Last month, the Consumer Product Safety Commission created a firestorm when a member floated the idea of banning future sales of gas stoves after they were linked to childhood asthma. The CPSC walked back the suggestion, but Tennessee lawmakers have filed legislation that would guarantee Tennesseans the “freedom to cook” at home.
under what regulatory power does the idiots in the cpsc have to make medical decisions?
ReplyDeleteOne of the commissioners of the CPSC is the son of Richard Trumka, former head of the AFL-CIO. If you don't accept Junior's expertise as a medical authority he'll hit you over the head with a baseball bat.
Deletecome and get it.
ReplyDeleteIt is not about stopping a cooking and heating method that has been used for well over one hundered years with negligable effects on humans. Its about control. Government over-reach.
ReplyDeleteLook what happened in Ohio as soon as laws to protect the people from dangerous railroad accidents were rescinded.
irontomflint
Cooking leads to eating leads to obesity leads to death.
ReplyDeleteMake eating illegal!
Living leads to death. Make living illegal. Oh wait, Agenda 20xx (sorry lost track).
DeleteSteve S6
"describe communism in 10 words or less".
DeleteI have a gas stove, and gas heat. But, I also have an outdoor wood boiler for heat. Since I lost 3 huge oak trees a few years after ago, I have more wood than I can handle and I’ll be burning wood in protest. I’ll be doing my cooking on the BBQ when it gets warmer and use the wood chips
ReplyDeleteCan't wait for the Consumer Products Safety Commission to realize childhood asthma increased about the time of central air conditioning became common.
ReplyDeleteIn other words, fuck you CPSC and all you leftist jackholes.
Gas stoves are bad they say, meanwhile in Ohio they're telling the residents that a huge cloud overhead is nothing to worry about and perfectly safe. smh.
ReplyDelete- WDS