I've seen so many awful columns by
Newsweek editors that I've become somewhat immune to them. But
this one , by Newsweek and
Daily Beast contributing editor
Michael Tomasky took my breath away. Here's some excerpts, but if you have a strong stomach, read the whole thing:
There�s only one way to say something like this, and it�s loud and proud and without apology: I wholeheartedly support Mike Bloomberg�s war on sugar. It�s unassailable as policy.... We have this �liberty� business completely backward in this country, and if Bloomberg can start rebalancing individual freedom and the public good, God bless him, I say.
It�s a policy designed to guide people toward a certain kind of behavior. This talk of �freedom� is absurd. No one�s freedom is being taken away. When the rule goes into effect, probably by September, assuming the city�s board of health votes it through (it's appointed by the mayor), New Yorkers will still be able to buy these beverages. And those who really feel that they will perish unless they have 32 ounces of Mountain Dew Code Red can simply buy two. Nothing is being banned, and no one�s being arrested.
Are bacon-cheeseburgers next? As a practical matter, no. Sodas are an easy target because there is nothing, nothing, nutritionally redeeming about them. But might there come a day when the New York City Department of Health mandates that burgers be limited to, say, four ounces? Indeed there might. And why not? Eight- and ten-ounce burgers are sick things.
...the state has every right to take action on behalf of the common good. We once had an epidemic of traffic deaths. We didn�t ban driving. But we came up with a device that is a minor inconvenience at most. And so seatbelts became mandatory, and now the epidemic has receded. A few people still foolishly oppose seatbelts. But most of us accept them and understand that whatever little dollop of our freedom is taken away as we latch up is more than countervailed by the practical upside....
One day, if the country comes to its senses, we�ll reverse the obesity trend and, just as we now chuckle at the prevalence of smoking on Mad Men, we�ll say, �Can you believe people used to peddle this treacle in 64-ounce doses?� We will not only have done something about obesity. We�ll have won an important victory over Libertarianism Gone Wild, a far bigger threat to society than even Sunkist Orange.
Yeah, that's the problem. Libertarianism Gone Wild. You bet. :rolleyes:
This isn\'t the first time he\'s written about the foolish "freedom fetish" we have, either. This 'freedom' business is simply paranoid and delusional. I defy anyone to name for me a specific and precise freedom that Obama has taken away from the American people. You can�t. When they�re not just invented out of whole cloth by multi-millionaire propagandists, all such laments are based on ignorance about what freedom actually means and an equal ignorance about how our system of government works.
Yeah, that's right. We're ignorant about what freedom actually means. And if that's how out system of government is supposed to work, well, I'm proud to say I'm an anarchist.
Onward and upward,
airforce