Clinging to My Guns, Salt, and Light Bulbs
Nanny-staters are on the march, seeking even more control over our lives.

 
November 23, 2008 - by Pam Meister 
I recently, along with my husband, took the class that is required in my state 
to obtain a handgun permit. According to the instructor where we took the 
class, business hasn’t been so good since the immediate aftermath of 9/11. Once 
I file the necessary paperwork, I expect that I’ll be able to purchase my 
firearm within the next couple of months.
Now I’m not necessarily expecting to have to use my handgun once I obtain it, 
as I am fortunate to live in an area where violent crime is rare. (The last 
murder in my town took place almost 25 years ago, and was a shocking anomaly to 
the norm.) But many people are worried that after he takes office, Obama will 
do his best to support and ultimately enact legislation that makes it more 
difficult for law-abiding citizens to exercise their Second Amendment rights. 
It’s more of a statement than anything else. Plus, target shooting is fun.

As the instructor at the gun shop said, “Meanwhile, criminals will continue to 
be able to get their guns.”

But it’s not just Second Amendment rights that Americans should be worried 
about, and it’s not just President-elect Obama whom Americans should be worried 
about when it comes to the infringement of our rights — Congress and smaller 
state and city governments all have their fat, grubby fingers in the pie as 
well.

Take, for instance, New York City Mayor Mike “Nanny” Bloomberg’s latest attempt 
to micromanage his constituents. Having already banned smoking in public places 
and the use of trans fats by restaurants within city limits, Bloomberg now 
wants to “reduce the salt in processed food by 20 percent over the next five 
years.”

No wonder he’s looking to skirt the two-term limit approved by the voters — 
he’s not done yet telling them how to live their lives. Mary Poppins added a 
spoonful of sugar to help the medicine go down, but she too would probably be 
in Bloomberg’s sights, as he may be planning to cut sugar out of your diet as 
well as salt and fat.

What’s next for New Yorkers? Cutting out certain foods entirely? Could it be 
goodbye to fried chicken? Donuts? Pastrami sandwiches? The carts that sell hot 
dogs, salted pretzels, and potato knishes on nearly every corner? When it comes 
to nanny staters, you never know what’s next on the hit list. Hey, one town 
council in Britain decided that the salt shakers at chip shops had an 
overabundance of holes, meaning customers could put too much salt on their 
food. This just wouldn’t do. So they decided to spend a couple of thousand 
taxpayer pounds on new and improved salt shakers with only five holes, compared 
to the traditional 17, and gave them out free to shops. One chip shop owner 
reported that “people will just put on more salt if they want more. In fact, we 
have had some people unscrewing the lids to do so.”

You just can’t make this stuff up. What’s next, assigning a salt monitor to 
each restaurant to dole out salt portions? Don’t laugh.

Certainly there is a problem here in America when it comes to diet and 
exercise. Thanks to modern technology, we not only have an overabundance of 
inexpensive food, but we’ve become a largely sedentary society. The obvious 
good comes with a price to pay. But does the answer really lie in relieving 
individuals of their personal responsibility in the choices they make? Should 
government bureaucrats who “know better” than you do have that much power over 
your life?

 Not long ago, I saw a couple of specials on TLC: Half Ton Mom and Half Ton 
Dad. The first was about Renee, who weighed nearly 900 pounds, and the second 
about Kenneth, who weighed over 1,000 pounds. Both were bedridden for years and 
both managed to get gastric bypass surgery as a desperate last resort — even 
though many doctors tend to shy away from the risk of operating on such large 
patients. Sadly, Renee died of cardiac arrest two weeks after the procedure — a 
risk she knew she was taking — but Kenneth made it through and after spending 
five months in the hospital being treated was able to go home after having lost 
about half of his weight. Did he manage to take the rest of the weight off? I 
don’t know. I wish him well.

While the shows did shed light on a disturbing trend, I sensed an underlying 
agenda by the producers. Highlighted was the fact that lower-income families 
often eat at fast food restaurants because the food is cheap and plentiful — 
and that fast food is a billion-dollar industry. In other words, blame 
McDonald’s and Popeye’s, but not the people walking in to buy the food. Legumes 
and brown rice are also cheap and plentiful, as well as being the complex 
carbohydrates that nutritionists tell us to eat instead of simple carbs like 
pasta and bread, but these foods don’t seem to be part of the problem. It’s 
apparent that many people lack basic nutrition skills. Yet again, is it 
government’s duty to remedy the problem by placing restrictions on what we eat? 
I don’t claim to have the answer to the growing problem of morbidly obese 
people, but the idea of limiting personal freedom in exchange for the 
government taking care of yet another problem is not one I care to contemplate. 
After all, Congress decided it knew what it was doing when it came to handling 
the mortgage industry — and look where that got us.

Where else have government bureaucrats decided they know more than you do? 
Light bulbs. In the name of saving the Earth, Congress passed legislation last 
year banning the sale of incandescent light bulbs by the end of 2014. Australia 
has us beat — they have set the deadline for 2010. Instead of the bulb created 
by Thomas Edison that has served us well for over 100 years, we’ll have to use 
CFL bulbs. In addition to the safety hazard they present upon disposal due to 
the small amount of mercury in each one, they give off less light than the 
incandescent bulb.

My stepfather, who does not like bright light and who likes to save a buck or 
two, has used these bulbs for years. But I would rather pay a few more dollars 
on my electric bill if it means actually being able to see what I read, write, 
and eat. Otherwise, I might as well resort to candlelight, which is much more 
pleasing to the eye than the sickly greenish hue cast by CFLs.

Besides, as this writer for American Thinker has pointed out, the energy saved 
by banning incandescent bulbs is insignificant compared to the other 
big-energy-ticket items we use — dishwashers, computers, big screen TVs, and 
Internet servers. He also notes that

  CFL light bulbs have been around for well over a decade. Only recently have 
they come in enough varieties and flavors to capture about 10% of the available 
sockets. But they are still at least five times more expensive than regular 
incandescents, which if replaced in their entirety would cost consumers an 
extra $4 to 5 billion at the cash register. No doubt millions of Americans will 
enthusiastically embrace this new technology and be willing to pay extra to get 
it.

  But millions more will not fare so well. This ban will be a tax on poor 
people and the silent majority — retirees on fixed incomes, single working 
parents, low-wage earners working double shifts or two jobs, along with the 
average Joes and Marys who live each week paycheck to paycheck. They don’t have 
cable TV to watch the Home and Garden Channel, and can’t afford to replace 
their functional if drab table lamp fixtures, much less employ a green 
ideology-toting residential lighting designer.

Another point worth noting in the article linked above is that no CFLs are 
produced in the U.S., only in China — and China will need to build more 
coal-powered plants in order to meet the upcoming demand. Remember, 
coal-powered plants are among the no-nos with radical environmentalists and our 
incoming administration. Talk about throwing out the baby with the bathwater! 
This is yet another example of the old adage that “the road to hell is paved 
with good intentions.”

As I said earlier, I don’t pretend to have all of the answers to these and many 
other problems. But I sure as heck know that government doesn’t have all the 
answers either — and if history is any indication, it will likely make things 
worse with its meddling. In the meantime, I’ll keep clinging to my gun and my 
incandescent light bulbs — the ones I’ve begun hoarding in anticipation of the 
upcoming ban. Who knows? Maybe they’ll become such a rare and sought-after 
commodity that people will be willing to pay big bucks for them.

Hey, I have to replenish my shrinking 401(k) somehow.

http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/clinging-to-my-guns-salt-and-light-bulbs/2/

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