VACCINE DECEPTION

 

VACCINE DECEPTIONS

 

JUNE 2, 2011. In my radio show yesterday, I interviewed Becky Estepp for the second time. Becky is the project manager for EBCALA (Elizabeth Birt Center for Autism Law and Advocacy).

 

Here is what emerged.

 

Recently, California passed a law mandating the pertussis (whooping cough) vaccine for all 7th-12th grade students entering school this fall. This piece of legislation was a response to new cases of whooping cough in California.

 

The state government is now carrying on a PR campaign to get parents to follow through and have their children jabbed with the pertussis shot. However, this vaccine is given in triple form—pertussis, tetanus, and diphtheria. Therefore, the mandate in effect covers all 3 vaccines.

 

Except, despite what the state government of California states, it isn’t a mandate, because all three types of exemptions—medical, religious, and philosophical—are still available. Parents can make use of these. Becky explained how she did exactly that for her child.

 

Obviously, state health officials know these exemptions exist, and yet they are talking as if the exemptions don’t apply. That’s called deception.

 

Since the new law was passed (and what kind of law is it, really, if the exemptions still hold), the results of an investigation into the recent cases of whooping cough have been published. It turns out that 75% of these cases occurred in people WHO HAD BEEN VACCINATED AGAINST PERTUSSIS.

 

This is a stunner.

 

There are several possible interpretations. If one accepts the premise that vaccines are safe and effective, then one could infer that the pertussis vaccine is not effective in protecting people against the disease. If one doesn’t make that assumption of safety and efficacy, one could consider the possibility that the pertussis vaccine caused the illness in some or all of those people who developed whooping cough.

 

Meanwhile, the PR campaign to get parents to have their kids jabbed with the triple diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis shot goes on.

 

Some time ago, I wrote a piece outlining the conditions for a real study that would test any vaccine for efficacy. Length of study, size of groups of volunteers, how to match the groups in terms of nutritional status, past medical history, and so on.

 

I then asserted that NO SUCH STUDY HAS EVER BEEN DONE FOR ANY VACCINE. And I asked for proof such a study had been done. Since then, I’ve received no evidence. Nothing.

 

JON RAPPOPORT

www.nomorefakenews.com

qjrconsulting@gmail.com

 

 

 

CRADLE TO GRAVE, BABY

CRADLE TO GRAVE, BABY

QUICK HITTER

MAY 21, 2011. Much talk these days about phony victims seeking freebies and making up stories to qualify for them. It’s all tied in, of course, to political correctness, whose ultimate goal is inventing so many oppressed people that anyone who laughs must be offending somebody—and will be fined and fired from work for it.

But all this pales by comparison with the agenda of the medical cartel.

Now we’re talking about real heavyweights.

Don’t have a disease or disorder? They’ll invent three or four for you. And cash in on the drugs you use.

The ultimate goal is cradle to grave “care” for everyone. Official “patient” status from the womb to the cemetery—and if they could figure out a way to diagnose and treat you after death, they’d have MDs walking on clouds with butterfly nets.

Permanent patient status isn’t just a device emanating from the cartel. People, millions and millions and millions of them, want it. Want it badly.

For the perks, but also as proud talking points that last a lifetime.

So what do you have?”

Well, ADHD, depression, Restless Leg Syndrome, and Social Anxiety Disorder. I mean, that’s pretty standard stuff. But my doctor recently ran a battery of tests and discovered I’ve got a rare endocrine disease. My thyroid is talking to my ass, and it interferes with sleep.”

Really.”

Yeah. They say one in ten million people develops it after forty. It can be fatal if it isn’t treated. Early diagnosis is crucial.”

That’s exciting. Is there a vaccine for it?”

They’re working on one. So far, they’ve only tested it in mice. But the mice eat each other. It’s a genetic vaccine. It replaces a DNA sequence in the so-called junk area. I’m on the list when they start doing clinical trials in humans.”

That’s very brave of you.”

Well, I feel I need to give back. You know? For all the care I’ve had. My cousin, who had a preventive double mastectomy when she was four, donated a kidney to me last spring. The California State Public Health Commission awarded her a medal at a ceremony in Beverly Hills. What’s that badge you’re wearing?”

Oh. That? Partial brain transplant patient. There are six of us, so far, in the US.”

Wow. Fantastic.”

Right now, it’s experimental, but hopefully next year by waiting for levers on the buttons taking less carrots in the garden…”

Hey, you okay?”

Sure. I wink in and out once or twice a day. It’s nothing. I have a permanent port in my spine. On Thursdays, I sit in my doctor’s office for six hours and they pump in neurotransmitters…”

Maybe you’d like to have dinner with us this weekend. My wife and I—she’s just recovering from her fourth bypass—usually have a few friends over for barbecue. I’m sure they’d like to hear about your transplant.”

Proud. Strong. Medical.

It’s a social system. A substitute for living.

Bringing everyone on the planet under this umbrella would achieve a level of control dictators can only dream about.

If the drugs don’t kill you, surely the soppy goo of the public relations flacks pushing this share-and-care ideal will drown you.

And the thing is, you’ll be tempted to side with the latest account of some heroic medical procedure that “saved a child’s life.”

Doctors today at the Mayo on Rye Clinic performed a 19-hour operation to attach nine-year-old Jimmy Jones’ eyes to the back of his head, when it was discovered his case of sunstroke had escalated into life-threatening Dry Neuron Syndrome.

The really difficult part of the surgery involved re-routing the optic nerve through Jimmy’s cerebellum,” said Dr. Michael Boodnogger, chief surgeon at the Thomas Edison Memorial Children’s Hospital.

To avoid several more hours under anesthesia, the patient’s eyelids were left in place, on his face. But grafts quickly taken from the boy’s knees, last week, were sculpted into ‘hard awnings’ and fixed above the eyes at the back of the head. A small motorized prosthetic, to automatically raise and lower the awnings, is inserted in Jimmy’s spine.

We’re just happy our son isn’t blind and escaped cognitive impairment,” said his father, a kindergarten teacher in the Indianapolis school system. “Now he can pursue his dream of becoming an air traffic controller.”

I’m waiting for elite shrinks to come up with a mental disorder called Freedom Disease (FD). Which of course centers around “the discredited belief that an individual has choice.” It’s a schizoid paranoid hallucination brought on by a genetic mutation, and the treatment is, again, heroic. Doctors blast thousands of random DNA sequences into the body through a sophisticated “shotgun.”

Side effects include “the formation of a weevily hardtack odiferous coating encapsulating both thighs, withering genital paralysis, gradual evaporation of the legs, cruciferous vegetable roots hanging from the ears, the excretion of cow’s milk from skin pores, and with the diminution of IQ to insectoid levels, relentlessly attempting to obtain PhDs right up to the time of death from old age.”

But not to worry, it’s all covered by insurance.

JON RAPPOPORT

www.nomorefakenews.com

qjrconsulting@gmail.com

Visit the site, sign up for email list and receive free articles, and order a copy of my e-book, THE OWNERSHIP OF ALL LIFE, in pdf or Kindle format.

Faking Medical Reality

Faking Medical Reality

by Jon Rappoport

May 9, 2011

NoMoreFakeNews.com

“It is simply no longer possible to believe much of the clinical research that is published, or to rely on the judgment of trusted physicians or authoritative medical guidelines. I take no pleasure in this conclusion, which I reached slowly and reluctantly over my two decades as an editor of The New England Journal of Medicine.” —Marcia Angell, MD

“The secret of acting is sincerity. If you can fake that, you’ve got it made.” —George Burns

What do doctors rely on? What do medical schools rely on? What do medical journals rely on? What do mainstream medical reporters rely on? What do drug companies rely on? What does the FDA rely on?

They all rely on the sanctity of published clinical trials of drugs. These trials determine whether the drugs are safe and effective. The drugs are tested on human volunteers. The results are tabulated. The trial is described in a paper that is printed by a medical journal.

This is science. This is rationality. This is the rock. Without these studies, the whole field of medical research would fall apart in utter chaos.

Upon this rock, and hence through media, the public becomes aware of the latest breakthrough, the newest medicine. Through doctors in their offices, the public finds out what drugs they should take—and their doctors know because their doctors have read the published reports in the medical journals, the reports that describe the clinical trials. Or if the doctors haven’t actually read the reports, they’ve been told about them.

It all goes back to this rock.

And when mainstream advocates attack so-called alternative or natural health, they tend to mention that their own profession is based on real science, on studies, on clinical trials.

One doctor told me, “The clinical trials are what keep us from going back to the Stone Age.”

So now let me quote a recent article in the NY Review of Books (May 12, 2011) by Helen Epstein, “Flu Warning: Beware the Drug Companies”:

“Six years ago, John Ioannidis, a professor of epidemiology at the University of Ioannina School of Medicine in Greece, found that nearly half of published articles in scientific journals contained findings that were false, in the sense that independent researchers couldn’t replicate them. The problem is particularly widespread in medical research, where peer-reviewed articles in medical journals can be crucial in influencing multimillion- and sometimes multibillion-dollar spending decisions. It would be surprising if conflicts of interest did not sometimes compromise editorial neutrality, and in the case of medical research, the sources of bias are obvious. Most medical journals receive half or more of their income from pharmaceutical company advertising and reprint orders, and dozens of others [journals] are owned by companies like Wolters Kluwer, a medical publisher that also provides marketing services to the pharmaceutical industry.”

Here’s another quote from the same article:

“The FDA also relies increasingly upon fees and other payments from the pharmaceutical companies whose products the agency is supposed to regulate. This could contribute to the growing number of scandals in which the dangers of widely prescribed drugs have been discovered too late. Last year, GlaxoSmithKline’s diabetes drug Avandia was linked to thousands of heart attacks, and earlier in the decade, the company’s antidepressant Paxil was discovered to exacerbate the risk of suicide in young people. Merck’s painkiller Vioxx was also linked to thousands of heart disease deaths. In each case, the scientific literature gave little hint of these dangers. The companies have agreed to pay settlements in class action lawsuits amounting to far less than the profits the drugs earned on the market. These precedents could be creating incentives for reduced vigilance concerning the side effects of prescription drugs in general.”

