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Overgovernment Archive

Wednesday

31

August 2011

0

COMMENTS

Overgovernment: Dog Days Edition

Written by , Posted in Government Meddling, The Nanny State & A Regulated Society

For years, many neighborhood New York City bars were dog friendly. Aware of their own worthlessness, self-loathing bureaucrats need their misery to be shared be all. So seeing how taking their dogs to the bar pleased the people, bureaucrats sprung into action:

[I]t has always been a violation of the city’s health code to allow a dog anywhere near a beer tap. But for years, this has been one of the most widely — and gleefully — violated rules in the city.

Not any more.

Since the health department adopted a letter grade system for bars and restaurants last year, bar owners say, health inspectors are allowing no wiggle room for four-legged patrons.

The stricter enforcement is apparently bringing to an end a rich tradition of dog-friendly bars in New York.

“Bars are built around characters,” said Andrew Templar, an owner of Floyd NY in Brooklyn Heights, which received a violation notice after health inspectors twice observed dogs on the premises this summer. “Now it’s just people and their people problems.”

Given the types of things that often happen in bars, dogs ought to be the least of the health concerns. But even if there are legitimate concerns (and no where in the article is it every asserted than anyone’s health has been threatened), no one is forced to visit a particular establishment. Don’t want dogs at the bar with you? Go to a different bar.

It’s just one more instance of unnecessary government meddling curtailing freedom.

Monday

22

August 2011

0

COMMENTS

Overgovernment: Yard Sale Edition

Written by , Posted in Big Government, The Nanny State & A Regulated Society

Faced with expensive medical bills for her bone cancer, Salem, Oregon resident Jan Cline took to selling much of what she owns to help cover the costs. This angered the local freedom-hating bureaucrats, so they shut her down (Hat-tip: Open Market):

Jan Cline had no idea, but the city of Salem has a clear law that states a person can only have three yard sales a year.

…She’s run businesses and supported herself for years but this summer she was diagnosed with bone cancer.“It’s a bone marrow cancer that eats through the bones and causes holes in the bones so that just by walking I can break a bone,” she says.

In one day she lost her independence, her ability to work and earn an income that could pay for all those medical bills.

So she decided to sell what she owned. The sale was bringing in several hundred dollars each weekend until one neighbor complained and she got a visit from the city.

What a despicable neighbor.

This is ultimately the source of overgovernment: some people just really don’t like what freedom produces. Specifically, they hate that it means things are not always how they want them to be. These people then whine and complain to government, demanding that something be done, and politicians who are pleased to be able to solve a problem for a constituent are happy to comply. The result is inevitably a loss of the freedom which seems to upset so many who lack perspective, but which I think they will increasingly come to mourn as the magnitude of its absence fully sets in.

But there’s a silver lining to this tragic case of government stupidity. Thanks to the publicity that has been brought to Jan’s plight, private individuals have now donated over $35,000 (Updated 8/22) to help her out.

Friday

5

August 2011

1

COMMENTS

Overgovernment: Woodpecker Edition

Written by , Posted in Energy and the Environment, The Nanny State & A Regulated Society

Government busy bodies claim they write laws to protect things, like animals. But this is betrayed by how the same bureaucrats react when confronted with people actually doing what it is they purport their laws are there to do (Hat-tip: Cato@Liberty):

Eleven-year-old aspiring veterinarian, Skylar Capo, sprang into action the second she learned that a baby woodpecker in her Dad’s backyard was about to be eaten by the family cat.

“I’ve just always loved animals,” said Skylar Capo. “I couldn’t stand to watch it be eaten.”

Skylar couldn’t find the woodpecker’s mother, so she brought it to her own mother, Alison Capo, who agreed to take it home.

“She was just going to take care of it for a day or two, make sure it was safe and uninjured, and then she was going to let it go,” said Capo.

But on the drive home, the Capo family stopped at a Lowes in Fredericksburg and they brought the bird inside because of the heat. That’s when they were confronted by a fellow shopper who said she worked for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

…The problem was that the woodpecker is a protected species under the Federal Migratory Bird Act.  Therefore, it is illegal to take or transport a baby woodpecker.  The Capo family says they had no idea.

…So as soon as the Capo family returned home, they say they opened the cage, the bird flew away, and they reported it to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

…”They said that’s great, that’s exactly what we want to see,” said Capo. “We thought that we had done everything that we could possibly do.”

But roughly two weeks later, that same woman from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service showed up at Capo’s front door. This time, Capo says the woman was accompanied by a state trooper.  Capo refused to accept a citation, but was later mailed a notice to appear in U.S. District Court for unlawfully taking a migratory bird.  She’s also been slapped with a $535 fine.

Fish and Wildlife later claimed the citation was processed and delivered in error. Part of their statement:

Upon speaking with the subject, later identified as Alison Capo, on June 27, the agent determined that no further action was warranted. A citation that had been previously drafted by the agent was cancelled on June 28.

Unfortunately, the citation was processed unintentionally despite our office’s request to cancel the ticket. The Service has contacted Ms. Capo to express our regret. The Service is also sending Ms. Capo a formal letter explain the clerical error and confirming that ticket should never have been issued.

