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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: The Craziest Regulations in the Obama Era The Obama administration set a record by issuing 97,110 pages of regulations for nearly 4,000 new federal rules, at an estimated cost of nearly $350 billion. Rules such as the Obamacare employer mandate and the Environmental Protection Agencys regulations over power plants and rivers, streams, and ponds are well known, and reflect the expansion of the federal bureaucracy. But lesser known rules shed light on the size and scope of the government, as well. Here are the craziest federal regulatory moves in the Obama era: The pronouns he and she were too heteronormative for the Department of Labor when it introduced a new anti-discrimination regulation last year. The agency proposed removing the terms he and she from a regulation in an effort to avoid the gender binary. The rule also added sex stereotyping, transgender status, and gender identity to the list of types of discriminatory behavior prohibited under a federal job training program. The rule was finalized in December, and gender-specific terminology from the law was removed, including any reference to he or she, him or her, and his or her. The Department of Transportation authorized pigs to fly as emotional support animals in 2012. The rules were intended to eliminate discrimination against disabled persons when they fly, and official guidance OKd pot-bellied pigs, which can weigh as much as 300 pounds. [I]f you determine that the pot-bellied pig is a service animal, you must permit the service animal to accompany the passenger to her seat provided the animal does not obstruct the aisle or present any safety issues and the animal is behaving appropriately in a public setting, the manual stated. One major regulation from Obamacare was adding calorie requirements to menus in restaurant chains across the nation. But defining what constitutes a menu was not easy. The rules, which were blasted as impossible to comply with and carried criminal penalties for not labeling a food correctly, are estimated to cost the industry $1.7 billion. The regulation was so specific that it announced that seasonal pumpkin spice muffins would have to be labeled, but not crushed dried peppers, which are considered a condiment that is exempt. The definition for menu reached 171 words, and the final regulation applied to things that are not menus, such as advertisements and coupons. The 2010 guidelines for the Americans with Disabilities Act were not finalized until two years later, and the government included a provision that store owners should let miniature horses in if they are used as guide animals. The guidelines also regulated everything from limiting the height of slopes on miniature golf courses, and other various requirements at shooting ranges and saunas to accommodate the disabled. Public accommodation was extended to mini-horses if the miniature horse has been individually trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of the individual with a disability. However, Ponies and full-size horses are not covered. Another unintended consequence of the healthy school lunch law pushed by First Lady Michelle Obama was that thousands of kids were weighed in daycare. Section 223 of the Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act mandated a study of food in daycare, which included measuring the height and weight of 3,000 kids. Children will be asked to cooperate with study staff who will weigh and measure them for the Standing Height and Weight Form, according to a notice of a regulation that codified the section of the law. Federal regulators extended their hand to Christmas lights at the Consumer Product Safety Commission. A regulation posted in 2015 deemed certain Christmas decorations a substantial product hazard if they did not meet the governments standards for wire size, overcurrent protection, and strain relief. The final rule applied to stars, wreathes, candles without shades, light sculptures, blow-molded (plastic) figures, and animated figures, but not solar-powered products. The military was not exempt from bizarre rules. Under orders from then-Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel, the Navy searched sailors workspaces to make sure they did not have any pin up calendars that could be degrading or offensive to women. In an attempt to curb sexual assault, Secretary of the Navy Ray Maybus sent a memo in June 2013 that more than once a year commanding officers would inspect workplaces to ensure they are free from materials that create a degrading, hostile, or offensive work environment. Even bathrooms were inspected, and any unprofessional calendars or posters were taken away as contraband. In 2014, the Obama administration received headlines for plans to regulate cow flatulence. The goal of cutting methane emissions from the dairy industry by 25 percent would have to target cow flatulence, since the EPA considers beef and dairy cattle as the largest domestic animal emitters of methane by far. California followed suit last year. Comparing himself to Noah from the Bible, Gov. Jerry Brown announced new legislation that regulates cow farts, and dramatically reduces methane emissions by 2030. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: HAPPY2BME-4UM (#0)
I guess our fed masters can decree anything. Personally, I am offended, frightened, and hurt, by all these regs and demand that they be immediately rescinded, now!
The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable. ~ H. L. Mencken
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