Also from the NY Review of Books, here are two quotes from Marcia Angell, former editor-in-chief of The New England Journal of Medicine, perhaps the most prestigious medical journal in the world. (“Drug Companies and Doctors: A Story of Corruption”)

Consider the clinical trials by which drugs are tested in human subjects. Before a new drug can enter the market, its manufacturer must sponsor clinical trials to show the Food and Drug Administration that the drug is safe and effective, usually as compared with a placebo or dummy pill. The results of all the (there may be many) are submitted to the FDA, and if one or two trials are positive—that is, they show effectiveness without serious risk—the drug is usually approved, even if all the other trials are negative.”

Here is another Angell statement:

“In view of this control and the conflicts of interest that permeate the enterprise, it is not surprising that industry-sponsored trials published in medical journals consistently favor sponsors’ drugs—largely because negative results are not published, positive results are repeatedly published in slightly different forms, and a positive spin is put on even negative results. A review of seventy-four clinical trials of antidepressants, for example, found that thirty-seven of thirty-eight positive studies were published. But of the thirty-six negative studies, thirty-three were either not published or published in a form that conveyed a positive outcome.”

It turns out that the source of the informational pipeline that feeds the entire perception of pharmaceutical medicine is a rank fraud.

It would be on the order of an intelligence agency discovering that the majority of its operatives were actually working for the other side.

And then continuing on with business as usual.

Sometimes the body is dead even though it keeps on walking. It can smile and nod and perform basic functions—a zombie—but it is doing so only because certain implacable criminals back it up and give it a machine-like force.

We have the clinical trials of studies on drugs and they are published in top-rank journals. We are the epitome of science.”

Yes, false science. Riddled from top to bottom with lies.

Perhaps this will help the next time a friend, pretending he actually knows anything, tells you pharmaceutical medicine is a resounding success.

If you need more, cite Dr. Barbara Starfield’s famous study, “Is US health really the best in the world?” Journal of the American Medical Association, July 26, 2000. Starfield concludes that 225,000 people are killed by the medical system in the US every year—106,000 by FDA-approved medicines. That latter figure would work out to over a MILLION deaths per decade.

A final note: The august editors of medical journals have a game they can play. Suppose a drug company has just finished writing up the results of a clinical drug trial and has submitted the piece to a journal for publication. The editor knows the company probably carried out a dozen other such trials on the same drug…and they didn’t look good. The drug caused wild fluctuations in blood pressure and blood sugar. There were heart attacks. Strokes. But this ONE study, the one submitted for publication, looks very positive. The editor knows if he prints it and forgets about “ethics,” the drug company will order re-prints of the piece from him and distribute them to doctors all over the world, and to who knows who else? Reporters, professors, government officials. The drug company will order and pay for so many re-prints, the medical journal can make $700,000 from publishing THAT ONE ARTICLE. Let’s see. In one hand, the editor sees: I won’t publish it=no money. In the other hand, he sees: I’ll publish it=$700,000. What to do?


the matrix revealed


If I could write and post an article and make $700,000 on it, I’d do one of those suckers every day.

STUDY CONFIRMS: RESEARCH TEAM REMOVES HEAD FROM PATIENT AND ATTACHES IT TO WRIST; CREATES THINKING MAN’S TENNIS CHAMP.

STUDY CONFIRMS: NEW ANTIDEPRESSANT RAISES IQ BY 50 POINTS IN 5 MINUTES. ACCIDENTAL OVERDOSE RESULTS IN MIDDLE-EAST PEACE TREATY.

STUDY CONFIRMS: ANTI-ARTHRITIS MEDICATION SPRAYED IN ATMOSPHERE ENDS GLOBAL WARMING FEARS. POLAR BEARS REJOICE.

Jon Rappoport

The author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world. You can sign up for his free NoMoreFakeNews emails here or his free OutsideTheRealityMachine emails here.

Creating a genetic monster

by Jon Rappoport

March 31, 2011

(To join our email list, click here.)

(July 2013 update: For TruthStreamMedia.com’s article entitled “DARPA to Genetically Engineer Humans by Adding a 47th Chromosome“, click here. For a pdf copy of the DARPA solicitation entitled “Advanced Tools for Mammalian Genome Engineering“, click here. See also Manipulating evolution from now on. How deep does this story go?.)

In the Jan./Feb. 2004 issue of Mother Jones, Mark Dowie recounts how Dr. Stuart Newman decided to test the willingness of the US Patent Office

Newman applied for a patent to create a chimera, a monster.

The application was turned down. Newman pushed his claim to see how far he could go, and the Patent Office remained firm. Newman wanted to raise awareness of what some genetics scientists were willing to do—and how wrong it would be to allow it.

Dowie writes: “Newman’s patent application is for an intriguing biotechnological contrivance called a chimera [ki-mir-a]. According to Greek mythology, a chimera was a part-lion, part-goat, part-serpent creature that terrorized Lycia until it was slain by the hero Bellerophon. If biotech continues to run amok, warns Newman, such inventions of legend and allegory could actually be invented.

“A biological chimera is a way to hybridize two or more species that won’t cross sexually. The exact results are largely unpredictable except for the certainty that the chimera will contain cells of each species proportionate to the numbers placed in the embryo. A creature made from an equal number of cells from two species could look like one species but contain the genes, organs, and intelligence of the other.

“Newman [sought] to patent ‘chimeric embryos and animals containing human cells’…taken to its most extreme but not necessarily impossible end, the technology could be used to manufacture soldiers with armadillolike shielding, quasi-human astronauts engineered for long-range space travel, and altered primates with enough cognitive ability to ride a bus, follow basic instructions, pick crops in 119 degrees, or descend into a mine shaft without worrying their silly little heads about inalienable human rights and the resulting laws and customs that demand safe working conditions.”

Well, three years earlier, as reported in The Telegraph (Sep.27, 2001, “Boy’s DNA implanted in rabbit eggs,” written by Roger Highfield), scientists had begun to walk down that road:

“Scientists in China have inserted a boy’s DNA into empty rabbit eggs and grown hybrid embryos, it is reported today. A team at the Sun Yat-Sen University of Medical Sciences, Guangzhou, are trying to overcome a practical limitation…Today’s issue of Nature reports [about]…Dr Chen Xigu at Sun Yat-Sen…In some of the 100 or so successful transfers to a rabbit egg stripped of chromosomes, an embryo developed to the morula stage, the compact ball of cells that forms after about three days of development. For stem cells to be isolated, the embryos must be coaxed into developing further. In Britain, the Government plans to ban the creation of hybrids.”

Also in 2001, there was another ambitious experiment:

BBC Online (May 4, 2001): “Scientists have confirmed that the first genetically altered humans have been born and are healthy.

“Up to 30 such children have been born, 15 of them as a result of one experimental programme at a US laboratory…

“Genetic fingerprint tests on two one-year-old children confirm that they contain a small quantity of additional genes not inherited from either parent.

“The additional genes were taken from a healthy donor and used to overcome their mother’s infertility problems.

“…The additional genes that the children carry have altered their ‘germline’, or their collection of genes that they will pass on to their offspring…[Note: This means the new abnormal configuration of genes will spread out into the general population, over time, with unknown effects.]

“Writing in the journal Human Reproduction, the researchers say that this ‘is the first case of human germline genetic modification resulting in normal healthy children.’”

The superhighway into a genetically designed future isn’t just a science-fiction fantasy. Stones on that highway have already been laid down.


The Matrix Revealed


Jon Rappoport

The author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world. You can sign up for his free NoMoreFakeNews emails here or his free OutsideTheRealityMachine emails here.

NULLIFYING OBAMACARE

 

TEXAS NULLIFICATION OF OBAMACARE

DECEMBER 19, 2010. The 10th Amendment Center is a group that is campaigning to nullify illegal federal laws. It’s also resuscitating the right of states to exercise their basic power in this regard.

Here is a brief excerpt from a piece at their site, “The Lone Star State’s Opportunity,” by Michael Maharrey:

On Nov. 16, Texas Representative Leo Berman (R-Tyler) filed a bill in the Texas House of Representatives that would nullify federal health care legislation in the the Lone Star State. HB-297 asserts:

The federal Act [ObamaCare] is not authorized by the United States Constitution and violates the Constitution’s true meaning and intent as expressed by the founders of this country and the ratifiers of the Constitution.

The federal Act:
(1) is invalid in this state;
(2) is not recognized by this state;
(3) is specifically rejected by this state; and
(4) is null and void and of no effect in this state.

The bill takes things a step further, making it a crime for any official, agent, or employee of the United States or an employee of any corporation to enforce any part of the health care act in Texas, and imposes fines up to $5,000 and/or five years in prison for anyone convicted of doing so.

-end quote

The point of this Texas bill, which faces a struggle to get out of committee, is that the federal government has exceeded its constitutional authority by passing ObamaCare. That power is not given to the federal government by the Constitution—and is therefore reserved for the individual states and the people.

Understand this: the US Constitution was originally ratified by state legislatures, and therefore, a pact was made, in which the states delegated some powers to the newly created federal government.

The Constitution didn’t spring out of thin air. It wasn’t written by members of the federal government. In the truest sense, there was no federal government at the time.

And the Constitution wasn’t some all-embracing gift given by the states, after which they disappeared back into the shadows, leaving the new central government to pass any laws it wanted to.

There was a pact: “We will give you certain powers, and we the states will retain all other powers.”

Implicit in this arrangement was a vital proviso: any individual state could nullify a federal law or regulation, if that state decided the fundamental pact had been violated by the federal law.

It’s really quite simple. Suppose you and your neighbors create a watch group, and you elect John Jones to run this group, in order to protect the neighborhood from criminals. You grant Jones certain specific powers. But then Jones decides to import 100 free-roaming rattlesnakes as protection, and he claims he can do this because you ceded your power to him. What do you do? You probably fire him. At the very least you nullify his plan for the snakes. And you can do this, BECAUSE YOU HAVE A CONTRACT WITH JONES.

