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September 5, 2007
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Fat Tax Acolytes Are Taxing Our Patience

Fat Tax Acolytes Are Taxing Our Patience

Apparently, one of the most absurd policy proposals ever generated by obesity zealots is still being taken seriously by political higher-ups. Yesterday on the Fox News Channel, an assortment of ostensibly conservative talking heads debated the value of a national "fat tax" on high-calorie and high-fat foods. This food-police favorite would supposedly stem the tide of rising obesity rates by financially punishing “bad” eating decisions. Normally, anti-big-government types are quick to condemn fat taxes as an unwarranted infringement of personal freedoms. But, as the Fox News broadcast makes clear, some are changing their tune.

Fortunately, at least one panelist -- Forbes magazine editor-in-chief and erstwhile presidential hopeful Steve Forbes -- wasn’t ready to jump on the fat tax bandwagon, and had some choice barbs for his overzealous colleagues. Here’s our favorite:

This is a fatheaded idea … In terms of putting taxes on everything, well I don't like your tie, so let's put a tax on that. It gets ridiculous.

Think necktie taxes are just hyperbole? Think again. They’re just the sort of arbitrary "solutions" we’ll get stuck with if the fat-tax logic catches on. It’s incredibly dangerous to let a handful of bureaucrats make judgment calls, backed by the force of law, about individual lifestyle choices. And it’s practically inevitable that government programs presumably aimed at helping people make “better” choices will devolve into dangerous exercises in social engineering. And that means financial punishments for choices that are entirely safe but aren’t approved of by the powerful. Oxford economist Adam Creighton powerfully made just that point in a recent op-ed in The American  magazine:

Perhaps fat-taxers ... should instead agitate for dismantling the public health system, much of which exists to alleviate health problems resulting from poor decisions. A handyman lifts packages incorrectly and injures his back; the sexually promiscuous contract STDs; a narcissist stares into the mirror all day and needs psychiatric care; and so on. Many people's behavior saps the public largesse for their recuperation; yet no one is lobbying to tax heavy parcels, nightclubs or mirrors.

The real solution to obesity rates is what we’ve been yammering about for years: increased personal responsibility. As the editors of Michigan’s Flint Journal noted yesterday:

Ultimately, success in reducing comes not from grandiose pronouncements from on high, but by incremental changing of habits, perhaps beginning with a little daily exercise to start out and eating a few more fruits and vegetables at a single meal.

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Headlines


iTunes Labeled A 'Sin' (For Tax Purposes, Of Course)
Posted On: Friday 5/9/2008

Lunch Box Police
Posted On: Thursday 1/24/2008

It's Only Natural
Posted On: Monday 1/7/2008

Obesity 'Facts' More Like Fantasy
Posted On: Thursday 12/6/2007

Surgeon General vs. North Pole
Posted On: Monday 12/3/2007

Salt Shaker Shakedown
Posted On: Friday 11/30/2007

Consumer Choice Not OK In The UK
Posted On: Wednesday 10/24/2007

Study: Americans Don't Like Being Told What To Do
Posted On: Tuesday 9/25/2007

Fat Tax Acolytes Are Taxing Our Patience
Posted On: Wednesday 9/5/2007


ActivistCash.com

Marion Nestle
Background
Nestle’s vision of a brave new food world includes the notorious “Twinkie tax,” federal price controls on high-calorie foods, and restricted food advertising. She believes that “food is too cheap in this country.” read more here »

Kelly Brownell
Background
Kelly Brownell is a Yale psychologist on a decade-long crusade against what he calls America’s “toxic food environment.” He is best known for having first proposed the infamous “Twinkie tax.” read more here »


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