From time to time, advocates of one policy position or another will try to connect an unrelated matter to national security. For example, you might hear someone say immigration is a national-security issue because we don’t want terrorists sneaking across the border illegally. Or energy policy is a national-security issue because we don’t want to have to rely on the Middle East for oil.
Some are less plausible than others. John McCain, for example, recently insisted that “the rights of the unborn [have] a lot to do with national security.” He had trouble explaining why.
This one’s even worse. (thanks to reader M.K.)
A former surgeon general warned Friday that America’s obesity epidemic is a national security problem as the more than 9 million overweight and obese children in the country threaten to shrink the pool of eligible servicemen and women.
Tucson’s Dr. Richard Carmona, who finished his term as surgeon general in 2006 and now chairs the Strategies to Overcome and Prevent Obesity Alliance, said that obesity is no longer an individual problem but one that “undermines the strength of our nation.” […]
The rapidly growing population of overweight, obese and physically unfit children is starting to affect the military, Carmona said. He noted that obesity is one of the most common reasons servicemen cannot fully perform their duties.
Carmona added that obesity is “the terror within.”
Now, I can appreciate the fact that obesity is a serious public-health issue, but does it also have to be a national-security issue? Are we really worried that we won’t have enough svelte Americans to serve in the military? It seems like a stretch.