You don’t disappear because you granted Jones a few powers. A contract implies two parties. They both live on, after the contract is signed. Otherwise, there is no contract.

This point, vis-a-vis the states and the federal government, has been lost. It was lost a long time ago.

To restore it requires actions by the states, because no branch or agency of the federal government is going to cut back federal power. It won’t happen. To imagine it could happen at the level of the Supreme Court, for example, is a bet you’d be ill-advised to make.

In his article, Maharrey quotes James Madison, from Federalist 46:

Should an unwarrantable measure of the federal government be unpopular in particular States, which would seldom fail to be the case, or even a warrantable measure be so, which may sometimes be the case, the means of opposition to it are powerful and at hand. The disquietude of the people; their repugnance and, perhaps refusal to cooperate with officers of the Union, the frowns of the executive magistracy of the State; the embarrassment created by legislative devices, which would often be added on such occasions, would oppose, in any State, very serious impediments; and were the sentiments of several adjoining States happen to be in Union, would present obstructions which the federal government would hardly be willing to encounter.”

So if you had any doubt that the strategy of nullification was real, from the beginning of the Republic, this should clear things up.

Delegating someone to “run things” for you is a myth. Think about it. There is always a contract, and the contract spells out what you are allowing the other party to do. How could it be otherwise, unless you were interested in appointing a king? When one party in the contract violates it by overstepping his mandate, you can legally rein him in. You’d be a fool not to.

There is a point, however, where things get tricky. Suppose the other party is showering you with gifts, with money? Suppose he is attaching conditions to these gifts? In order to take them, you have to fall in line with a whole host of regulations. If you cave in, you’re in a tough spot. You’re selling out. And if you try to nullify some law he just passed, he tells you the money will stop flowing. You then take a step back and realize the gifts were always coming out of your own pocket, because you were paying taxes to the Man. Wow. What a set-up. How did you become so deluded? How did you fall for this shell game? What you gave him he gave back to you. (Well, part of what you gave him.) He used the money you gave him to buy the snakes he set loose in the neighborhood, and he kept some of the money, too. And now he says he wants to give you money so you can install better sprinkler systems on your lawns, but he’ll hold that back from you—he’ll hold back your own money unless you allow him to set loose the snakes.

When people in Texas try to nullify ObamaCare, they need to think about that. I’m sure they are. They’re paying taxes to the federal government so it can put in place the whole ObamaCare program. Somewhere along the line, this issue is going to come up. What do you think the Founders would say about it? Taxation to pay for enforcing and administering a law that is unconstitutional to begin with? Are you kidding?

Well, one step at a time.

If enough illegal federal laws are nullified by enough states, the emperor is going to look naked, because he is. He’s taxing people to pay for a whole host of laws that are unconstitutional. He keeps saying he needs more money, and it’s obvious this is a lie. What he really needs is less power. What he really needs is honest adherence to the Constitution. He gave all that up a long time ago.

Every state in the Union runs, to a considerable degree, on federal money. Which means taxes and money invented out of thin air by the central government. If you think the money crunch in state capitols is serious now, what do you think would happen if states started telling the federal government they don’t want that funding from Washington?

I’ll tell you exactly what would happen. State governments would have to reassess their whole modus operandi. They would be forced to realize they’ve been operating on a bloated dream of credit, endless credit, and they would also have to realize that a great number of government contracts they award to the private sector are paid for by funny money.

And the private sector would have to wake up, too. Wake up to something called the free market.

This is how far off the track we’ve wandered.

This is how deeply the Constitution has been shredded.

It’s not that we’re opening a can of worms here or raising the lid on Pandora’s box. The can and the box were opened decades ago. We’re trying to remember how it was supposed to be before the box and the can were blasted apart.

The whole national economy has essentially been bought off and bribed by federal money and state-government money, and the real operating social contract is: take the money and forget about the Constitution. That’s the deal we’re making now. Let’s not pretend it’s different. Walk into any big-company office and look around and find out where they’re working this government-money angle, and you’ll see the reluctance to opt out of the arrangement. The teat is warm. The teat is good. The teat is essential.

But again, one step at a time.

The states have to expose the naked emperor. Step one.

JON RAPPOPORT

www.nomorefakenews.com

Jon is the author of LOGIC AND ANALYSIS, a unique course for home schools and adults. To inquire: qjrconsulting@gmail.com

 

Placebo, antibody, and the destiny of failure

by Jon Rappoport

November 24, 2010

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Since my last several articles on medical rules of the game have evoked interest, I’ll take a few more steps.

As I mentioned, there is a fallacy buried in diagnostic tests that employ antibodies as the standard of measure. 

The presence of antibodies specific to a particular germ doesn’t automatically signify illness, and yet that is the interpretation being made these days.

This would be an interesting challenge:

A lab is given blood samples from a number of patients.  Each sample, it is found, indicates antibodies to germ X.  The lab must state whether these people are displaying symptoms of illness X.

By the rules, the answer would be yes in every case. Yet, the answer would be wrong in a majority of cases—perhaps in all cases.

Why?  Because naturally produced antibodies normally mean the person’s immune system has warded off the germ.

At this point, the lab might say, “Well, yes, but chances are these people will get sick.  It just hasn’t happened yet.  Or they have the disease without symptoms.”

These are not scientific statements.  One would have to follow the test cases for a while to see whether they get sick.  I would bet against it. In any event, a diagnosis of illness based on a positive antibody test is not about the future.  It’s about the present.  Public health agencies routinely count case numbers on the basis of antibody tests.  And the idea of a disease without symptoms is just a feint.  It’s a contradiction in terms.          

On to placebo.  In any serious controlled trial of a medical drug, there are two groups.  One group gets the drug; the other gets a sugar pill.  The reason for this practice has been obscured in modern times.  Actually, it is done because a certain percentage of people (around 20%) will get better no matter what you give them.  Therefore, the drug has to perform significantly better than the placebo.

However, we need to return to the medical origin of the placebo.  This is it: a country doctor, faced with a patient who was a hypochondriac, would hand him a sugar pill.  The patient would take it and then feel better.

But…you see, the patient believed he was getting effective medicine.  That’s what caused him to recover.

In a controlled trial, this is not the case.  The patient knows, beforehand, that he will get EITHER the medicine or a placebo.  This setting doesn’t provoke the same belief.  It’s different.  It’s weaker.

Therefore, one can expect that the “cure rate” in the placebo group will be lower than the normal 20%.  And, as a result, the actual drug will only need to meet a lower standard of success, relative to the results obtained by the placebo.

Bottom line?  A medical drug can test out with fewer positive outcomes to be deemed effective.  Unless someone decides that the placebo group performed in an unexpected manner—but who cares about that when the goal is to establish that the drug is a winner?

Jon Rappoport

The author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world. You can sign up for his free NoMoreFakeNews emails here or his free OutsideTheRealityMachine emails here.

PART 2, THE SECRET POLITICAL ISSUE

A CALL FROM THE WILDERNESS

THE SECRET POLITICAL ISSUE, PART 2

NOVEMBER 10, 2010.  Millions of advocates of health freedom see that no major political candidate, with one or two exceptions, voices their concerns or stands up for their right to improve their health by any and all self-chosen methods. 

To understand the landscape in which this deafening silence continues, we need to realize that the one industry which could and should make a difference—the nutritional supplement sector—is dominated by ostriches.

Once a powerful voice for health freedom, the industry has stepped back into the shadows.  It nurtures the illusion that it is safe from government intervention.  It even supposes it has sufficient allies within the government to stave off attacks by the FDA.

Since 1993, I have been calling for the creation of a powerful “PR wing” funded by nutritional companies.  This group would dedicate itself to obtaining ongoing media coverage, showing that nutrition scores many victories in preserving and expanding health, that nutrition is a brilliant success.

At first glance, this may not seem very important.  But, in fact, it is THE vital way to turn public, media, and political opinion to the side of nutrition.

The FDA and other government bodies see no reason to curtail their attacks on nutritional supplements if the media aren’t even covering the issue.

Every PR campaign works toward a tipping point, where the very idea of opposing its goals is politically suicidal.

If you don’t understand that, you know nothing about PR. 

And what is a campaign?  Is it a one-time promotion?  Is it a vaguely flailing effort to marshal support?  Is it a token outreach?  For amateurs, perhaps.  For dreamers.

But the reality is far different.  A campaign is a well-funded, sustained, and highly organized operation, aimed at gradually creating a shift in widespread perception.

In this case, the campaign TELLS THE TRUTH.  That is its weapon.  That is its intrinsic strength.

NUTRITION WORKS.

Media outlets, editors, reporters are always looking for interesting stories.  The brutal fact of life is, they need copy to fill space and time.  They must have it.

What about a boy in Arkansas who was ill for three years, unable to learn or play with his friends, who was brought back from the brink by supplements?

Is that a story?

You bet it is.

What about a husband who had to quit his job and go on the dole, because he no longer had the strength to put in eight hours in a factory?  And then he regained his strength with nutrients.  Is that a story?  It sure is.

Does a fledgling PR campaign start from the top of the media chain?  Does a story suddenly appear on the front page of The New York Times?  In a fantasy world, perhaps.

No, you build up your book of clippings. You gradually move up the ladder.

You establish a foothold.  You lay a firm foundation.

You find experts who will give you favorable and truthful quotes. 

You shove in your chips for the long haul, and you don’t back out because you wish paradise would come tomorrow.

On the other side of this PR campaign, you tell the truth about your target, your opponent, your nemesis, your threat.  The FDA.

You build up an accurate dossier documenting the widespread damage this agency had done over the years.  And it’s there, believe me.  For the past 20 years, I’ve been finding it and reporting it.

FDA-certified drugs have been killing American citizens at the rate of 100,000 a year.  That’s a good place to start. (Starfield, JAMA, July 26, 2000; “Is US health really the best in the world?”)

