No alleged treachery about it, folks. The Washington Post has a cover story about the intelligence work that Nord and her predecessor, Hal Stratton have been engaged in. These so-called "gift travel" trips – about 30 of them – included missions to China, Hong Kong, Spain, San Francisco, New Orleans and a golf resort on Hilton Head Island, S.C. The sponsors of these missions: Lobbying and industry groups representing businesses that allegedly make products that could be possibly considered dangerous, like toys.
This certainly will drive the toy-haters into a deeper frenzy, of course. But what should scare and shame them is that The Post has destroyed our greatest weapon in the superhuman arms race; Nord wasn't taking these trips for pleasure: These were fact-finding and advocacy missions. Nord was a double agent. Acting as the CPSC chief, she had top-level access here and abroad, and she had our enemies wrapped around her finger, which is sponsored by Fisher Price, so the wrapping had to be done carefully, so as not to obscure the branding. She kept tabs on China's nano-tech army, even as she slyly pushed for them to flood our markets with lead-fortified toys. She knew damn well that enhancing our children with lead would form the foundation of our super-powered soldiers (see related post below), who would be both murderous and easy to control, like freepers.
Now that the stunted cat is out of the proverbial bag (and suffering from kidney failure and ADD), lead consumption could dip to all-time lows, putting the United States roundly behind the Chinese-manufactured 8-ball (it's really cheap). Our future is now in peril, and the one person whose mission was central to our success has been rendered impotent.
When the final histories of man are written, the authors undoubtedly will snicker at our nation's rabid, unhinged fear of lead. This simple and essential metal has become the boogieman du jour, as the United States continues to ignore real issues, such as the upcoming end of life as we know it (see related post, below). So, as Rome burns (or sits five years away from the event horizon of a supermassive black hole), we don't grab the pails and start a line; no, we panic. We panic about toys.
Ignoring the old addage that if it's a toy it can't be bad, some of our "leaders" have decided that bucking the free market is the answer with recall after hysteric recall. But their so-called solutions miss the mark on many levels – most notably in the role lead can play in the fast-approaching superhuman arms race. See, lead is the long-lost Super-Soldier serum. By fortifying our childrens' bodies with lead, we are making a generation of supermen and women: heavy metal warriors, who will soundly thump the marauding hordes of nanobot-enhanced Red Chinese repo-men sure to come.
Now, some decry theories that lead exposure can affect thought processes and personality. All the better: What's better than super-powered soldiers? Super-powered soldiers with hyper-violent tendencies and hair-trigger tempers, that's what. Booyah!
But, in all seriousness, when you get to the nutcutter of the whole thing, the nation suffers most when businesses are forced to accept any responsibility for their actions. The White House and the CPSC Chairwoman Nancy Nord are courageously toeing the line, but the nation's resolve is shaky and the siren song of regulation is wailing across the land of the free.
So, as a public service, I am responding with a song of my own. Well, not exactly one of my own, but this little ditty laid down by the stone cold Milton Friedman Choir is sure to put the lead back into the pencils of patriotic capatilists everywhere, even in China.