The feds' war on school-lunch french fries

The USDA may change lunch menus — all but banning the venerable "white potato" — and the spud industry is sputtering with rage

Whether baked or fried, the white potato is not healthy enough for kids, according to the USDA, which is contemplating banning it from federally subsidized school lunches.
(Image credit: Jana Birchum/Getty Images)

The U.S. Department of Agriculture is mulling a near-total ban on potatoes from federally subsidized school breakfasts and lunches — limiting servings of all spuds but sweet potatoes (plus other starchy vegetables) to just one cup per student per week. While a livid potato industry defends its fare as a "gateway vegetable" that eases kids into healthier, greener veggies, some lawmakers are equally incensed. "Where in the Constitution does it say the fed. government should regulate potatoes in school lunches? It doesn't," tweeted Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) Are the feds going too far?

This is the nanny state run amok: When the federal "food police" are done with us, says Rick Moran at The American Thinker, "we will all be eating dandelions and alfalfa sprouts, with bean curd pie for dessert." Must everything kids actually relish be considered unhealthy? Potatoes aren't. And don't get me started on "this nonsense about only one cup of corn a week," or peas, or even lima beans. It's downright irrational.

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