You put your opponent, your threat back on its heels.  You force it to play defense.  Instead of trying to limit people’s access to supplements, the agency is busy warding off truthful, pointed attacks.

You obtain the right, correct, and honest coverage of the FDA in the press.  On an ongoing basis.

This is the double-pronged PR campaign.  There is much more to say about it, but you get the idea.

You want politicians to aggressively support health freedom?  You have to show them they would have public opinion on their side.  And how do you do that?  You obtain TRUTHFUL media coverage.

Coverage isn’t accomplished by waving a magical wand.  It’s done through PR. 

Over the years, since I ran, in 1994, for a Congressional seat in Los Angeles on the issue of health freedom, I’ve seen the most haphazard, amateurish, wasteful, silly, and delusional PR launched out there, in the stratosphere, on behalf of health freedom.  Drunken men with no tools would have a better chance of building a mansion than this kind of demented PR would have in congealing public opinion. 

This must change.  The nutritional industry must come into the 20th, and then the 21st century. 

In case you hadn’t noticed, the basic ideal of individual freedom is under assault from many quarters.  Health freedom will not escape this net.

Something EFFECTIVE needs to be done. 

Go to Emord and Associates and read my long interview with brilliant constitutional attorney, Jonathan Emord.  He spells out what the FDA is doing and planning to do to nutritional supplements in this country. 

Jonathan explains the situation in detail.

Naysayers out there will give you a litany of reasons why the media will never cover health freedom or the massive success of nutritional supplements.  “Media ad space is dominated by drug companies.”  “Media are controlled by the government.”  “Medical power is too great.”

I’ve heard all the excuses.  Mostly, they are offered by people who refuse to believe any good change can happen in any sphere.  But the fundamental flaw in their arguments lies in a complete misunderstanding about the way PR works. 

Here is the secret.  Most PR DOES work.  If the people behind it are smart, if they have money, if they put in the time and the effort, if they aren’t scared away by a few failures, they will come out on top. 

Every PR campaign knocks its head on the ceiling many times.  “We can’t break through!”  “They won’t listen to us!”

You complain, and then you roll up your sleeves and keep going.  Because the goal is worth it.  Because you truly want the desired end result.  And because PR works.

When I began writing as a reporter almost 30 years ago, I knew nothing about the business.  I quickly learned that media need copy.  That was the basic reality.  Media need stories.  They will respond. 

PR works the same way.  You dig in for the long haul, and you gain success.

Of course, the other advantage of an excellent PR campaign is, no one person has to stick his neck out and take the heat.  Instead a whole industry is involved.  “You want a battle?  Then come after all of us.”

Then can you imagine how the millions of people who buy those supplements would appear in full view, ready to stake their claim for freedom?

In the early 1990s, this is exactly what happened.  A few nutritional executives bankrolled a massive outreach program, enlisting American citizens, who wrote millions of letters to Congress demanding a new law protecting supplements. 

Congressional sponsors were lined up.  They felt confident because the outcry from citizens was huge.  The law was passed.  It didn’t offer us the guarantees we really needed, but it was better than nothing.

Now we need more.  Better laws, and also a PR campaign that doesn’t fold up its tent just because the Congress moved in a somewhat positive direction. 

This time, we may need all those citizens to write to supplement companies demanding their action.  I have sketched out that action in this article. 

JON RAPPOPORT

www.nomorefakenews.com

OBAMACARE CORRUPTION

HOW POWER CORRUPTS:

OBAMACARE

By Jon Rappoport

www.nomorefakenews.com

Why is the Obama legislation double-barreled?  Why does it offer both a private and public option?

 

Why are we hearing relatively few howls of protest from the private insurance industry?

 

What happened to the Democrats’ single-payer program, in which Medicare would be expanded to include all Americans under one roof?

 

The answers to these questions yield up the same result: the private insurance mammoth so far supports the Obama Plan.  The private (and possibly the public) option will be priced by the insurance companies, to ensure profits, and since all 300 million Americans will be forced to sign on to one option or the other, these insurance companies will handle some of the large spillover.  New customers.   

 

In other words, the Obama Plan is a government-corporate partnership from top to bottom.  It always was. 

 

The insurance companies agreed to call in their markers on Congressional legislators and get the necessary votes to pass the Plan.

 

Think of the amount of force present in this arrangement.  Insurance giants, pharmaceutical corporations, the federal government—all working together to control medical treatment for Americans.  And the hidden secret is: many of these treatments are fraught with danger.  They injure people.  They kill them.  225,000 of them a year. 

 

All this power funnels down into the doctor’s office where the patient is handed his diagnosis and drug prescription. 

 

Here is the breakdown of medically-caused deaths in the US:

 

Each year in the US there are:

 

12,000 deaths from unnecessary surgeries; 

 

7,000 deaths from medication errors in hospitals; 

 

20,000 deaths from other errors in hospitals; 

 

80,000 deaths from infections acquired in hospitals; 

 

106,000 deaths from FDA-approved correctly prescribed medicines.

 

The total of medically-caused deaths in the US every year is 225,000.

 

This makes the medical system the third leading cause of death in America, behind heart disease and cancer.

 

Source:  July 26, 2000, Journal of the American Medical Association, Barbara Starfield (Johns Hopkins School of Public Health), “Is US health really the best in the world?”

 

 Up the road from here, carrying the banner of  ObamaCare, there will be a gaggle of vultures descending on the decaying landscape.

Pharmaceutical creatures will be the most powerful of the invaders.

To understand their influence: Consider these winged goblins’ entrance into the arena of psychiatric practice.  Thirty-five years ago, the whole profession was sinking under the waves.  Americans were showing less and less interest in what psychiatry had to offer.

The psychiatric journals were going broke.  Even the funding for conferences was drying up.

There was one unlikely upside.  The “discovery” and definition of mental disorders had no true scientific foundation.  Definitive biological tests for psychiatric conditions didn’t exist.  These mental disorders were named and labeled by committees, which met and discussed lists of symptoms (behaviors) and hashed out conclusions.

There was a holy text, the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual), and the ruling committees engraved new mental disorders and their descriptions on stone tablets.

Into this ludicrous situation flew and flapped the pharmaceutical industry.  It saw the possibilities.  Markets could be created.  For each new invented and labeled mental condition, there would be a new

market.  It was that simple.

Since no diagnostic tests were necessary, since none existed, the arbitrary nature of the whole game was a magnificent boon.

The psychiatrists would roll out new disorders, and the drug companies would supply the drugs.

So pharma essentially made a pact.  It would resuscitate psychiatry with money.  It would fund conferences and back the professional journals.  It would help re-float the whole profession.

And that is exactly what happened.  Outlandish PR was launched to explain that many millions of Americans were suffering from undiagnosed psychiatric disorders.

Talk therapy was no longer the preferred route for alleviating or curing these disorders.  No, all mental conditions, across the board and without exception, were said to result from brain malfunction.  Voila.  It was a chemistry problem—and researchers were on the case.

Their answers naturally led to chemical (drug) strategies.

Studies which called into the question the safety of the drugs were shunted into the background.

Politicians were enlisted in the PR campaign.  The humanitarian levers were pulled.  “We can’t let so many Americans live in silence with their mental disorders.  Drug treatment is available.  The breakthroughs are extraordinary.  Today, we are seeing miracles.  It’s science at work.”

Dissenters from within the psychiatric profession, people who saw through this ruse, were attacked.  They were called Neanderthals.  They were banished from the top journals.  Anyone who suggested that unhappy and troubled patients might really need nutritional help, or might be experiencing problems associated with myriad chemicals in processed foods, or might need a way to realize they were uniquely themselves in a society increasingly bent on conformity—this was slammed as scientific nonsense, clap-trap, idiocy of the first order.

Instead, millions of children were really suffering from a deficit of Ritalin.  Millions of Americans were suffering from a deficit of Prozac or Depakote.    

The job description of psychiatrists changed.  Talk in the office with patients was, more and more, about confirming a list of symptoms/behaviors and writing drug prescriptions.

The new alliance between the American Psychiatric Association and the pharmaceutical companies was strong.

This is how vultures operate when they see an opportunity.

Americans under ObamaCare will be “served” by a wide-ranging medical panel.  The panel, over time, will determine which diseases and disorders are covered by insurance, and which are not.

But where does that stop?  A patient under the Plan is told by his doctor that he has a mental disorder.  A diagnosis is made.  A drug is prescribed.  Can the patient refuse?

Of course he can.  At first. 

But what about ten years, 20 years up the road?  Do you seriously think pharma and organized psychiatry are going to curtail their efforts at the golden gate?

If the insurance is compulsory, the treatment at some point is going to be compulsory. 

Oh, it’ll be a struggle to enact such draconian rules, but the chances of success, when the government is the ruling entity and is working hand in glove with Big Pharma and insurance companies, will dramatically increase.

And when drugs are involved, and when the prescribed treatment is compulsory or coerced through pressure, the drugs’ dangerous effects are ignored, because the treatment cannot be refused. Do you believe the government is going to assume and admit liability for a damaging drug the patient must take?

The pharmaceutical companies will have a field day.

Take a case described by psychiatrist, Peter Breggin, in his landmark 1991 classic, Toxic Psychiatry.  A young patient, Roberta, had been treated with a host of so-called major tranquilizers [AKA neuroleptics].  Peer-reviewed published studies support the use of these drugs: Haldol, Mellaril, Prolixin, Thorazine.

Breggin writes: “Roberta was a college student, getting good grades, mostly A’s, when she first became depressed and sought psychiatric help at the recommendation of her university health service.  She was eighteen at the time, bright and well motivated, and a very good candidate for psychotherapy.  She was going through a sophomore-year identity crisis about dating men, succeeding in school, and planning a future.  She could have thrived with a sensitive therapist who had an awareness of women’s issues.

