Source: Calgary Sun (Canada) Contact: http://www.canoe.ca/CalgarySun/ Pubdate: Tue, 23 Jun 1998 Author: DAVID FRUM -- The Financial Post ABSOLUTE ABSURDITY REALITY IS USUALLY MORE OUTLANDISH THAN ANY SATIRIST COULD IMAGINE Let them ban booze -- the great journalist H.L. Mencken quipped at the beginning of Prohibition in the U.S. -- and next they'll want to ban cigarettes, jazz and custard pies. If you stayed awake in high school English, you'll recognize Mencken's jape as an example of reductio ad absurdum. Once upon a time, the reductio was a splendid method of demolishing crank nostrums. No longer. Our cranks are more robust than they used to be -- and none of the absurdities their critics invent to mock them with can come close to the absurdities they actually believe in. The U.S. Congress is, for example, engaged in a great battle over a big new tax on the vice at the head of Mencken's list: Cigarettes. Opponents of the tobacco hysteria have tried to quiet it with, among other arguments, Mencken's old taunt: If you want to tax cigarettes to deter people from using them, what about fatty food? I've used the french fry reductio ad absurdum more than a few times myself in the tobacco debate, and I have always thought it a doozy. A regular diet of burgers and fries is almost as dangerous a habit as smoking. After all, if we're taxing people for failing to take good care of their health, why single out smokers? Alas, over the past few months, the french fry argument has begun to elicit a disturbing new reaction from the anti-tobacco folks. Tax junk food? Hmmm - -- that's an idea. There are few things in life more horrifying than that sudden contemplative look on the face of a liberal as he ponders an unthought-of new tax: A look half reflecting greed for the cash, and half pure delight of discovering a new way to boss one's fellow-citizens around. A few weeks ago, a senior editor at an influential liberal weekly in Washington took up the cause. Conservatives, she wrote, are always saying that after cigarettes, junk food will be next. Well, she continued, why not? The idea had lodged. Shortly afterward, I saw the french fry tax being debated by two talking heads on cable TV. In Mencken's day, you could still hope to kill off ludicrous ideas for social uplift by mocking them. But our contemporary version of social uplift defies exaggeration, and any last feeble attempt to exaggerate is likely to be taken -- not as a joke -- but as a suggestion. I remember when we still argued over compulsory seat-belt laws. Those of us against them warned if this sort of law were allowed to pass, we would soon be asked to accept compulsory bicycle helmet laws -- and then (hardi-har-har) compulsory tricycle helmet laws. Don't be paranoid, we were told, and the seat-belt laws were enacted. But take a look at your local playground: Every three-year-old there is struggling under the weight of a crash helmet. And nobody thinks it's funny. When Latin was removed from the public school curriculum in the '70s, dyspeptic conservatives could grumble that at the rate things were going, the schools would soon cease teaching spelling. Now that they actually have ceased teaching spelling, what is left to predict? The English-language equivalent of the reductio ad absurdum is the slippery slope. But we are long past worrying about taking a step down the slippery slope -- we are lying in a heap at the bottom, looking backward and upward at 30 years worth of downhill skidmarks. There is no place for the satirist in 20th-century America, the delightful satirist Tom Wolfe has complained, because reality is always more outlandish than anything he can imagine. Physicists tell us there exists a temperature, absolute zero, beyond which nothing can be colder. I sometimes wonder, as I watch one reductio ad absurdum after another, whether in similar fashion we have not reached the point of absolute absurdity. - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)