If-at home-you cook,cool and store a rice dish quickly,then reheat thoroughly-you are less likely to have problems. This is because you have control of all steps in the process. The problem arises with food prepared outside the home. This is why many instances of food poisoning due to take-aways or meals out occur. Too many take aways will have rice sitting out-this gives the bacillus the perfect conditions to flourish.
It's silly to be flippant and take the 'I always do it/I'm alive' approach.....just be very,very careful how you handle rice,or where you eat it.
You don't want this - and it has nothing to do with 'food policing gone mad'
From wiki-
"B. cereus is responsible for a minority of foodborne illnesses (2–5%), causing severe nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.[6] Bacillus foodborne illnesses occur due to survival of the bacterial endospores when food is improperly cooked.[7] Cooking temperatures less than or equal to 100 °C (212 °F) allows some B. cereus spores to survive.[8] This problem is compounded when food is then improperly refrigerated, allowing the endospores to germinate.[9] Cooked foods not meant for either immediate consumption or rapid cooling and refrigeration should be kept at temperatures above 60 °C (140 °F).[8] Germination and growth generally occurs between 10–50 °C (50–122 °F),[8] though some strains are psychrotrophic.[10] Bacterial growth results in production of enterotoxins, one of which is highly resistant to heat and to pH between 2 and 11;[11] ingestion leads to two types of illness, diarrheal and emetic (vomiting) syndrome.[12]
The diarrheal type is associated with a wide-range of foods, has an 8- to 16.5-hour incubation time and is associated with diarrhea and gastrointestinal pain. Also known as the long-incubation form of B. cereus food poisoning, it might be difficult to differentiate from poisoning caused by Clostridium perfringens.[11]
The emetic form is commonly caused by rice that is not cooked for a time and temperature sufficient to kill any spores present, then improperly refrigerated. It can produce a toxin, cereulide, which is not inactivated by later reheating. This form leads to nausea and vomiting 1–5 hours after consumption. It can be difficult to distinguish from other short-term bacterial foodborne pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus.[11]"