“Instead of moral support and insight, her doctor gave her Haldol.  Over the next four years, six different physicians watched her deteriorate neurologically without warning her or her family about tardive dyskinesia [motor brain damage] and without making the [tardive dyskinesia] diagnosis, even when she was overtly twitching in her arms and legs.  Instead they switched her from one neuroleptic to another, including Navane, Stelazine, and Thorazine.  Eventually a rehabilitation therapist became concerned enough to send her to a general physician, who made the diagnosis [of medical drug damage].  By then she was permanently physically disabled, with a loss of 30 percent of her IQ.

“…my medical evaluation described her condition:  Roberta is a grossly disfigured and severely disabled human being who can no longer control her body.  She suffers from extreme writhing movements and spasms involving the face, head, neck, shoulders, limbs, extremities, torso, and back—nearly the entire body.  She had difficulty standing, sitting, or lying down, and the difficulties worsen as she attempts to carry out voluntary actions.  At one point she could not prevent her head from banging against nearby furniture.  She could hold a cup to her lip only with great difficulty.  Even her respiratory movements are seriously afflicted so that her speech comes out in grunts and gasps amid spasms of her respiratory muscles…Roberta may improve somewhat after several months off the neuroleptic drugs, but she will never again have anything remotely resembling a normal life.”   

Under a government no-way-out Plan, it could start this way:

Patient:  “Doctor, I really don’t think I want to take this medicine.”

Doctor:  “Believe me, I understand your apprehension.  But it’s a good drug, and we’ll be monitoring the effects all the way.”

Patient:  “I know, but still…I’ve read about the side effects.”

Doctor:  “I’m starting you out on a small dose.  You tell me if you’re uncomfortable.”

Patient:  “I’m not sure…”

Doctor:  “Listen.  Perhaps you don’t understand what’s happening here.  You’re covered.  You have insurance under the Government Plan.  Now, if you decline treatment, what are we supposed to do?  You want the coverage, but you don’t want the treatment.  It’s like saying you want to buy the car, but you don’t want to drive it.”

Or the doctor might say, “I’m seeing fifty patients a day.  They want my help.  I’m giving them the best available medical advice in the world, based on the best science we have.  Don’t you want to take advantage of that?”

Many variations on the same theme.

“I’m telling you, you need chemotherapy right away.  We can’t wait.  This is your optimal chance for survival.”

Pressure.

“As I’m sure you’re aware, there is a list of patients on the Government Plan who refuse treatment.  I don’t think you want to be on that refusenik list.  It’ll mean your waiting times for appointments will stretch out.  You’ll go to the back of the line.  We have to serve the people who are willing to take advantage of what we give.”

The road continues through twists and turns until treatment is compulsory.  If you’re under the Plan, you take your medicine.  You don’t ask about the science.  You don’t demand evidence the drugs are safe.  You don’t discuss other options.  You don’t buck the system.  The system is huge.  Everyone says it is there for your own good.  It’s based on a fundamental humanitarianism.  Share and care. 

“I see on your chart you’ve refused three vaccines in the last six years.  You have two children.  You tried to obtain a waiver for them so they don’t have to receive vaccinations.  I’ve notified Child Protective Services.  I’m sorry, but we can’t allow this to go on.  I know you don’t want CPS to take your children from the house.  What parent would?  But if we can’t reach an understanding here, you’re going to encounter serious trouble.”

Let’s imagine a doctor is handling a cancer patient, a young boy, whose mother is quite educated.

The mother says, “Doctor, are you familiar with the work of Ulrich Abel?  A German biostatistician.  Very fine international reputation.  In 1990, after reviewing thousands of studies on chemotherapy, he came to a conclusion.  Here is the quote.  ‘Success of most chemotherapies is appalling…There is no scientific evidence for its ability to extend in any appreciable way the lives of patients suffering from the most common organic cancer…Chemotherapy for malignancies too advanced for surgery, which accounts for 80% of all cancers, is a scientific wasteland.’”

The doctor smiles and says, “We’ve heard all the objections.  But chemotherapy is your son’s best option, I assure you.”

“I know you assure me, but I’m presenting evidence that contradicts your opinion, Doctor.”

“Madam, this situation is far more complex than you realize.  Believe me, I’ve looked at all the possibilities.  You’re not a physician.  Cancer is my specialty.  You boy needs chemo, and he needs it now.”

“Doctor, I’m going to decline.”

“It’s not that easy, I’m afraid. In the old days, you could take this case to court.  Lawyers could argue both sides before a judge.  But now, under the Government Plan, we have the right to insist on treatment.  We’re not trying to be coercive.  We’re only concerned with the best interests of the patients.  That’s why the Plan exists.”

“Doctor, chemo will not extend my son’s life.  And it will make him suffer terribly.”

“It’s our best hope, and I’m going to go ahead with it.  I’ll note your objections.  I’m happy to have you meet with one of our counselors.  Perhaps she can alleviate your concerns.  That’s all I can do.”

This is where the rubber will meet the road, and the powers-that-be will dictate the results.  Even pointing out a number of qualified studies that indicate a specific medical treatment is ineffective and dangerous won’t save the day.

To some, all this sounds like a paranoid fantasy.  But only the most naïve imagine that an enormous increase in centralized power will somehow enhance personal freedom or maintain it in its present state.  The major players want more.  They always want more.  They have the time and the means and the power and the connections.  They see the goal.  They see the rewards.

We may want to extend the benefit of the doubt to those who say they are looking out for our best interests, but then we are the fantasizers.  We are the fools.  More power means more control.  It always does.

What is starting out now as a “public option” in the Healthcare Plan is the wedge in the door.  If joining the Plan, in one form or another, is no longer a choice, then someone has just gained the power that formerly resided in us.

What do you think will happen to the whole issue of medical liability under the Obama Plan?  What will eventually happen to a private citizen who tries to sue a drug company, doctor, or hospital for damages?

“You say this drug injured your health in a permanent way?  Go home.  There is no case.  The Plan is the best structure we have.  Occasionally, a mistake occurs, but we all have to live with that.  If we permit huge lawsuits to move forward, we won’t be able to pay for the Plan anymore.  Greatest good for the greatest number of people is the watchword.”

So the freedom to obtain justice, too, will disappear in time as well.  (It already has, in so-called pandemic seasons, as drug companies promise delivery of vaccines to governments if and only if no liability is attached when a patient is injured by the vaccine.)

*                                *                          *

Who benefits from all this?  Obviously, Big Pharma.  Compulsory or coerced drug treatment for all Americans, in every area of medical practice; greater and greater legal protection against claims for damage; an insider’s place at the table where an official panel decides what diseases and disorders and drug treatments will be covered and paid for under the Government Plan.

Instead of having to swoop down on a whole profession, like psychiatry, and bankroll it, the pharmaceutical industry can rely on the federal government to carry the burden.

I cited above the quintessential study that established a death toll of 106,000 Americans, every year, as the direct result of FDA-approved, correctly prescribed medicines.

Under the Obama Plan, and its succeeding incarnations, Big Pharma will be slipping out from beneath that shadow of liability, as it walks, hand in hand with its partner, the federal government of the United States, into the sunrise of official absolution.

JON RAPPOPORT  

www.nomorefakenews.com

Jon Rappoport is the author of LOGIC AND ANALYSIS, a unique course for home schools and adults.  To inquire: qjrconsulting@gmail.com

The threat to Health Freedom now

An exclusive interview with attorney Jonathan Emord

October 25, 2010

(To join my email list, click here.)

As a medical investigative reporter for 28 years, I’ve seen public interest in health freedom come and go.  Right now, in 2010, it is at a low point. 

In the early 1990s, there was a tremendous fervor in America.  Millions of people, perceiving a threat from the federal government, realized they could be cut off from the right to improve their health according to their own wishes, judgments, and decisions.

In practical terms, health freedom has come to mean: the right to have access to the widest possible range of nutritional supplements, health practitioners, and treatments—with no government obstruction.   

Back in 1993, millions of Americans believed in that principle, and sent letters to Congress.  Rallies were held.  Celebrities appeared and supported traditional American liberty.

The final blow was struck with the passage of the Dietary Supplement Health Act of 1994 (DSHEA).  It appeared to promise the results citizens were looking for.  The FDA would not be permitted to limit access to the full range of nutritional supplements.    

Then the furor died down and people went back to their lives.  The internet grew into a giant.  Millions of pages discussing health issues appeared.  More freedom.  More access. 

But there has been an overall dampening of that spirit of the early 90s.  Many people believe the major battle has been won.

To examine whether this is the case, and whether the DSHEA Law is actually keeping Americans safe, I interviewed a widely revered lawyer, Jonathan Emord.

Emord is one of the nation’s leading free speech attorneys. He has defeated the Food and Drug Administration a remarkable seven times in federal court, more times than any other attorney in American history, earning him the title, “FDA Dragon Slayer.”

He is the 2007 recipient of the Cancer Control Society’s Humanitarian Award for “winning and preserving our great civil rights to life, to liberty, and to health freedoms.” 

Mr. Emord has practiced constitutional and administrative law in Washington, D.C. for the past twenty-five years. He is routinely consulted by industry, Congress, and the media on regulatory issues that affect health freedom. He is the author of four critically acclaimed books: Freedom, Technology and the First Amendment (1991); The Ultimate Price (2007); The Rise of Tyranny (2008); and Global Censorship of Health Information (2010).

I hoped Mr. Emord would give us real and detailed information on substantive issues facing Americans today.  He responded in kind, and went the extra mile.  He cleared up a number of popular confusions, and offered several predictions based on his long experience as an attorney in the field of health freedom.

One of the most critical points Mr. Emord makes:  The laws Congress passes can be twisted by the federal agencies responsible for overseeing those laws.  For example, the FDA has reinterpreted health law to suit its own slanted purposes.  This is an extreme violation of the Constitution, and it endangers the American Republic.  Federal agencies can, in effect, illegally become legislators and enforcers.

This is not a brush-off interview.  Mr. Emord provides a compelling and extensive case that should be read, studied, and acted on by other attorneys, health-freedom advocates, nutritional-company executives, and all citizens who value their freedom.

