The discussion on my previous post got me wondering: how is it that we seem to be losing the right to eat what we want?

Steve Bemis alludes to Sinclair Lewis and his expose on the meat slaughterhouses. That led fair-minded Americans to demand government involvement, which seemed the only sane way to go at the time. But so tight has the government’s hold become, farmers can’t even slaughter their own animals. And the National Animal Identification System promises to take us to a new level of government regulation.

Around the same time the government took over monitoring slaughterhouses, it also inserted itself into the milk processing situation, as part of an alliance with industry. This was also in response to a crisis—large-scale epidemics that were blamed on raw milk, and no doubt some of them stemmed from contaminated milk. Once again, so tough has the government’s hold become that we find ourselves begging for a 50-coliform standard rather than a 10-coliform limit in California, and other similarly small favors that would give us at least some access to our milk.

A number of people, like Dave Milano and Meg, seem to think that our ultimate fall-back position is America’s sacred trust in contract law. But how sacred is this trust?

It’s becoming less sacred all the time. Just consider the crisis of the day—the subprime mortgage mess, which is our current equivalent of the slaughterhouse and raw milk crises of a century ago.

Here we have a situation in which businesses got greedy, at the expense of the general population. So now politicians are calling for changes to the subprime mortgages people took out. Remember, those are private contracts between borrowers and lenders.

Last night in the Democratic debate, I heard Hillary Clinton propose that all those subprime mortgages be frozen at 5%, and people cheered. (Barak Obama said he favored subsidies instead to help people hurt by the mortgage problems, which is much different.) What Hillary was really proposing was that the government step in and void hundreds of thousands of contracts. A number of other pols have come up with variations on this theme, and amazingly, very few have criticized this approach of undermining contract law.

I know lots of people want to help the poor people who took out bad mortgages, but sure as the sun comes up, the precedent of changing those mortgage contracts will come back to bite us in the form of an ever-more-intrusive government. After all, if it can undo mortgages, why can’t it undo herdshares and LLCs?

And then there’s the whole matter of health care insurance, which looks ever more likely to become a government project. Here’s another area that business has screwed up, leaving millions without insurance, so now the government will step in.

What kind of health-related clauses might they insert into our health insurance contracts? Well, I could see the feds deciding that your coverage is voided if you’ve been found to consume raw milk. (I hate to give them ideas.)

The U.S. Constitution states in Article 1, Section 10, that, “No state shall…pass any…Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts…” I asked a good friend of mine who’s now a prominent constitutional law professor his assessment of that clause, and he told me it’s been so bent out of shape by exceptions that it has become essentially toothless. Many of the exceptions have to do with the common good and safety. (You get my drift?)

I was struck during the recent hearing in a New York state court  over the Meadowbrook Dairy LLC that the judge, who seemed to have studied the case and understood the facts, passed up an easy opportunity to back a private contractual arrangement. But he clearly wanted nothing to do with it, and passed it over to another court that is likely to be favorable to the New York Department of Agriculture and Markets.  

Our form of dictatorship will be different than what we see in places like Iran or North Korea. There will be more gentle background music. But people who want to live their lives more healthily will have to work very hard at it. I only hope we don’t wind up completely underground.