I don’t give these agencies the benefit of the doubt on such matters, but rather tend to assume that they are simply lying and only withdrew the citation because of public outcry. That said, even if we take their explanation on face value, there’s something fundamentally wrong when people can’t even go shopping without being confronted by some random federal bureaucrat enforcing an obscure infraction.

There are simply too many federal rules for anyone to possibly be aware of, much less follow. In Federalist No. 62, believed to have been written by James Madison, the danger of overgovernment is aptly described:

It will be of little avail to the people, that the laws are made by men of their own choice, if the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood; if they be repealed or revised before they are promulgated, or undergo such incessant changes that no man, who knows what the law is to-day, can guess what it will be to-morrow. Law is defined to be a rule of action; but how can that be a rule, which is little known, and less fixed?

Friday

5

August 2011

0

COMMENTS

Overgovernment: Sippy Cup Edition

Written by , Posted in Big Government, The Nanny State & A Regulated Society

That sippy cup in your child’s mouth may be dangerous! Well, no, not really. But you might be filling it with non-government approved liquids, and we can’t have that, now can we? New York doesn’t think so, anyway (Hat-tip: OpenMarket):

The Legislature, for the second year in a row, approved a measure requiring baby bottles and sippy cups to have warning labels about the dangers of childhood tooth decay.

Ex-Gov. David Paterson vetoed last year’s measure.

“I can show you photos of children who go to bed with sippy cups,” said Mark Feldman, executive director of the state Dental Association, which pressed for the bill.

“All you see is little black stumps that is all that is left of the teeth,” he added.

If only the statists would turn their eyes to the dangers of overgovernment. I can see it now, statehouses all across the land forced to display giant warning labels: “Warning, meddlesome legislators may produce freedom decay!”

 

Friday

22

July 2011

0

COMMENTS

Overgovernment: Fighting Back Edition

Written by , Posted in The Nanny State & A Regulated Society

Following up on the previous post on Overgovernment, I might as well make it a regular feature, ala the We’re All Gonna Die! series.

Sisters Caitlin and Abigail Mills have for 6 years during February and March set up a card table in front of their home in order to sell Girl Scout cookies. How precious, right? How American, in fact! Wrong. The local tyrants got wind of this behavior and were not pleased. But now, Bob McCarty reports, the girls are fighting back with a lawsuit:

On Thursday morning, according to attorneys Dave and Jenifer Roland at the Freedom Center of Missouri, St. Louis County Judge Maura McShane will hear arguments on Hazelwood’s motion to have the Mills’ cookie stand case thrown out.

I reported the basics of the case in a post April 8:

Each February and March for the past six years, Caitlin Mills, 16, and Abigail Mills, 14, have put a card table in front of their home in Hazelwood, Mo., and sold Girl Scout cookies to drivers passing by. This year, however, the city of Hazelwood notified their mother, Carolyn Mills, that the girls’ cookie stand violated city ordinances and must be shut down.

Despite much national media attention, including coverage at Andrew Breitbart’s BigGovernment.com, city officials have, according to the Mills’ attorneys, “dug in their heels.”

In a media advisory today, the Rolands said the City of Hazelwood “has enlisted four high-priced attorneys to fight to ensure the government’s power to prohibit these icons of American childhood, and those attorneys have asked the court to dismiss the Mills family’s case.”

Selling something on your own properity? Outrageous! The plebes should not seek to provide for themselves…that is the government’s job.

Tuesday

19

July 2011

1

COMMENTS

Overgovernment: Day Care Edition

Written by , Posted in Big Government, The Nanny State & A Regulated Society

We have too much government. Every aspect of our lives is subject to regulation, review, licensure or approval. Simply put, we are overgoverned.

Here’s a classic example out of Colorado:

Day care providers in Colorado may have to meet new rules that would dictate the race of dolls at centers, how much TV kids can watch and time in between meals, making Colorado child care facilities some of the most regulated in the country.

The changes being proposed by the Colorado Department of Human Services include that dolls at centers should represent three races (which are not specified). TV and computer time would be limited to 20 minutes per day unless it’s a special occasion. In addition, providers must not serve whole milk to children older than 2 years old, only 1 percent, 2 percent or skim milk, and guidelines for eating times are outlined. The proposed rules also require providers and children take at least one physical education class per year and that each child have an assigned caregiver.

…Funding to meet guidelines will not be provided by the state, Liz McDonough, spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Human Services, said, but the state will “work with centers” to help them fix any problems.

There is zero reason for government intervention, and even less to believe that government will be more capable than the market of ensuring quality care. Centers already have incentive to take care of children, whose parents pay their bills. Day Care centers that do a bad job, and certainly such have and will exist, go out of business. Government, on the other hand, is slow to adapt to changing realities, has a history of poor oversight and management, and lacks expertise in the matter of child rearing. Why replace a good model of accountability, such as the market, with a poor one, such as politics and bureaucracy?

Colorado bureaucrats are artificially raising the price of day care for parents, which will most hurt poor families struggling to get by, and who need their children looked after so that both parents can work. As usual, the government is standing in their way, instead of by their side. This is overgovernment.