JON RAPPOPORT:  DSHEA is a federal law that was passed in 1994 to protect the public’s right to buy and take a wide range of nutritional supplements.  It’s considered our best bulwark against invasive actions by the FDA.  Did DSHEA really give us reliable protection?  Where do things stand today? 

Has the FDA eroded that law over the last 16 years?

Are we in trouble?

JONATHAN EMORD:  DSHEA has not given reliable protection against FDA censorship or FDA restrictions on access to products.  In certain respects the law itself is to blame because of flaws in its design; in other respects FDA has purposefully misconstrued the law to defeat its plain and intended meaning.   Congress has been derelict in counteracting the agency’s abuses—in no small measure because the drug industry benefits from those abuses and has such influence over the House Energy and Commerce Committee and the Senate Health Committee that no meaningful reforms ever occur. 

I was invited to comment on the bill when it was in draft form.  I said then that certain provisions in the bill would enable the FDA to censor health information and restrict access to supplements.  I opposed inclusion of those provisions to no avail. 

In particular, DSHEA requires supplement companies to file, with the government, notice of use of structure/function claims [statements about the positive effects of a nutrient on the structure or function of the body].  At the time the bill was being debated, I explained that since structure/function claims were protected speech under the First Amendment, there was no sound justification for requiring any company to submit them to the FDA for review, and that forcing companies to do so would invite FDA mischief.  I explained that inevitably FDA would use structure/function claim review to redefine claims from the category of structure/function to the category of prohibited drug claims, thus reducing the quantity of free speech available for expression.  That has happened.

The DSHEA permits the HHS Secretary to adopt good manufacturing practice guidelines [GMP] for supplements [how supplements should be made in the lab-factory].  I warned at the time the bill was being debated that this provision would invite considerable agency mischief, that FDA would use GMP regulation to put the industry under its thumb and stop the marketing of supplements on technicalities, thereby ridding the market of any product it did not like.  That is now happening.

We hired Steve Hanke, the Senior Economist on President Reagan’s Council of Economic Advisors, to evaluate the impact of the GMP rule.  He determined that the cost of compliance per year [to supplement companies] would exceed the finances of roughly one-third of all dietary supplement manufacturers, resulting in their elimination from the market.  In the GMP rule, FDA put the estimate more conservatively, but admitted that it would eliminate about one-quarter of the market.   The evaluation we were provided also concluded that there would be less variety of product available to consumers and that the cost of product would increase.  The FDA also admitted these effects in its GMP Final Rule.  FDA is vigorously pursuing its inspection agenda.  Within the next several years we should see the fall-out.  FDA has increased its reliance on direct court action instead of negotiated settlements of disputes with the industry.  That too will result in a loss of companies and a reduction in consumer offerings.

The DSHEA adulteration provision included language limiting FDA action to ban supplements to instances where the agency could prove that they presented a significant or unreasonable risk of illness or injury.  Congress intended for this to be a meaningful barrier to FDA, compelling the agency to prove supplements capable of causing harm before removing them from the market.  FDA has construed this language to give it virtually unbridled discretion.  In its ephedra ban, for example, FDA in effect rejected the Paracelsian model for assessing dietary supplement adulteration (i.e., dose determines toxicity) in favor of the precautionary principle.  Under that [precautionary] principle, if a nutrient causes harm at some dose level (a universal fact because everything, including, water, causes injury at some dose level), it would be presumed adulterated until the industry proved it safe beyond doubt at another dose level.  That shifted the burden of proof from FDA (where Congress placed it) to the industry (where FDA prefers that it be), enabling FDA to ban any nutrient it wishes on evidence readily available that at some dose level [at preposterously high doses] it causes harm.

The DSHEA included a provision to permit dietary supplement companies to distribute scientific literature on nutrient-disease associations [a nutrient can help alleviate a disease] to the public, including to their customers.  At the time, I warned that the provision included ambiguous requirements that FDA could construe to emasculate the speech-protective intent of Congress.  FDA has in fact gone farther than I had anticipated.  FDA completely eviscerated this provision by taking the position that any scientific publication that associates a nutrient with a [positive effect on a] disease…can still be forbidden by FDA because company provision of the literature to customers would constitute “evidence of an intent to sell the product as an unapproved new drug.”

I also opposed the provision that required submission of a new dietary-ingredient notice to FDA for every nutrient first sold after the date of passage of the DSHEA.  Under that provision, if FDA does not object to the notice, the product is legally marketable.  I thought that if a product met the definition of a dietary supplement, FDA should have no power to prevent its marketing.  I warned that FDA could use its discretion to require a degree of proof for safety that was so high as to make it impossible for any new dietary ingredient to enter the American market.  While FDA has not construed it to be absolutely prohibited, it has made it very difficult to market lawfully any nutrient first introduced to the American market after the date of passage of DSHEA.

The dietary supplement industry is in trouble because the FDA harbors an unscientific bias against supplements, principally arising from its desire to protect the agency’s foremost regulatee, the drug industry.  I remember when folks were arguing that the GMPs were a good idea because industry leaders had connections with FDA and could assure that the agency would not abuse its power.  The dietary supplement industry has never had a very effective lobby and is a Lilliputian compared to the Leviathan drug industry.  I have often used the following metaphor to describe the power triangle at work.  The drug industry is like an enormous elephant, and the FDA is like a blind jockey atop the elephant incapable of altering the elephant’s course.  The dietary supplement industry is like a flea on the elephant.  So long as the flea does not irritate the elephant, everything proceeds smoothly, but as soon as the flea causes irritation, the elephant signals its displeasure and the blind jockey whacks about the surface of the elephant with his riding crop until he nails the flea.  Some in the trades and in the dietary supplement industry have an inflated view of their influence over FDA.  The drug industry they are not, and to the drug industry they are entirely beholden for any regulatory crumb that falls off that industry’s table.

RAPPOPORT:  Many commentaries about Codex have circulated on the Web over the past decade. 

What is Codex and what is its goal, vis-à-vis nutritional supplements?

Are the American people going to be forced to accept the provisions of Codex?  Is this a looming reality?

EMORD:  The Codex Alimentarius Commission is an organization of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Health Organization.  It is a standard setting body.  The standards it adopts each member state is expected to implement or, if not, to explain why it has chosen not to do so.  If the failure to adopt a standard caused a member state to discriminate against imports, that state could be challenged for its failure before the World Trade Organization.  More commonly, however, the Codex Commission serves as a forum for member states to exercise influence over one another in the adoption of domestic standards governing the availability of dietary supplements and the dose levels in the market.  By adopting a standard, as Codex has done, recommending that member states determine whether vitamins and minerals are safe at particular dose levels and ban them at dose levels not determined safe, the Commission places the onus on members to implement regulatory regimes based on dose and, implicitly, on the government-preferred precautionary principle.  That has encouraged the development of extensive EU prior restraints on the availability of dietary supplements in the market and has advanced the European attachment to and advocacy for the precautionary principle as the best means to assess toxicity.  In short, Codex has become a coercive force in favor of restrictions on dietary supplements and what can be said [what health claims can be made] about them.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration admires the European system of controls and can alter its interpretative construction of existing regulations to “harmonize” the American model more closely with the European model of regulation.   U.S. delegates to Codex should be opposing the movement toward greater restrictions on supplements and claims.  Instead, they quietly acquiesce in those restrictions and work toward effecting similar restrictions within the United States through reinterpretation of existing agency rules.

RAPPOPORT:  What can you tell us about the legal status of nutritional supplements in Europe?  Is the EU really destroying the public’s right to buy a wide range of nutrients?  What’s the situation?  Are there serious implications for America?

EMORD:  Under the European Union Directive governing dietary supplements, no dietary supplement is legal to market without first being found safe and bioavailable by the European Food Safety Authority [EFSA].  Moreover, no claim—not even structure/function claims—concerning health effects of a dietary supplement may appear on labels, in labeling, or in advertising of a dietary supplement in Europe without first being approved by EFSA.  This massive system of prior restraint has imposed a nutrition Dark Age on Europe.  As the EFSA determinations continue to be enforced by the EU member states, hundreds of products that had been safely consumed for decades will be removed from the market.  Also, claims will disappear, leaving Europeans in the dark as to the potential of nutrients to affect health and disease.

This system is a form of Lysenkoism or state created orthodoxy over science.  It is dumbing down the European market and removing from it health enhancing substances.  In the end, there will be a rise in age-related diseases for which risk is diminished by supplementation, such as cancer and cardiovascular disease.  EFSA will be responsible for creating a very unhealthy environment all in the guise of protected European consumers from anything less than certain science. 

In truth almost nothing in science is certain; nearly everything is inconclusive, yet we make decisions every day based on the inconclusive science—based on personal bets on the extent to which we think evidence of association [is] correctly indicative of ultimate outcome.  Remove from us that evidence of association by force of law and we become incapable of making informed bets. 

EU censorship of all information in the market not proven conclusively true necessarily censors information on nutrient-disease relationships that will in time be proven true.  That present censorship will cause those who would bet on the ultimate truths to be denied the opportunity of guessing right and, thus, they will lose out in potentially fatal ways. 

That is precisely what happened to the FDA.  We sued the FDA when it refused to authorize a claim associating folic acid with a reduction in the risk of neural tube defects [NTD].  FDA took the position that the association had not been proven that folic acid containing supplements could reduce NTD risk.  FDA censored the information for some six years, contributing to over 2,500 preventable NTDs each year and to countless NTD related abortions.  We ultimately defeated FDA’s censorship in Pearson v. Shalala.  That then led in time to FDA allowance of the claims when we beat the agency a second time for refusing to permit the claims.  The result has been a steady reduction in the incidence of NTDs in the United States as more and more women of child bearing age learn of the need to take folic acid supplements containing 400 (and preferably 800) mcgs each day before they become pregnant. 

What will the scientists within EFSA think of themselves if five, ten, twenty, or more years from now proof positive arises that certain nutrients they have condemned are associated with significant reductions in the risk of cancer and cardiovascular disease such that tens of thousands of Europeans could have lived had they been given market access to information concerning the association years prior?

