I really, really dislike the whole “nanny state” concept. It brings out the rebel in me. Korea may or may not be trending that way, but it is at least a decade or two behind what I’ve observed in the good ol’ USofA. But really, does it get more insane than this:
When a small church comes to the Bowery Mission bearing fried chicken with trans fat, unwittingly breaking the law, they’re told “thank you.” Then workers quietly chuck the food, mission director Tom Bastile said.
“It’s always hard for us to do,” Basile said. “We know we have to do it.”Lines at soup kitchens are up by 21 percent this year, according to a NYC Coalition Against Hunger report released yesterday. The city’s law banishing trans fat took effect in July 2008 and touched everyone with Health Department food licenses — including emergency food providers.
You might die hungry, but you’ll die healthy I suppose.
So, when people ask why I am seriously considering retirement in a third world country here’s another reason. I’d rather have the inconvenience of limited government services than the oppression of a government telling me what’s good for me.


