By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Concealed RepublicanConcealed Republican
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Guns
  • Politics
  • Videos
Reading: Global elites think you’re too stupid for soda and beer
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Concealed RepublicanConcealed Republican
  • News
  • Guns
  • Politics
  • Videos
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Guns
  • Politics
  • Videos
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Advertise
  • Advertise
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Concealed Republican > Blog > News > Global elites think you’re too stupid for soda and beer
News

Global elites think you’re too stupid for soda and beer

Jim Taft
Last updated: June 21, 2025 4:36 pm
By Jim Taft 15 Min Read
Share
Global elites think you’re too stupid for soda and beer
SHARE

The latest wheeze from global public health elites? Jack up taxes on tobacco, alcohol, sugary drinks, and processed food by 50% to raise $3.7 trillion in new revenue. They call it “health policy.” In plain English, it’s government-sanctioned theft.

This isn’t about curing disease. It’s about expanding state power. These so-called health taxes, pushed by academic ideologues and international bureaucrats, are little more than economic punishment disguised as progress. They won’t meaningfully reduce illness, but they’ll absolutely hit working people the hardest.

Sin taxes don’t foster well-being — they weaponize economic pain against the people who can least afford it.

The new push for massive taxes on soda, smokes, beer, and snacks is social engineering with a hefty price tag. The goal isn’t better health so much as behavioral compliance. And who pays for it? Not corporations. Not policymakers. Regular people. Especially those already stretched thin.

The promise of $3.7 trillion in new revenue tells you everything you need to know. This is about cash, not caring. You’re not going to fix the obesity crisis by making a Coke cost $4. You’re just making life worse for the guy who wants a cold drink after work.

These aren’t just products. They’re small pleasures — a beer at dinner, a smoke on break, a soda on a hot afternoon. Legal, affordable, familiar. Stripping them from people’s lives in the name of “health” doesn’t uplift anyone. It makes life more miserable.

And this plan doesn’t educate or empower. It punishes. It uses taxes to bludgeon people into compliance. That’s not public health — that’s moral authoritarianism.

Proponents claim that higher prices discourage consumption, especially among young people. But that’s not smart policy — it’s an admission that the entire strategy relies on pricing people out of their own choices.

That’s not a sign of sound policy; it’s a confession that the aim is to price people out of their own choices. It’s hard not to see this as profoundly elitist. A worldview in which an ignorant public must be nudged, coerced, and taxed into making decisions deemed acceptable by a distant class of arrogant policymakers.

Sin taxes don’t foster well-being — they weaponize economic pain against the people who can least afford it. The more someone spends on a drink or a cigarette, the less they can spend on rent, groceries, or gas. In the U.K., economists found that sin taxes cost low-income families up to 10 times more than they cost the wealthy. That holds true in the United States as well. These are regressive by design.

History offers a warning. Prohibition didn’t end drinking — it empowered criminals. Today, in places like Australia, black markets for vapes and other restricted products are booming. When governments overregulate, people continue to consume. They just go underground, and quality, safety, and accountability go with them.

Public health bureaucrats love to talk about the “commercial determinants of health,” blaming industry for every social ill. But they ignore the personal determinants that matter even more: freedom, dignity, and the right to make informed decisions.

RELATED: Cigarettes and beer: The heady perfume that transports me to my childhood

guruXOOX via iStock/Getty Images

People already know the risks of smoking, drinking, and sugar consumption. They’ve seen the labels and heard the warnings for years. They don’t need lectures from bureaucrats, government ministers, or international agencies. What they need is respect — and the freedom to live as they choose.

These new tax schemes don’t offer support or alternatives. They rely on coercion, not persuasion. The state becomes the enforcer, not the helper. It’s a government model that punishes pleasure and equates restriction with virtue.

The sinister core of this health tax agenda lies in its relentless condescension. It assumes people are too stupid, too reckless, or too addicted to choose what’s best for themselves, and so government must intervene forcefully and repeatedly.

This is control, not compassionate governance.

A better path exists — one rooted in harm reduction, not prohibition. Encourage low-sugar drink options. Expand access to safer nicotine alternatives. Support moderate alcohol consumption. Respect the people you’re trying to help.

If public health advocates truly want to improve outcomes, they should abandon these regressive, punitive proposals. They should promote innovation, not punishment. Education, not enforcement.

Because real public health doesn’t treat people like problems to be managed. It treats them like citizens — free to live, choose, and thrive.



Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

Some Georgia Republicans Seek to Add New ‘Gun-Free Zone’ to State Law

Newsom Calls Ninth Circuit Decision on Ammunition Background Checks ‘Slap in the Face’

WATCH LIVE: Blaze Media’s coverage of President Trump’s first address to Congress since his historic return to the White House

Top Hegseth adviser escorted out of Pentagon as part of probe into Houthi text leak

US is assisting Israel against Iranian missile attacks, official confirms

Share This Article
Facebook X Email Print
Previous Article Maher, Hunt slam Whoopi Goldberg for Black American-Iran regime comparison Maher, Hunt slam Whoopi Goldberg for Black American-Iran regime comparison
Next Article Rhode Island Legislature Approves Bill Banning Sale, Transfer of ‘Assault Weapons’ Rhode Island Legislature Approves Bill Banning Sale, Transfer of ‘Assault Weapons’
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Latest News

Don Lemon Nods Along as Democrat Likens GOP Map to the Holocaust [WATCH]
Don Lemon Nods Along as Democrat Likens GOP Map to the Holocaust [WATCH]
Politics
Wind Winding Down Wednesday
Wind Winding Down Wednesday
Politics
Thousands Fled To America … Only To Find Their Next Likely Leader A Socialist Who Supports Brutally Violent Regime
Thousands Fled To America … Only To Find Their Next Likely Leader A Socialist Who Supports Brutally Violent Regime
Politics
Virginia Sheriff Slashes Concealed Carry Permit Fees
Virginia Sheriff Slashes Concealed Carry Permit Fees
News
AP gets annihilated online for sympathetic report on terrorists injured in Israeli pager attack
AP gets annihilated online for sympathetic report on terrorists injured in Israeli pager attack
News
NewsGuild urges New York Times transparency after critics reassigned
NewsGuild urges New York Times transparency after critics reassigned
News
© 2025 Concealed Republican. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?