The EU ban on supplements and supplement claims (unless pre-approved by EFSA) is now in place.  EU depends on its member states for enforcement.  Each state is variously engaged in enforcement with some using more aggressive methods than others.  Over the next several years, however, we can expect to see crack downs in each of the member states with products being removed from the market following each crack down.

The present FDA admires the European example of broad censorship and restrictions on supplement access and is aggressively ridding from the American market claims and products.  We need to replace that administration and put into law new constraints on the exercise of government power.  I have written for Congressman Ron Paul a bill that would strip FDA of its prior restraint on claims, leaving the federal government limited to acting against claims it can prove with clear and convincing evidence to be false.  That bill, the Health Freedom Act, needs public support and would, if passed, usher in a new era of speech freedom for claims in the United States.

RAPPOPORT:  During the debate and run-up to the passage of ObamaCare, the national health insurance plan, I heard very little concern expressed in the health freedom community about the future implications of this bill.  It’s obvious to me that, with control being vested in the Department of Health and Human Services, we could eventually see the day when alternative health care and nutrition are edged out further and further from permitted treatments.  And citizens would be required to accept conventional medical treatments, whether they want them or not. 

Along a similar line, I see very little evidence, these days, of action being taken by health freedom groups and nutritional companies to keep health freedom alive.  Certainly, we see nothing like the enormous campaign launched in the early 1990s, when Congress received millions of letters protesting the actions of the FDA to limit our access to supplements, and celebrities came out of the woodwork to support health freedom.

What am I missing?  Is some back-door deal in place now?  Have nutritional companies been given assurances that, if they keep their heads down and their mouths shut, they’ll be allowed to do business as usual?

I’m at a loss to explain the eerie silence from groups that should be continuing to fight VERY VISIBLY for our freedom in this area.  I sense a soft attitude.

I was very active in the health freedom movement of the early 90s.  My approach was to go after the FDA for their ongoing crimes, to attack.  At the time, some people told me to dial it back, we were going to get a good bill passed in Congress, and aggressive actions could injure our cause.  Is that the prevailing mood now?  Is something on the table we don’t know about?  A new bill?

EMORD:  There has been a recurrent pattern by supplement trade groups and certain leading companies in the industry (epitomized by the industry move to draft and advocate FDA adoption of GMP rules giving FDA broad discretion) to engage in self-flagellation.   In its nascent, more competitive years, the industry more stridently opposed FDA regulation.  The movement of consumers away from specialty supplement brands towards less costly generic varieties combined with bad economic times contributed to consolidation of the supplement market, and certain industry leaders have for the last several years moved away from robust contest with FDA to compromise with the agency.  There is an economic motive for this, to be sure.  Large [supplement] industry players believe they benefit from greater FDA regulation because it creates costly barriers to entry that keep out smaller competitors. 

There is also a mistaken view promoted by certain industry trade associations that if the industry confesses fault to FDA and Congress, even when no fault exists, and professes a keen interest in ridding itself of bad practices, even when those practices are unrepresentative of the industry, it will curry favor with the powers that be.  Instead, it has provided those powers with more ammunition to use against the industry, compounding the industry’s problems and creating a major public relations problem. 

The fact is dietary supplements with few exceptions are the safest ingestible products, far safer than foods and far safer than drugs.  That is a remarkable fact that one would think the industry would recite at every turn.  Instead, certain trade associations and industry leaders voice grave concerns about supplement safety and agree to greater federal regulation on the notion that greater regulation is either inevitable or will favor the market position of the leading companies.  To listen to what Congressmen Waxman or Dingell have to say, you would swear that supplements were fissile materials.  It is the rare exception rather than the rule that a dietary supplement causes harm.

By buying into the self-flagellation argument (the argument of supplement opponents that there is something inherently wrong with the market that necessitates extraordinary new regulation lest we all succumb), the industry is inviting its own demise.

Industry leaders who buy into this on the notion that it will reduce competition and shore up their market shares are in fact deluded, however, because, in the end, the FDA is the drug industry’s, not the supplement industry’s, to control.  In other words, FDA will be pleased to expand its regulatory power over the supplement industry but not for the benefit of the supplement industry’s leaders.  Rather, FDA will invariably use greater regulatory power over the supplement industry to aid its favored regulatee, the drug industry, not to shore up the market share of large supplement companies.  The drug industry, not the supplement industry, holds almost all the cards at FDA and in Congress.  The supplement industry has relatively little clout by comparison.

Instead of engaging in self-flagellation, the industry ought to refute false representations against supplement safety and efficacy and promote public awareness of the many benefits supplements bring to consumers.  Supplements are rarely the cause of human injury.  The science concerning their health enhancing effects abounds and grows weekly.  The potential for nutrients to reduce the risk of, prevent, and even treat disease is profound.  Science is unraveling truths about human biochemistry that support the conclusion that our lifestyle choices very much affect our disease risks and that healthful living in reliance on organic foods, above levels of certain key nutrients, reduction in stress, and faith and hope have a profound impact on our health, our quality of life, and our longevity.

Rather than engage in self-flagellation, the industry should celebrate its strengths, advertise them continually to the public and the government, and act to defend on grounds of principle the freedom to market and sell safe and potentially life-saving and health enhancing supplements. 

RAPPOPORT:  I have searched the most popular conservative radio and television shows and websites and blogs—in other words, the places where one would expect to find a defense of our freedom to choose whatever means we want to, to maintain and improve our health—and I come up with a big fat zero.  Why do you think the silence there on this issue is deafening?

EMORD:  There may be some truth to the notion that because the media are financed in no small measure from drug ads, there is a natural economic interest in avoiding communication that attacks drug safety and efficacy.   The FDA and the FTC have not been shy about informing media of regulatory risks associated with supplement advertising, thus creating a general chilling effect on the interest of media to present supplement advertising and discuss supplement health effects.  Finally, as with many areas of emerging science, there is still widespread ignorance in the media on the association between nutrients and disease.  That ignorance is forged into prejudice when negative press on supplement-disease associations is widely disseminated, but positive press on those associations is more often than not ignored or given short shrift.

RAPPOPORT:  This past summer, Congress took up a food safety bill (S.510).  What’s its present status?  Does its wording really suggest we may be subject to Codex regulations vis-à-vis the sale of nutritional supplements?  What are the shortcomings of the bill?

EMORD:  This bill is a significant threat to the supplement industry.  It contains a provision that permits FDA to charge the hourly cost of its inspections of [nutritional-supplement] establishments if the agency finds a violation warranting a re-inspection.  That creates an incentive for FDA to find fault on first inspections and to do re-inspections as a revenue raiser.  The bill also includes a provision that encourages FDA to evaluate harmonization between domestic and foreign regulation.  That invites the agency to construe its regulations to effect a change in them favoring the EU model.  At a time when the FDA is in great disrepute for abusing its powers (approving unsafe drugs, failing to force the withdrawal of unsafe drugs form the market, and censoring health information concerning supplements), the Congress is about to entrust the agency with yet more vast new regulatory powers.  That is a big mistake.  Congress should be moving rapidly in the other direction, taking away power from this corrupt agency.  The problem is that Congress, too, is quite corrupt.  Senator Harry Reid said that he would not move the bill forward in the Senate until after the election.  The election is likely to result in Republican control of the House and either Republican control of the Senate or a loss of Democratic dominance in the Senate.  If that happens, S. 510 could become a casualty of an angry electorate desirous of stopping the regulatory train before it leaves the station.

RAPPOPORT:  In a radio interview we did some months ago, you made a number of points that need much wider dissemination.  I’d like you to expand on two of those points.  First, you said we have a federal government that, actually and disastrously, is run by and through its regulatory agencies, whose employees stay on during one administration after another.  And two, despite your string of unprecedented victories in court against the FDA, you have the sense that the Agency is quite prepared to ignore the court rulings limiting its illegal intrusions into our affairs—in fact, the Agency fully intends to carry on without paying one iota of attention to those court rulings…making it, in my eyes, a rogue Agency.

EMORD:  In my book, The Rise of Tyranny, I explain how our federal government has been transformed from a limited federal republic into a bureaucratic oligarchy since the 1930s.  Under our Constitution, Congress is vested with the power to make laws.  We have a separation of powers that prevents any one branch from exercising combined legislative, executive, and judicial powers, and we have a non-delegation doctrine, that forbids those branches vested with those powers from delegating them to other entities.  In the 1930’s, the Supreme Court at first held efforts by President Roosevelt to delegate governing power to bureaucratic agencies unconstitutional.  In response, President Roosevelt advocated the passage of legislation that would have packed the court, adding a justice for every one sitting who had reached 70 and one-half years, thus altering the composition of the Court to receive jurists who would favor the New Deal agencies.  The bill was not passed but caused what the media of the day referred to as “the switch in time that saved nine.”  In 5 to 4 majority decisions, the Court switched from defending the separation of powers and the non-delegation doctrines to abandoning them.  Since that time, despite the creation of over 183 federal agencies, many with these combined powers, there has not been a single instance in which the Supreme Court has held the delegation of governing power outside the [three basic] constitutional branches to be a violation of the non-delegation doctrine.  As a result, today over ninety percent of all federal law is not the product of our elected representatives but regulation promulgated by unelected heads of the bureaucratic agencies.  We founded this country on the notion that no American should be taxed without being represented, and yet today we are taxed and those who create almost all laws governing us are unelected.  James Madison, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Alexander Hamilton, and George Washington each stated that if ever our country were to reach a point where legislative, executive, and judicial powers were combined in single hands that would be the end of liberty and the birth of tyranny.  Sadly, I believe we are there.  A bill I wrote for Ron Paul would restore constitutional governance by preventing any regulation from having the force of law until it was passed into law by Congress in the way the Constitution requires.  That bill, the Congressional Responsibility and Accountability Act, is pending in Congress.

RAPPOPORT:  A more general question: From your experience and training as a constitutional lawyer, what is your view on what the Constitution put in place, through word and intent, regarding individual freedom?  Constitutionally, what is the meaning and range of freedom?

