Scapegoating to 'paradise'
May 17, 2003
The liability lawsuit
against McDonald’s hamburger chain strikes me as frivolous,
even laughable on its face. But I’m not laughing because
it is not just some isolated, renegade, over-the-top lawsuit.
It’s representative of a society-deadening illness in America.
Last year lawyers filed
a number of lawsuits against fast food distributors for making
their consuming clients obese and unhealthy. While none of the
lawsuits has yet been successful, a few are still looming and
people are beginning to take them seriously.
The theory behind the
suits is that the defendants failed to disclose clearly and conspicuously
the nutritional content and harmful effects of their food, including
obesity, heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, and elevated
cholesterol.
Just how far are we
going to take this developing principle that a person is not responsible
for his own actions if there is a deep pocket to which we can
shift the blame? The tobacco suits were bad enough. After all,
if as a pre-teen some forty years ago I was aware enough of the
risks in smoking to try to convince both my parents to quit the
habit – which I was and did – how could any sentient
human being have been ignorant of the risks?
It didn’t matter
that everyone knew the risks, said the tobacco plaintiffs, because
the evil, conspiratorial tobacco companies tried to conceal the
risks and also laced their product with addictive ingredients.
They needed to be punished – not just for their tortious
behavior, but also just for being big corporations -- no matter
how irresponsible the plaintiffs may have been.
But what about McDonald’s?
What misdeeds has it perpetrated that should trump the flagrant
irresponsibility and humiliating shamelessness of the plaintiffs
in these cases? Well, the father of one of the burgerholics said
he never saw anything in the Bronx restaurants informing him of
the food’s ingredients. He also submitted an affidavit saying
he always believed McDonald’s was healthy for his children.
This guy may have driven
in on a pumpkin truck, but he has no right to expect the rest
of us did too. If he was so unworldly he wasn’t aware burgers
and fries are high in fat, are we supposed to believe he would
have been able to comprehend a nutritional chart and then exercise
sound judgment (on behalf of his daughter)?
You better believe
this insanity will not stop with McDonald’s and it won’t
stop with fast foods – because this really isn’t about
nutrition. It’s about changing our societal relationships,
restructuring our economic system and undermining the nuclear
family. It’s about destroying our liberties by divorcing
them from personal responsibility and accountability – freedom
can’t long survive without them.
Why do I say that?
Well, under cockeyed theories like this all manufacturers and
vendors are at risk. It’s hard enough for businesses today
with onerous taxes and stifling regulations, but what about their
constant exposure to liability because a certain percentage of
the population simply will not consume in moderation (fast foods)
or because certain criminals will misuse lawful products (guns)?
Plus, the instigators
and supporters of these suits aren’t just after the restaurants.
They are targeting our capitalistic system itself, which depends
on people assuming responsibility for their own actions. In this
case the restaurants allegedly didn’t give people sufficient
scientific data to support the conclusion written on the psyche
of anyone with common sense: that too much high fat food is unhealthy.
But guess who else
is at fault? The government! That’s right, some are now
suggesting that the government should assume the responsibility
of protecting people from themselves. Meet your new mommy and
daddy. Move over, Hillary. It doesn’t just take a village
– it takes an entire bureaucracy.
Recently, in a debate
over these obesity suits, one "scholar" suggested we
should not be looking to pin the blame on restaurants, but the
government, because it is "subsidizing obesity." The
federal, state and local governments, said Shannon Brownlee of
the New America Foundation, are not doing anything "credible"
about this "disease," but are actually promoting it
through taxes and other policies.
Folks, this country
will eventually collapse if we don’t exercise a little self-help
and use some of that common sense that doesn’t seem to be
quite as common anymore. Not every societal problem is an injustice
that must be remedied. Utopias don’t exist, the Cuban Paradise
notwithstanding.
What we really need
is not more policy-making lawsuits or mandatory nutrition guides
accompanying each meal, but a nationwide crash course on the "nutritional"
ingredients essential for a vibrant, prosperous and free society.
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