SAHDad
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2009
- Messages
- 2,343
I voted yes. not because I like taxes but because I'm on a real food movement.
Soda is just about the worst thing for a person can put in their bodies, it's also probably the cheapest thing to buy. In a fantasy world it would be nice if every one took responsibilty for their own health but in the real world, America is super obese, high rate of diabetes, high blood pressure. Plus we're killing our young kids with process food and sugar.
Unfortunately we generally don't make changes until it hurts us in the pockets. Look at gas, before we hit the 4.00/gallon point we were a fun lovin SUV, truck driving country. When gas prices began to hurt that's when everyone had a V-8 slap in the head moment.
Yes, I definitely know it's hard, I'm the girl who is trying to wean ourself off of coke. LOL
And, unfortunately, we also make knee-jerk reactions without actually trying to determine root causes. A couple of doctors (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/23/science/23tier.html) are pushing the idea that humans have a "set-point" in their brains that regulates sodium intake. Because so much food is low-sodium, they hypothesize that we actually eat more in order to hit that point. More calories in = heavier people. No one wants to actually test it, of course, because then it might mean that the nutritional guidelines of the last couple decades were really wrong. Again. (They revised them in 2000, because they realize that the low-fat stuff may have been causing people to consume more calories, leading to obesity and diabetes.)
Personally, I rather think that the federal government, by arbitrarily choosing to tax certain foods over others, is an assault (albeit a mild one) on liberties and freedoms. Is it as bad as banning them outright? No. But it is the subtle creep of attempting to make something with which some people disagree illegal by taxing and regulating it out of existence, provided that its demise can help fill the federal coffers in the process.
My guess is that, once this tax fails to bring in the proposed revenues (and it will fail, since taxing a behavior always drives it down, while subsidizing it increases it), then they will turn to another, fairly easy target. Maybe prepared coffee drinks. Starbucks and the like ought to be worth a couple extra billion a year. Who is up for an 18% increase in prepared coffee drinks?