« BACK  |  PRINT

RS

MEMBER DIARY

Our Dangerous Dependence on Foreign Chocolate

From the diaries.

America is addicted to chocolate.  Foreign chocolate.

A majority of us consume chocolate each day.  Although the U.S. produces only 6% of the world’s cocoa, we consume more than 20%.

The threat is obvious.  It’s time for government to step in and promote alternatives.

Any day, President Obama will be barnstorming the country to tell us, “If we really want chocolate security and chocolate independence, we’ve got to start looking at how we use less cocoa and use sources that we can renew and that we can control, so we are not subject to the whims of what’s happening in other countries.”

Today, we are at the mercy of Africa, which produces over 75% of the world’s cocoa.  That’s an unstable source, which means our chocolate dependency undermines national security.

Each of us probably began with that first innocent M&M but now it’s an unsustainable $13-billion a year habit.  The average American eats 11 pounds of chocolate per year.  We gain weight from chocolate.  Pimples get blamed on chocolate.

Fortunately, alternatives exist.  With proper federal loans and subsidies these can relieve our cravings and wean us from our addiction to chocolate.

Every member of Congress should be ready to spend on Spree.  (And it’s a lot easier to pronounce than Solyndra.)  The economy would be stimulated by the outpouring of government-subsidized alternatives to chocolate.

Subsidizing LifeSavers is another way to demonstrate our commitment to health care.

We can re-affirm our commitment to children if we provide Dots for Tots.

Others would pull for taffy.  The ag sector might prefer Jolly Ranchers.

And why not switch over our ethanol subsidies to candy corn?

Some chocolate alternatives are no-no’s, however.  Promoting Sweet Tarts risks offending the National Organization for Women.  And no self-respecting Democrat would mimic Ronald Reagan by providing Jelly Bellies.

President Obama can lead the way by explaining how we should not rely on foreign chocolate anymore than we should rely on foreign oil.  Of course, we’ll hope he doesn’t mess up his chocolate numbers as he does when he claims we have “only 2%” of global oil reserves.  But he’s using the most restrictive definition possible.  Obama’s own Department of Energy reports that, “Proved reserves are a small subset of recoverable resources.”

As noted by Investors Business Daily, America’s actual oil reserves are 60 times higher than the President’s carefully-chosen number:  “The figure Obama uses — proved oil reserves — vastly undercounts how much oil the U.S. actually contains. In fact, far from being oil-poor, the USA is awash in vast quantities — enough to meet all our country’s oil needs for hundreds of years.”

Mr. Obama is using flimsy and misleading numbers to justify his anti-oil and gas energy policy, and his mega-billion dollar subsidies for “green energy” and “green jobs.”

So perhaps it’s time for him to pivot to another basic necessity, like chocolate.  If that goes well, he could move on to coffee, because we consume 16% of the world’s coffee but grow less than 1%.  And we manufacture less than 1% of the world’s TV sets, yet use 17% of them.  Then there’s olive oil:  We produce a tenth of one percent but use 8% of the world’s supply.  There are plenty of other examples of how we are dependent on trading with other nations,  just as they are dependent on trading with us.

But we have an over-abundance of politicians who are addicted to government subsidies and regulation but allergic to free markets.  After all, the free market could not have produced the $50 light bulb.  It took government to come up with that bright idea.

Former Congressman Ernest Istook is a distinguished fellow at The Heritage Foundation. 

  Follow Ernest on Twitter:  @ErnestIstook

 

COMMENTS

  • JSobieski

    Our minimum wage is also significantly above the minimum wage of other nations on the earth.

    Very creative!!!!!

  • vancouverite

    For example – what are “Proved reserves”? From the EIA document linked to above, Footnote 1, Page 1:

    “EIA defines proved reserves as those volumes of oil and natural gas that geologic and engineering data demonstrate with reasonable certainty to be recoverable in future years from known reservoirs under existing economic and operating conditions. Proved reserves are a small subset of recoverable resources with a probability of recovery of at least 90%.”

    This is important in that both price and engineering control the proved reserves. That is, if the price of oil drops, the proved reserves drop, as some become uneconomical to recover with current proven technologies. If the price rises, more oil becomes available, as previously uneconomical oil now become reasonable to recover.

    The US has lots and lots of known oil; at current prices, with current technologies, most of it is not economically recoverable. We will have that oil when technology has a breakthrough, or when prices increase sufficiently; however, I don’t consider $1,000/bbl oil to be a valid solution to our oil problems, and I bet that most people don’t either.

    It is entirely possible that the US has vastly more oil RESOURCES than does Saudi Arabia – however, we have far less proven oil RESERVES than they do at this time. The distinction is important. As noted by both BP and the Business Review (using an article from The Oil Drum, one of a number of good resources on the oil industry available in blog form – highly recommended), we currently have something on the order of 1/10th of the economically recoverable oil that Saudi Arabia does.

    As noted in this diary, ?Proved reserves are a small subset of recoverable resources.? However, to make recovery of the other resources profitable, the price of oil needs to rise even more. This is not a recipe for driving down oil prices, but for driving UP oil prices. We will eventually go down this road, even if we stop all use of oil for energy, because oil is too important as an industrial chemical. But thinking that all of those oil resources will drive down prices is, most likely, a pipe dream.

    • gafisher

      … may be found in the closely related coffee trade, which America, under the prescient leadership of FDR, replaced with an alternative “fuel” produced by roasting chicory, a common weed. The practice spawned a new industry, led by baristas fondly referred to as “Chicory Chicks.”

      (youtu (dot) be/RCH9mPhfZrw)

  • norris

    With the climate change coming we can grow our own chocolate in Nebraska.

