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Lawsuit against
fast-food industry is attack on personal responsibility, Libertarians
say
WASHINGTON,
DC -- A lawsuit filed by an obese New Yorker
against
several popular fast-food chains should be immediately dismissed,
Libertarians say, because individuals ? and not restaurants like Burger
King ? are responsible for what they eat.
"Claiming
you don't know that fatty food is bad for you ? now that's a
real whopper!" said Steve Dasbach, Libertarian Party executive
director. "This man and his lawyer should be rebuked for filing this
preposterous suit ? then forced to reimburse the targeted companies for
any legal expenses."
Caesar Barber,
a 5-foot-10-inch, 272-pound maintenance worker, filed a suit in Bronx
Supreme Court last week that accuses McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's
and KFC Corp. of false advertising because they "misled" him
about the nutritional value of their food. Barber says he has been eating
fast food "four or five times a week" since the 1950s and blames
that for his diabetes, high blood pressure and series of heart attacks.
The lawsuit
seeks unspecified monetary damages and also aims to force the fast-food
industry to offer "greater variety" to consumers,
including vegetarian meals. Supporters also hope to spur federal
legislation requiring warning labels on fast food similar to those on
tobacco products.
"This
lawsuit isn't just an attack on Burger King and McDonald's; it's
an attack on the very notion of personal responsibility, without which
a free society can't function," Dasbach said. "Does anyone really
believe that Mr. Barber was too dumb to know that repeatedly gorging
himself on saturated fat was less healthy than ordering, say, a fruit
dish or a chef salad? Has he never heard of the words 'dieters'
platter,' 'health club,' or 'No, thanks?' And does anyone want to
reward him for that behavior by forcing the restaurant industry to fork
over millions of dollars?
"Keep
in mind that if businesses can be punished every time someone
abuses their products, eventually they will go bankrupt, their
employees will be jobless, and responsible consumers won't have access
to these products."
And make
no mistake: This lawsuit isn't designed to compensate one man for his
medical expenses; it's designed to extort billions of dollars
from the fast-food industry, Dasbach warned.
"Barber's
attorney, Samuel Hirsch, has called the legal action 'the
first of its kind' and likened it to the lawsuits against the tobacco
industry," Dasbach said. "It's no accident that he targeted
the four
largest fast-food chains in America, rather than a mom-and-pop
restaurant: He and his client are far more interested in shaking down
successful businesses than in changing the menu at McDonald's."
Though Americans
might be outraged and even amused by this lawsuit, no one should be surprised,
Libertarians say.
"The
successful lawsuits against tobacco companies set the precedent
that people were not responsible for their own unhealthy behavior,"
Dasbach said. "Politicians were only too happy to pile on by suing
tobacco companies for billions of dollars and using the money to create
new programs. It became inevitable that other industries, such as guns
and even fast food, would be targeted."
But instead
of wondering which industries are going to be next,
Americans should stand up for personal responsibility and demand an end
to such ridiculous lawsuits, Dasbach said.
"The
court should throw this lawsuit out immediately ? before Mr.
Barber makes a meal out of the entire restaurant industry."
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