EMORD:  Ours is designedly a Constitution of liberty.  It is remarkably unique.  The Declaration of Independence perhaps best sums up the legal creed that underlies the Constitution.  Just governments are instituted among men to protect the rights of the governed.  Just governments are derived from the consent of the governed. When governments become destructive of those rights, it is the duty of the people to alter or abolish them so as to restore governance in protection of, rather than derogation of, those rights. 

The Constitution is an extraordinary document precisely because it is a written limit on the power of the state.  Before it, no government on earth had such written limits.  Under it, no power rightfully exists in the state except that which is expressly given to it by the instrument.  It enumerates the powers of Congress; it separates legislative, executive, and judicial powers; it makes law-making the province of an elected branch but only for enumerated purposes; it makes war declaration the province of that same branch, albeit war prosecution the province of the executive.  It makes treaty negotiation the province of the executive, but reserves consent to the Senate for treaties negotiated.  It makes the individual sovereign by limiting federal powers, preserving state powers as a check on the federal ones, and forbids in the Bill of Rights government from acting beyond the powers enumerated in the Constitution against the reserved rights of the states and the people.  Those reserved rights create for us a universe of freedom that is meant to be extremely broad.  Its scope is perhaps best conveyed in Thomas Jefferson’s definition of liberty: 

“Of liberty I would say that in the whole plenitude of its extent, it is unobstructed action according to our will.  But rightful liberty is unobstructed action according to our will within limits drawn around us by the equal rights of others.  I do not add ‘within the limits of the law,’ because law is often but the tyrant’s will, and always so when it violates the right of an individual.”

That ideal, that scope of freedom, we do not presently have because the plain and intended meaning of the Constitution is now largely dishonored.

RAPPOPORT:  What is your view of the so-called “living, evolving Constitution” promoted by many, many judges?

I have given much thought to this.  My thinking is reflected in my books Freedom, Technology, and the First Amendment and Global Censorship of Health Information. 

In brief, the Constitution’s words spring from underlying principles.  Those principles are static.  Yet, as we progress in science, technology, and knowledge, we are confronted with new facts.  That environment, the life of the Republic, is dynamic.  The Constitution permits amendment through a precise process prescribed in Article V.  Its meaning, i.e., the principles designedly protected by its words, may not be reasoned out of the document or altered, except by amendment in the way the document designates.  Consequently, those principles must be preserved in the face of the evolution of our Republic, but that is not to say facts arising from that evolution, because not previously known, justify departure from first principles.  To the contrary, the aim must be to ensure that first principles are upheld despite the evolution.  So, for example, while the electronic media was not known to the Founders, it is nevertheless media and therefore should be entitled to the same full First Amendment protections afforded the print media.  We thus preserve freedom for the message (the aim of the First Amendment) regardless of the medium.

RAPPOPORT:  When a pharmaceutical company is found guilty of pushing a drug on the public it knew was dangerous; and when the drug has been shown to have caused considerable injury and death; when law suits for grievous harm result in huge money judgments; why aren’t persons in that company prosecuted criminally and thrown in prison for long sentences?  What keeps that from happening?

EMORD:  You raise an excellent question.  I believe those who knowingly introduce into the market substances that are likely to cause mortal injury, not just those in industry but also those in government, should be prosecuted criminally for homicide or, at a minimum, criminal negligence.

RAPPOPORT:  On what Constitutional basis does the federal government pour billons of dollars into the National Institutes of Health, a federal agency, for ongoing medical research? 

EMORD:  None.   Ideally, the federal government should be limited to Justice, State, Treasury and Defense.  The health and safety power was meant to be a state power, and I think we in this and many other respects have exceeded the intended bounds of the federal government.

RAPPOPORT:  Could you comment on the legality/illegality of ways in which the government partners with conventional medicine, making it the preferred method of health treatment in all areas.   

EMORD:  On the state level, medical boards engage in anti-competitive regulation, largely designed to deem it a failure of the standard of care for a physician to innovate in medicine and create a market for the innovation that would harm the economic interests of those who practice conventionally.  On the federal level, Medicare establishes treatment orthodoxies through its coverage determinations that bleed into all areas of care and invite charges of abuse for those physicians who would provide a different degree, nature, or quality of treatment than is accepted by Medicare.  That condition is destined to worsen as the Health Reform law causes care for all Americans to be federally scrutinized and subject to a Medicare-type system of second-guessing of physician services.  The FDA contributes to this regime because nothing can be used for treatment of disease in the United States unless it has been approved by the FDA as a drug.  Because it costs on average about $600 million to get a drug approved in the United States, tens of thousands of potential therapeutic agents are never legally available to treat patients and, thus, secure a monopoly for drug companies in the treatment of Americans.  FDA is an example of industry capture.  The drug industry controls the agency.  The drug industry also largely dictates the content of medical education and the prescription practices of physicians.  Its influence is pervasive and reinforces allopathic medicine at every turn.

RAPPOPORT:  What do you think our best strategy is, here in America, to head off what the FDA is going to do?

EMORD:  In my book The Rise of Tyranny I provide a detailed explanation of the changes needed to restore the Framer’s Republic.  In short, I urge people to vote out of office those who have not supported deregulation and to press members of Congress to support two of the bills I have written for Congressman Ron Paul—the Congressional Responsibility and Accountability Act and the Health Freedom Act.  The former would prevent any regulatory agency from enforcing any regulation it promulgated until that regulation is passed into law by Congress in the way in which the Constitution designates.  This would prevent the agencies from exercising unchecked power and would restore the law-making function to Congress, preventing a lot of abusive regulation from ever being enforced.   The latter bill would disarm FDA of any power to require advance review of claims for supplements.  That system of prior restraint violates the First Amendment and should be dismantled.  Those who would defraud the public by falsely advertising their products should be prosecuted after the fact but those who wish to tell the truth should not be required to convince the FDA before they are allowed to speak.   There are many other reforms we need to institute, including removing from FDA the drug approval power and vesting in universities, through a blinded system, drug reviews so that science, rather than politics and favoritism, determines the outcome of drug evaluations.

Jon Rappoport

The author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world. You can sign up for his free emails here.

THE SECRET POLITICAL ISSUE

THE SECRET POLITICAL ISSUE

OCTOBER 21, 2010.  As this year’s election draws close, it’s business as usual, as far as Health Freedom is concerned.  This issue isn’t just in the shadows.  It’s in the closet behind the shadows, locked in tight.

The avalanche of pharmaceutical ads on TV drones on.  The attacks on natural health set off firecrackers here and there: “Patients shouldn’t be allowed to choose alternative remedies, because that will take them away from medicines that really help.”

“We, the medical elites, know what’s best for you, and we’ll shove it down your throats.”

But wait.  This is supposed to be the Year of the Conservative.  Conservatives want less government intrusion, more individual freedom.  Why isn’t Health Freedom front and center?

I have four answers to that question.  One, the pharmaceutical lobby and money machine are bankrolling overwhelming numbers of candidates.  Two, the millions of people who participated in the Health Freedom movement of the early 1990s have gone back into their cocoons, and the funding of that movement, which came from nutritional companies, has dried up.  Three, many leaders of the old Health Freedom campaign actually believe Barack Obama is a forward-thinking guy who would never permit a real crackdown on the nutritional industry.  And four, conservative candidates running for office see no reason to put Health Freedom up high on their agendas, because they’ve never had to before—the pressure to do so is minimal.  Why rock the boat?

In case you’ve forgotten, Health Freedom means: every person has the right to choose how to take care of their own body and health.  The government has no business interfering.  The right extends to refusal to accept conventional medical treatments.  It’s a simple thing, really. 

And perhaps reading this, you imagine there is no urgent need to press home this issue at this time.

Well, Health Freedom is always a major issue.  The federal government, in the person of the FDA, an agency that is actually a bought and paid for subsidiary of the drug companies, is always seeking new ways to apply a chokehold on nutritional companies and natural health practitioners.

In a radio interview I did with Jonathan Emord, the most successful American lawyer in cases launched against the FDA, Emord told me he has sufficient reason to believe the FDA never intends to abide by the court decisions rendered against them.  That’s right. In other words, the FDA is a rogue agency. 

In another interview, this one with Dr. Barbara Starfield, of the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, Starfield confirmed that, in the wake of her 2000 finding that FDA-approved drugs have been killing Americans at the rate of 106,000 people a year, no federal agency has approached her to consult on ways of reducing this horrendous outcome.  Not in the past ten years.  Her virtually unchallenged report, published in the July 26, 2000, issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, has stirred no government response.

How much willful political ignorance and avoidance does it take to walk away from A MILLION DEAD AMERICANS over the last ten years?

In reading a number of conservative political blogs, I’ve seen no mention of the Health Freedom issue or the effects of Big Pharma on Americans.  Why is that?  Is it because drug companies are blithely assumed to be bastions of free enterprise and, therefore, sacrosanct?  That’s my suspicion, because I do encounter statements that ObamaCare is trashing the greatest medical system in the world.  Obamacare is a disaster in all ways, but “greatest medical system” is a massive lie.

Face it.  The overwhelming number of Americans are still, after all these years, hooked on drugs.  Medical drugs.  They live to swallow pills.  They live to receive diagnoses from doctors.  Therefore, the notion that we all have the right to choose whether to take a medical drug or an herb is beyond their ability to think and reason.  They’re in the hole deep, and they don’t even know they’re addicted.

Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Glenn Beck, take notice.  You’re missing the boat here.  You’re way out in left field.  You’re a victim of doctor-induced hypnosis, and it’s time you woke up and put this issue on the table.  You’ll be surprised at the response, once you open the gates.  Millions of people will come out and respond.  And that’s called RATINGS. 

Bottom line: even if you worship at the altar of modern medicine, in all cases, all the time, the right to choose any form of healing therapy is basic to the intent of the Constitution, and that right is always in jeopardy as the Parental State decides what’s best for you, decides what “science” is good science, decides how stupid you are and how much help you need to see the light.

JON RAPPOPORT