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Federal
Register Watch by Nick Ebinger October
6 - 10, 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. OCTOBER
6, 2003: FISH
AND WILDLIFE SERVICE - TIBETAN ANTELOPE LISTED AS ENDANGERED The
Endangered Species Act of 1973 has been extended to the Tibetan
antelope. (How magnanimous! I hope the antelope realizes how fortunate
it is.) There's one problem:
the Tibetan antelope does not live in the United States. It primarily
lives in China, with some in India and (perhaps) Nepal.
That the federal government runs around protecting various animal
species in my name and on my dime is ridiculous enough, but extending
these actions into foreign countries makes no sense.
How is it to enforce this protection? The
Fish and Wildlife Service lists a number of environmental threats to the
Tibetan antelope, and I have no doubt that such danger not only exists,
but is unfortunate. Nonetheless,
why is tax money going toward this protection?
(The
correct answer, by the way, is "Why not?
It's not our money.") http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-25207.htm OCTOBER
7, 2003: ALCOHOL
AND TOBACCO TAX AND TRADE BUREAU - SEEDLESS GRAPES; GROUNDLESS
REGULATION This
agency (formerly part of the ATF) here establishes a particular region
of Oregon as an American viticultural area (AVA).
The specifics are not what's interesting; rather, the concept of
the AVA is a good example of the pettiness of state regulation.
An AVA is a governmentally designated wine-growing region, so
designated with the intention of providing accuracy in labeling.
Indeed, minor geographic differences can matter for true wine connoisseurs,
but there's no reason why the free market can't provide proper labeling.
Instead, the federal government has set up this somewhat
arbitrary system, based upon mind-numbing regulations that require the
expense of a lawyer to decipher. If
consumers care enough about the differences in wine from one valley to
the next (as many do), then the free market will provide a system in
which they will be accurately labeled (as
I showed last week). That
the taxpayer has to pay for an inferior system, based upon the
producers' financial wherewithal and an inflexible set of regulations,
is unfair. For
more information, the Wine
Institute has a thorough yet interesting website on AVAs. http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/07oct20030800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-25372.htm OCTOBER
8, 2003: FOOD
AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION (FDA) - WATCHING YOUR NEIGHBOR'S WAISTLINE On
October 23, the FDA will be holding a meeting to discuss its "role
and responsibilities in addressing the major public health problem of
obesity," along with any related nutritional issues. Who
gave the FDA this role? How
did they become responsible for the eating habits of individuals?
Why, it's an important public health issue, of course! In
fact, the concept of "public health" is a statist chimera.
Health is an individual concept; the well-being of body and mind
varies from person to person, and the maintenance of that well-being is
the responsibility of each individual.
Health is one's own burden, particularly when it is adversely
affected with one's own choices (which is usually the case with
obesity). The
origin of "public" health is intertwined with the origins of
"public" education, "public" transportation,
"public" television, "public" works, the
"public" sector, etc. The
positivist-progressive movement of the late 19th century and early 20th
century found do-gooders seeking to fuse democracy and the scientific
management of society. To
that end, they plugged the concept of a unified "public," a
homogenized U.S. citizenry that could more efficiently be managed by
elites. However, they failed
to recognize (or purposely ignored) a few points.
First
of all, it is inefficient to try to organize society from the top down.
Trite slogans aside, Americans do not stand united as much as
they represent a mass of individuals with widely varying, arbitrary and
ever-changing tastes, desires and needs.
It is impossible for a public sector to gauge these needs and
wants; the private sector only does so by existing in a fluid, flexible
and fragmented form. Second,
the homogenization of America would inevitably result in the debasement
of the masses, as they are brought down to a dull standard.
(This was recognized by Rockefeller, Carnegie, and other Robber
Baron-era industrial magnates who sought a docile and compliant
workforce for their factories. Some
"public"!) In
fact, the elevation of the "public" is the degradation of the
individual. Third,
tying together democracy and the public welfare as dual patriotic duties
will only lead to the increased demagoguery of those re-elected by the
beneficiaries of a state welfare system, leading to an increase in that
system, and, as a result, an increase in the number of people who try to
benefit from it. In other
words, it's a never-ending cycle. Once
a democratic welfare economy is created, there's no way to control it
without destroying it. It
grows, and stagnates, and feeds parasitically on its productive sectors
to continue that growth. Individuals
should be responsible for their own eating habits, no matter how
unhealthy. My neighbor's
pork rind habit is no business of mine, just as my predilection for fugu
is none of his. (Of
course, there is nothing progressive about the state forcibly seizing
part of your property and/or income to sink into its schemes, but the
conventional wisdom is that it is progressive to want to financially
support the public good. You
know the drill: "Ask what you can do for your country," and
all that buncombe.) http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/rothbard37.html
http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-25645.htm
On
this same day, the Department of Health and Human Services announced
that it would be giving a grant to the National Health Museum to help
promote this concept of "public health."
Its justification is that museums receive hundreds of millions of
visitors each year, but they rarely address public health issues.
Of course not: public health policy is boring!
Give
schoolchildren what they want: more dinosaurs, fewer Medicaid dioramas! http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-25506.htm NATIONAL
INDIAN GAMING COMMISSION (NIGC) - FEE INCREASE FOR INDIAN CASINOS The
U.S. government makes amends for its historical wrongs against Native
Americans in part by freeing it from its puritanical anti-gambling
tyranny; that is, it allows Indian tribes to legally open up casinos.
Of course, these casinos are regulated by the NIGC, which, until
now, has collected up to a ceiling of $8 million from the casinos to
fund its operations. The
NIGC is changing its regulations to make this ceiling more flexible
(read: higher), based on Congressional approval.
Currently, legislation passed by Congress would allow the NIGC to
collect up to $12 million - a 50% increase. So,
there you have it: the federal government grants the Indians the legal
right to open casinos, and then takes an ever-increasing share of the
profits. There's a term for
this, but it's politically incorrect. Then
again, I think politics is tyranny, so why should I care about political
correctness? Indian
givers, Indian givers, Indian givers! http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-25472.htm
OFFICE
OF THE WHITE HOUSE - VARIOUS PRESIDENTIAL PROCLAMATIONS The
hypocrisy continues. What
cloying decrees does Bush offer this week?
First of all, it's Fire Prevention Week.
You only have to look to the government's
mismanaged forestry policy and the
firebombing deaths of tens of thousands of innocent civilians in Tokyo
to understand its fire prevention policy. Second,
it's German-American Day. Another
WWII firebombing, this time over
Dresden, shows how much the U.S. government cares about the German
people and culture. Curiously,
Bush cites John D. Rockefeller as a great German-American.
He is, of course, famous (or infamous) for being hounded by the
federal government for being a successful entrepreneur. Third,
Bush declared this week Marriage Protection Week.
This has nothing to do with protection, but rather with
aggression. Marriage,
like any other relationship or association between individuals, is the
business only of those involved. (Nor
should do-gooders try to quash the right of individuals to express their
disapproval of said relationships!)
Voluntary relationships are the basis of civilization, and any
effort by any organization to disrupt these associations by force is
immoral. http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-25651.htm http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-25653.htm http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/14mar20010800/edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/03-25652.htm To
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