  • Pingback: read

  • aesthete

    We should put up tariffs, and make sure that the only chocolate available to American consumers is fair trade, grown, and processed in America chocolate made with the sweat of the American working class.

    NO BLOOD FOR CHOCOLATE; FURRINER CHOCOLATE GO HOME

  • audax

    When I lived in Kerala South India we had cocoa trees on the farm. Thought they needed a tropical climate? Ernest, are you just funnin’ us?

  • aesthete

    which at their heart hate America, and thus grow a crop that discriminates against American climate.

    Clearly, there’s no other explanation for why cocoa doesn’t grow outside the tropics — and that’s something that’s easily fixable with a 35% tariff and more government regulation.

  • Tbone

    As such, domestic chocolate production will get no tariff protection.

  • lapert

    There have been a few attempts to get commercial growing started there. The only current processing plant I know of is The Original Hawaiian Chocolate Factory near Kona.And I believe they are receiving federal grants from the SBIR program.

    Of course it isn’t a joke when you look at our protectionist policies regarding sugar.

  • davesinsanantonio

    be growing cocoa beans in South Dakota.

    Or, maybe not.

  • acat

  • hobarticus

    The terrorists will use their surplus of valentine candy to outbreed us, making up in numbers what they will lose by all being slightly chubby.

  • garfieldjl

    I miss George W. Bush, he made mistakes sure, but he wasn’t a power hungry meglomaniac.

  • Tbone

    I mean really, look at those eyes.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

    acat, sit down and let’s review the Southern Baptist sacrament of coffee and how cocoa is but a mere desert, and certainly not part of a human’s catechism or acat’sachism.

    Now, what I really want to know, especially given my recent anti-free foreign trade epiphany with Pat Buchanan now approaching God, Son, Holy Ghost and Ronaldus Maxus status… I have ONE question…

    on subject line of my next comment…more later

  • aesthete

    I see that the legacy of slavery in America yet looms large…

  • Tanggor

    After all, I?ve heard that some college students have to pay up to $3000 per year for their chocolate. This is ridiculous.

    Receiving chocolate is a right! A basic Human Right!

    As defined in the Constitution, under the Necessary And Hungry Clause.

  • aesthete

    They’ve already moved towards native treats like mango lassi and sweetened rice — both native and economically sustainable.

    Clearly, we need to either invade a Central American nation and secure their strategic reserves of chocolate, or put up tariffs and subsidies to protect industry here at home if we’re to get out of the strangehold that Africa has us in.

  • funwithknives

    one of my all-time faves

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

    Rolos are manufactured in Pennsylvania.

  • nedescon

    turn America into a chocolate country?

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

    Ain’t that a good word, y’all?

  • Tbone

    your point is?

  • acat

    One this yankee cat uses frequently.

    As far as your survey goes, I tend to buy Hershey’s Natural Unsweetened but will buy other natural unsweetened brands if it’s not available – I can’t eat the “dutch process” stuff, allergies.

    And no, cat is not fat. I put very little sugar in my cocoa or coffee, and it’s the sugar and the sloth, not the fats, that cause weight gain.

    Mew

  • hls87

    Ever since “thee” and “thou” became archaic and “you” became the all-purpous second person pronoun English has lacked the clear distinction between the second person singular pronoun and the second person plural that every romance language preserves. Sometimes the distinction is important and obscuring it is confusing. “Y’all” is an elegant solution. It’s one of the many good things we get from the South and we should all be grateful for it.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

    and pat’s cool with low tariffs on imported chocolate…

  • acat

    Growing cocoa beans in Texas, perhaps?

    Mew

  • demsaresatanic

    promised us before?

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

    is fulfilled…

  • civil truth

    …just humor from here on out.

    The next step of course will be the media outrage against the alleged villainies of Willy Wonka in opposition to Charlie organizing the Oompa-Loompas.

  • jiminga

    I’ll bet your tongue really hurts after pushing it so hard into your cheek. 8-)

  • justperhaps45

    More important is the risk to human well-being poised by the verly sharp, pointy extreme ends of round wooden toothpicks. Gumbleeding is a pointential OSHA recordable. The risk of disease transmission is growing, the unaware are sucking their own blood and swallowing the same (auto-vampireism). The COPPAHMA (committee on puncture potential and hazardous material abatement) has reclined (fallen down) on it’s critical accountability (job).

    Was this an April Fools exercise for the slow (Federal Bureaucracy)?

  • Jack_Savage

    Now I know why.

  • chuckie

    …..i thot “thee” was the object, “thou” was the subject pronoun…as in “thou shalt not” or “i bring thee”…….

    however, it is correct that y’all is the singular…..all y’all is the plural….

    …….. :)

  • Seedyrom

    my desk. NO, not fat, but a good choco-fix is worthy of temptation. They usually last 2 weeks, assuming others aren’t stealing them, opps I mean the liberals. Yes I share, that’s all the wealth redistribution they get.

    Down with the foreign stuff. Help Hershey’s and Mar’s and my retirement.

  • Melody Warbington (rwm52)

    along with Hershey’s kisses. I keep mine in the ‘fridge at home. No doubt they’d disappear if I did the same at work. I share peppermint candy, but if my co-workers want chocolate, they’ll have to work for their own.

    Occasionally, I buy the Hershey’s variety bag of mini candy bars just to spread the love, especially for the dark chocolate.

  • hls87

    “You”, in archaic English, was plural or formal (like vous in French). Now most of us use “you” promiscuously for singular,plural, subject and object, formal and familiar.

    Y’all is used for both subject and object, but I didn’t know that it was singular. I thought it was typically plural and I don’t remember ever hearing “all y’all.” When does one use y’all instead of you? Is it a less familiar form of address used for strangers and elders (like “vous”)?