If you have a young child in Europe and allow him to blow up a balloon or blow on a party whistle, you might just be a criminal under new safety rules handed down by the EU Nanny State.
You know that thing kids like to blow on and it makes a thing sort of like a tongue roll out? (I have no idea what it’s called.) That thing’s banned, too, for all kids under the age of 14.
When I oppose giving bureaucrats the power to make up rules for us to live our lives by, I frequently make up examples of things such bureaucrats could do with their power. And I ask, “Would you like it if they made up a rule about what color you could paint your house?” Or whatever. The response is always the same. “You’re just being silly,” they say. “They’d never do that.”
But as people grow comfortable with the idea that bureaucrats have the power to rule their lives, the bureaucrats do take more and more and more of these absurdities and turn them into reality. What starts off as absurd hyperbole or even satire ends up turning into reality. Parents are no longer exercising their judgment about what’s safe. Games that have been safe and reasonable for generations are suddenly banned or made hard to get.
What does it take to hold thug with a badge accountable for murder?
Why do Birmingham taxpayers give $500,000 yearly to college sports?
California pays $205,075 to move shrub that typically sells for $16
Inflated expectations make good people act like entitled children
Photo assignment in dimly lit gym kickstarted my love for basketball
Without hope for a better future, depression grabs us by the throat

If politics sends you into a rage, is it really a good use of your time?
Tough problem: What does a free society do about unfit parents?
OK, morons, we’ll finally admit it: We really are smarter than you