Warning that "A free man is responsible for his choices" while "a servant has neither choices nor responsibility,"
John Hayward challenges Mayor Bloomberg's argument for the 16 oz soda ban.
Bloomberg’s soda ban is just one sobering reminder that independence and responsibility are inextricably linked. If people don’t want to accept responsibility for their actions, they must sacrifice their liberty as well...
In the United States, liberals have spent generations selling the
illusion of "independence" without responsibility — the promise of
government benefits provided at no great cost to individual liberty.
This illusion shattered forever when the American Left finally achieved
its dream of government-controlled health care. The true cost of
dependency could no longer be concealed. The Catholic Church is no
longer free to follow its religious conscience. Contrary to President
Obama’s assurances, you don’t get to keep your old plan if you liked it.
The War on Obesity is still fairly young, as political crusades go,
but it has spotlighted the loss of liberty that inevitably accompanies
dependence. If the government is to be held accountable for financing
your health care, it must have power over your life, in order
to keep those socialized costs down. Once the basic premise of
socialism is accepted, and everyone is collectively obliged to pay for
everyone else, this only makes sense.
And if New Yorkers don't stand up to Bloomberg's "benevolent tyranny"?
...there will eventually be no purpose in complaining about it, because you’ll never get your lost choices back. You will be expected to grow comfortable with a more limited range of motion, within the perpetually shrinking cage your betters have designed for you. You will become steadily less responsible for your life, and the lives of your children, which is very soothing. You’ll also be less free, by definition, as your “unacceptable” choices are taken away. It is widely assumed that Americans are no longer the sort of people who grow angry over such things.
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