Pages

Showing posts with label salmonella. Show all posts
Showing posts with label salmonella. Show all posts

Monday, August 11, 2008

Salmonella and the Government


Tomato farmers are suing the government over the big tomato ban declared by the FDA. Seems the ban caused them to take a pretty big loss. You can read about it at Bloomberg.


As a crabby critic and small-government fiscal conservative, I don't know what to think. The government took action to keep people from getting sick, but caused financial damage to innocent farmers in the process...

All I have are questions:

Could the ban and the tracking down the source have been done more efficiently?

Do we need the USDA to guarantee the safety of our food supply? Read Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle" before answering.

Could private enterprise do the job better? Would you trust a business more than the government, especially after the mortgage mess and Wall Street financial bacchanalia that have cost us dearly? The business and finance people damn near wrecked our economy and so far we haven't seen too many people pay for it.

On the other hand, businesses really guard their reputation. When's the last time a car spontaneously combusted, ala the late 60's Corvaire? Businesses do have a financial incentive to not harm the consumer.

Is it a good idea to routinely get fresh food from all over the world? Would consuming only regionally grown food be a better alternative? That is the progressives' answer, and they are not always wrong. Think about it: If a local grower poisons some people his business probably wouldn't survive the fallout. Also, I haven't heard of any salmonella cases originating from a Saturday farmers market.

I don't have the answers, but I urge you to ponder these issues if you care about the proper role of government. Sorry this wasn't funny.