I am a baseball fan – especially of the Atlanta Braves - so you might
expect me to decry the evils of steroid use. Well, I don’t particularly
care whether or not Gary Sheffield used steroids; he is still one of the
most amazing athletes to ever step onto a diamond. Maybe athletes
shouldn’t use anabolic steroids; maybe baseball should be purged of
steroids – but, that should be up to baseball.
Congress is threatening legislation to ban steroid use in professional
baseball. Okay, let me dig out my copy of the Constitution…”We the
people”…….etc., etc., “Congress shall make no law”…….. Nope, nothing in
there granting government the power to dictate supplementation by
professional athletes. In fact, that document is mostly comprised of
limitations on government.
John McCain disagrees, “government intervention if baseball owners and
players don't agree on a stricter steroid-testing program…I threatened
them last March, and they didn't do anything. I don't know what choice we
have unless we act now.”
Contrast McCain’s statement with one by a true Republican, the man whose
seat he now holds:
I have little interest in streamlining government or in
making it more efficient, for I mean to reduce its size.
I do not undertake to promote welfare, for I propose
to extend freedom. My aim is not to pass laws, but to
repeal them. It is not to inaugurate new programs,
but to cancel old ones that do violence to the
Constitution, or that have failed in their purpose,
or that impose on the people an unwarranted
financial burden. I will not attempt to discover
whether legislation is 'needed' before I have first
determined whether it is constitutionally
permissible. And if I should later be attacked for
neglecting my constituents' 'interests,' I shall reply
that I was informed their main interest is liberty and
that in that cause I am doing the very best I can.
– from The Conscience of a Conservative by Barry
Those are words that can transform a party and win the hearts and minds of
America. John McCain is no Barry Goldwater. Thank God we didn’t elect
this would-be dictator president!
We live in a country where estrogen is essentially forced on a woman after
a certain age, a woman can get testosterone to increase her libido and a
man can get estrogen to make him more feminine - but if a man tries to
increase his testosterone level, the DEA will knock down his door and send
his doctor to jail! I smell the stench of radical feminism here. Maybe
anabolic hormones are bad for you, maybe they are immoral – I don’t know.
I do know that government is meddling in matters where it has no place.
Earlier this year, our benevolent nanny state of a government moved to
outlaw the hormonal precursors to natural testosterone commonly known as “andros”.
Last year, you could walk into nearly any vitamin store in the country,
and buy andro products that would help your body produce peak levels of
testosterone. These products were legal, safe and relatively cheap. Even
though there is no documentation of anyone ever being harmed by such
products, the FDA moved to ban them.
The full story of the andro ban can be found at
www.t-mag.com, as well as information on alternative
products that are still legal. This site is run by sports nutritionists,
bio-chemists and doctors, most of whom are also body builders and power
lifters. They know a bit more about the subject than the pasty and
flaccid denizens of Capitol Hill.
Most of the people who read this column will never be directly affected by
McCain’s meddling in professional baseball or the ban on andros, but we
are all affected by government interference in the private sector.
Whenever our government oversteps the bounds of our constitution, all
liberty is at jeopardy. Is it too much to ask that before congress passes
legislation, the sponsor of the bill should show where in our Constitution
congress is authorized to do so?
Judson Cox is a political columnist from the
mountains of
North Carolina. He is quickly
gaining recognition as one of the most popular and influential voices of
his generation. As a college student, President of the Foundation for
Conservative American Values and Editor In Chief of the North Carolina
Conservative (soon to be North Carolina’s largest circulation newspaper)
he has a unique perspective on matters of politics, economics and culture.