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Big Brother is Knocking on Your Front DoorDate: January 20, 2008 |
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The following article is excerpted from the Los Angeles
Times. Taking liberties
Once again, personal
choices are under attack by good-for-you government. Remember this? "There is nothing wrong
with your television set. Do not attempt to adjust the picture. We are
controlling transmission. If we wish to make it louder, we will bring up the
volume. If we wish to make it softer, we will tune it to a whisper. We will
control the horizontal. We will control the vertical...." Younger readers may not remember the opening to "The Outer Limits," a pretty good sci-fi rip-off of "The Twilight Zone" (and they may have only a fuzzy understanding that TVs used to have knobs to control the horizontal and vertical). But as they read the news these days, maybe they can find a new appreciation for the creepy feeling of powerlessness that opening once gave viewers. For instance, California is proposing
revisions to its housing code that would require all new or remodeled homes
to have a "programmable communicating thermostat." Equipped with special
"nonremovable" FM radio receivers, these devices would allow state
power authorities to set the temperature in your home as they see fit.
Ostensibly to manage demand during "price events" and other
"emergencies," you would basically cede control of your home's
heating and air conditioning to the state (when and if state officials wanted
to exercise it). Taken by itself, this
may not sound so scary. But then again, as Gulliver learned, one Lilliputian
is an intriguing freak. Two are kinds of cool. But 10,000 teeny-weeny folk
tying you down? David Harsanyi, author
of "Nanny State," reports that there are "No Running"
signs in Florida playgrounds, perhaps to make it easier for the authorities
to catch toddlers and outfit them with mandatory helmets, chin guards and
corrective shoes. |
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In Canada, there are
now a slew of public service announcements that use fear, terror and gruesome
imagery to encourage workplace safety. You can find them on YouTube. My
favorite features an attractive young female chef in the kitchen of her
restaurant, gushing that she's about to get married and have a wonderful
life. Unfortunately, proper safety precautions weren't taken, and in the
middle of the ad, while she's speaking to the camera, she slips and falls,
pouring boiling oil on herself. She screams in agony. We see her scalded
hands clenched in pain, the singed flesh on her face peeling off. So remember
kids, safety never takes a vacation! Much of this, as Reason magazine's Jacob
Sullum has long argued, stems from the "totalitarian" temptation
inherent to seeing healthcare as a sub-category of politics and policy. When
government picks up the tab for health costs, it inevitably feels it is
responsible for curtailing them through "prevention," which can
often elide into compulsion. As Faith Fitzgerald, a professor at the UC Davis
School of Medicine, put it in the New England Journal of Medicine: "Both
healthcare providers and the commonweal now have a vested interest in certain
forms of behavior, previously considered a person's private business, if the
behavior impairs a person's 'health.' Certain failures of self-care have
become, in a sense, crimes against society, because society has to pay for
their consequences." We've seen this before.
The original progressives -- activist intellectuals, social reformers, social
gospel ministers and other would-be planners in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries -- touted "social control" as the watchword of their
movement. One reason the progressives supported World War I so passionately
was not because they supported the aims of the conflict but because they
loved domestic mobilization. John Dewey, the American philosopher and
educator who sang the praises of the "social benefits of war," was
giddy that the conflict might force Americans "to give up much of our
economic freedom. ... We shall have to lay by our good-natured individualism
and march in step." The progressives believed that people needed to be
saved from themselves. Journalist and commentator Walter Lippmann dubbed
average citizens "mentally children and barbarians."
"Organized social control" via a "socialized economy" was
the only means to create meaningful freedom, argued Lippman, Dewey and others.
And by free, the progressives meant free to live the "right" way. Now, nobody thinks
anything like that is in store for us these days. But we can come far short
of that and still overshoot the mark of what is desirable by a wide margin. |