We Really Are In The Best Of Hands

The mayor of New York and that city’s health com­mis­sioner have decided to pres­sure city restau­rants to lower the amount of salt in food they serve by half over the next decade even though the sci­ence behind the deci­sion is ambigu­ous and uncer­tain. On top of that, low­er­ing salt in your diet may lead to depression.

Many peo­ple will argue that doing some­thing like this surely won’t hurt any­thing and might help a lot but in fact, there are always hid­den costs to any pub­lic pol­icy deci­sion that politi­cians and peo­ple who favor more gov­ern­ment never have to face because they are prac­ti­cally invis­i­ble to the pub­lic. Costs like spend­ing more money on alter­ing the sup­ply chain of their food to remove sup­pos­edly high salt foods. Those costs get passed down the chain and even though it’s not obvi­ous will even­tu­ally lead to things like higher costs or job losses. But that just gives politi­cians the chance to “do some­thing else.”

The gov­ern­ment can’t even pro­tect our food sup­ply from dis­eases that kill us directly like the lat­est out­break of sal­mo­nella in peanut but­ter. How can we ever hope for them to pro­tect us from some dis­ease in the future that may or may not be related to an ingre­di­ent in most of our food today? This com­plete dis­con­nect with the abil­i­ties that gov­ern­ment actu­ally has and the desire to increase the power of the gov­ern­ment so that it can expand its pow­ers over us seems odd to me. Let me choose whether to eat high salt or fat foods. You try to keep sal­mo­nella and E coli out of my peanut but­ter for a cou­ple of years and we’ll see how that goes.

Politi­cians are largely dri­ven by power and fame and the only way to con­tin­u­ally feed those dri­ves is to reg­u­larly “do some­thing impor­tant.” Until we start elect­ing more lead­ers and fewer power hun­gry mega­lo­ma­ni­acs, we will keep being sad­dled with ridicu­lous laws and big­ger gov­ern­ment, gov­ern­ment that is largely impo­tent in its attempt to pro­tect its cit­i­zenry and many times inflicts great dam­age in the name of “doing something”.

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