Under ObamaCare, who decides how much salt you'll eat?
ObamaCare and other progressive plans threaten individual rights. Should bureaucrats decide our salt intake and the sugar we consume?
Salt and pepper shakers sit on a table at the Elysian Fields Cafe in Hoboken, N.J., in this 2008 file photo. Under ObamaCare, will bureaucrats limit individual rights, like how much salt we eat?
Ann Hermes/海角大神/File
I love-hate the word 鈥減rogressive.鈥 Its political uses derive from the so-called Progressive Era and the less-than-socialist reforms that were enacted during that early twentieth-century period.
Today, of course, few people who use the term think about its historical origins. They think it is simply a word that means 鈥渁dvanced,鈥 鈥渂etter,鈥 鈥 well, 鈥減rogressive.鈥
For a long time in the nineteenth-century, 鈥減rogress鈥 meant the gradual liberation of human beings from the control of the state. For some thinkers, like , it was tied to a particular view of evolution. For others, like , it was based on certain historical changes that involved increasing complexity of life spurred on the process of 鈥済lobalization.鈥 Increasing division of labor, specialization and trade were critical in this view. Others, like, emphasized the legal changes: from status (serf/nobility) to contract 鈥 each of us now decides how to relate to others in commerce.
Constant reminded us that the 鈥渓iberty of the ancients鈥 was a collective liberty. The citizens of Athens could do whatever they liked. The 鈥渓iberty of the moderns鈥 is an individual liberty. The individual is sovereign. It is a liberty against the state.
Now this progress has become reversed. The new 鈥減rogress鈥 is back to the 鈥渓iberty鈥 of the collective. We are the state.
We are in the process, in many areas of political life, of merging ourselves with the state 鈥 of conceiving of ourselves, not as individuals, but as part of a collective that somehow commands itself. The master appears to be us, but it is not: It is 鈥渢hem鈥 disguised as 鈥渦s.鈥 It is the paternalists, the special interest seekers, the crony capitalists, politicians seeking glory, and the ignorant.
As government becomes more and more involved with healthcare, the expenses associated with it become increasingly socialized. Taxpayers now have a stake in the health of everyone. My irresponsibility is no longer my problem alone; now it becomes your problem too.
What of individual autonomy? We can see the handwriting on the wall. All sorts of clever proposals to turn us into wards of the state are coming forward. There are proposals to tax sugar in soft drinks In New York and other 鈥減rogressive鈥 states, and now the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) is
I am not arguing for people to increase their consumption of sugar or salt or even not to reduce it. I am simply saying that if we wish to be individuals and not automatons, we need to make our own decisions about health and much else. There are few decisions more personal or more intimate than deciding what to eat.
But when we look to the state to pay for our healthcare we unleash social and political processes that have a life of their own. Step by step we give up the control of the decisions that makes us human. We become playthings of state. This is not progressive. It is reactionary.
Where are the civil libertarians in all of this?
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