And then they came for the Skittles

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Opinion
And then they came for the Skittles
Opinion
And then they came for the Skittles
White Skittles
FILE- This June 1, 2016, file photo shows Skittles in New York. Skittles has temporarily ditched its rainbow theme in favor of an all-white look in the United Kingdom and Germany in order to celebrate LGBT pride. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

My 9-year-old son and his teammates often buy
Skittles
at wrestling tournaments. Their theory is that eating them before matches gives them energy — especially certain colored ones.

“The red ones make you kick a**,” one boy told me. (I told him that’s good but that he shouldn’t use that word.)


CALIFORNIA COULD BAN SKITTLES, SOUR PATCH KIDS, AND CAMPBELL’S SOUP OVER ADDITIVES

As it happens, Skittles has been in the news lately. Proposed legislation in California
would ban the candy
, which was first introduced in North America in 1979. At issue are several chemicals most people have never heard of — brominated vegetable oil, red dye No. 3, propylparaben, titanium dioxide, and potassium bromate — that critics allege are dangerous.

“Why are these toxic chemicals in our food?”
asked
health advocate Susan Little. “We know they are harmful and that children are likely eating more of these chemicals than adults.”

Candy companies said the claims have no merit,
pointing out
that none of the ingredients have been banned by the Food and Drug Administration.

“Food safety is the No. 1 priority for U.S. confectionery companies,” said a spokesman for the National Confectioners Association. “Chocolate and candy are safe to enjoy, as they have been for centuries.”

Many parents might be shocked by claims that Skittles is harmful, but they shouldn’t be. The war on Skittles is part of a broader effort to control what products consumers can buy.

That gasoline-powered car you drive? Sorry, it’s an existential threat to the environment. Those large sugary drinks you enjoy with your New York-style pizza?
Not a chance
. The plastic straw you’re using to sip those drinks with? Also harmful to the environment. And don’t even think about
buying a gas-powered stove
.

This is the trendy
new strain of anti-capitalism
. It’s designed to protect humanity by regulating what you consume — everything from what you eat and drive to the size of your house and how many calories you get to take in each day. The ideology is detailed in German author Ulrike Herrmann’s bestselling book
Das Ende des Kapitalismus
(English: The End of Capitalism).

Not all of these efforts have yet been realized, of course. Many, such as
California’s ban
on the sale of gas-powered cars, are scheduled to go into effect years from now.

Nor does all anti-capitalism look the same. Some proponents want to
eliminate meat
consumption to save the planet (in parts of Europe, this is
primarily being done
through emission regulations). Others seek to protect public health by eliminating foods or food ingredients they deem harmful, as in the case of Skittles.

But notice the common theme: In both instances, they get to choose, not you. This is what truly matters.

“The most basic question is not what is best, but who shall decide what is best,” the bestselling economist Thomas Sowell has observed.

Banning Skittles might seem trivial, but it’s not. It’s an assault on limited government and the idea that consumers should be free to decide for themselves what to consume. It’s a battle over
who is sovereign
in society and gets to decide what is produced: consumers or planners.

And that’s what the Skittles fight is really about: politics, influence, and power. Indeed, proponents of the legislation admit they don’t think California’s bill will pass, but they hope it will draw the attention of the FDA.

“I think its purpose, which is valuable, is getting the FDA to look again at these chemicals and possibly to reevaluate its entire system for reviewing food additives,” UCLA School of Law professor Diana Winters
told
the Guardian.

Unlike Winters, I won’t decide for you whether you should eat Skittles. I have no idea what brominated vegetable oil even is. But I do know that
tens of billions
of Skittles are consumed each year, and children are doing OK. I’m aware of other government bans on
perfectly safe candies
.

So yes, I’ll allow my son to keep eating Skittles before his matches. As far as warnings from public health experts, I put as much stock in those as claims that the red Skittles help him “kick a**.”


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Jon Miltimore (
@miltimore79
) is the managing editor of the Foundation for Economic Education. 
Follow him
 on Substack.

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