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Federal
Register Watch by Nick Ebinger August
25 - 29, 2003
The Federal
Register is the official daily publication for Rules, Proposed Rules,
and Notices of Federal agencies and organizations, as well as Executive
Orders and other Presidential Documents.
This column attempts to summarize the highlights (or lowlights)
of the Federal Register during the preceding week. Instructions
for subscribing to the Federal Register can be found at the end of the
column. OFFICE
OF THE WHITE HOUSE – RESUMPTION OF DRUG INTERDICTION FUNDS TO THE
COLOMBIAN GOVERNMENT The
U.S. government is going to resume giving funds to the Colombian
government so that it can interdict any flights it considers to be
engaged in drug trafficking. If
Colombian drug war forces are anything like their Worse
yet is the absurdity of the whole situation. The
government outlaws drugs, raising the price and encouraging unsavory
characters into the industry. Having
indirectly produced these vicious drug cartels (as well as raising the
price for honest, stable drug users, arresting millions at the
taxpayers’ expense, etc.), the state then shovels money into the
quagmire of http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-21676.htm
CONSUMER
PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION (CPSC) – PUBLIC MEETING REGARDING FURNITURE
FLAMMABILITY The
CPSC is holding a public meeting on September 24 to discuss the
agency’s proposed rules on creating a government standard for
furniture flammability resulting from cigarette or lighter burns. Without
even going into the absurdity of the nanny state’s continued efforts
to protect each citizen from him- or herself, there are some interesting
points to make here. First
of all, the CPSC admits that voluntary industry guidelines “are widely
followed among manufacturers today.”
This means that the free market is already working! The
CPSC, like any other government agency, pursues expansionary policies,
and can’t help but worry about the “societal costs” related to the
minority of furniture pieces that don’t meet these qualifications.
(Never mind the idiot who puts out his cigarette on the armrest
of his couch.) To justify
its position, the CPSC notes that, at a public meeting last year, as
well as in a recent letter, the American Furniture Manufacturers’
Association (AFMA, an industry trade group) “recommended that a
standard include requirements for upholstered furniture cigarette
ignitability.” Why,
we’re all in agreement, then, right?
Of course not. In an
August 22 letter to the Secretary of Commerce, the AFMA CEO expressed
concern about such regulatory meddling, noting that “[e]fforts . . .
by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission to address upholstered
furniture flammability could result in higher costs to both producers
and consumers, with little or no benefit to safety.”
The letter then notes that “AFMA has proposed a federal
framework to resolve concerns about the risk of flammability associated
with upholstered furniture that would pre-empt conflicting state
standards and provide complying manufacturers with protection against
lawsuits.” Simply
put, AFMA only suggested a set of standards to mitigate the crippling
effects of government meddling and absurd litigation encouraged by the
state’s witless judicial system. The
industry regulates itself just fine, but the state forces it to play
along. How sad. http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-21936.htm DEPARTMENT
OF STATE – REGISTRATION FOR THE DIVERSITY IMMIGRANT VISA PROGRAM The
Department of State is announcing a special lottery to admit immigrants
from countries that currently don’t send a lot of immigrants here.
This new class of “diversity immigrants” is good for . . .
what? Diversity for the sake
of diversity? I
invite people onto my property because they’re useful in some manner,
not just because they’re different.
“Skilled immigrants,” “smart immigrants,” “7’5”
immigrants with great rebounding skills that will fill up my arena” .
. . bring ‘em on! But
pushing multiculturalism over voluntary association is a recipe for
mediocrity. http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-21908.htm INTERNATIONAL
TRADE ADMINISTRATION (ITA) – ANTI-DUMPING DUTIES ON POTASSIUM
PERMANGANATE The
ITA is instituting duties on potassium permanganate, a poison used to
kill off parasites that attack fish, imported from First,
“unfair” prices supposedly hurt American business.
If cheaper products from abroad are destroying the American
economy, then why is this agency wasting its time on the potassium
permanganate industry? This
rarely-used chemical clearly isn’t a mainstay of the American
manufacturing industry. Not
only is For
certain industries, such as steel or rubber, “national security” has
been cited as a reason to institute tariffs.
Aside from the fact that the state endangers its citizens far
more than any of the state’s enemies, fluke parasites represent no
danger to your or my life and liberty. Sometimes,
the state isn’t just mean, it’s petty. http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-22049.htm
CUSTOMS
AND BORDER PROTECTION BUREAU – IMPORTATION RESTRICTION ON BYZANTINE
CULTURAL ARTIFACTS This
agency (part of the Department of Homeland Security – what exactly are
they protecting us from?) is placing “emergency” import restrictions
on Byzantine-era cultural relics from The
http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-22137.htm
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