Four years ago, I wrote about how dishwashers don’t work very well because of foolish red tape from Washington.
The clever folks at the Competitive Enterprise Institute put together a video on the topic.
I especially like the fake commercial at the start of the video.
But I don’t like the way my dishwasher performs.
And Jeffrey Tucker of the American Institute for Economic Research shares my disdain.
American dishwashers used to work. They were wonderful labor-saving devices. They kept our kitchens cleaner. They sanitized the dishes, helping to stop cross-contamination and generally improving health over the iffy process of handwashing. …Then one day they just stopped doing the work. What happened? …Dishwashers used to wash all the dishes in under one hour. Now they take two hours, three hours, and four hours, and still don’t get the dishes clean. …All of this is directly due to government regulations. …Now everything comes out foggy and spotted. This is true no matter which dishwasher you get. …None of this has really hurt the dishwasher industry. Sales have consistently risen for the last ten years. My theory is that people are buying replacements, thinking (rationally) that they just need a newer model. What consumers don’t know, and what manufacturers don’t want to admit, is that they no longer work. The older the model, the more likely it is to be operational.
Here’s the most astounding factoid.
One in five homes have just stopped using their dishwashers altogether.
And here’s the bottom line.
These regulations have caused an infuriating and devastating degradation of the quality of appliances and the quality of life in our homes.
I agree. In my home, I don’t bother putting items in the dishwasher until I’ve thoroughly rinsed them. Otherwise, I’ll find food residue and have to wash them again.
Here’s a chart from the Competitive Enterprise Institute on the average cycle time of dishwashers. As you can see, modern dishwashers take much longer because they do such a poor job.
Since I generally run my dishwasher before heading to bed, I’m not particularly worried about how long it takes.
I just want clean dishes at the end of the process. But that’s now much more difficult because of government.
If you want more examples of the regulatory state’s war on modern life, there are plenty of examples.
- Inferior light bulbs
- Substandard toilets
- Inadequate washing machines
- Dribbling showers
- Dysfunctional gas cans
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Image credit: Bart Everson | CC BY 2.0.