Guest guest Posted October 6, 2004 Report Share Posted October 6, 2004 So sad, that we are not encouraged to know that a few pellets of homeopathic chamomilla or nux vomica under the baby's tongue (at a cost of pennies) can, if properly chosen -- there are about half a dozen other remedies that can help the body release colic -- do a better job than expensive pharmaceuticals, while promoting the over-all health of the body. And yet the hypocrisy rules, where we are encouraged to go for the " quick fix, " but only so long as it is expensive, and manufactured by the pharmaceutical industry. The same people who push us to go along with this, work overtime to criminalize or eliminate traditional and natural therapies, calling them " quackery. " gertie The New Freedom Commission and Our Children http://www.independent-media.tv/item.cfm?fmedia_id=9282 & fcategory_desc=Under%20R\ eported The New Freedom Commission and Our Children October 06, 2004 By: Carr Independent Media TV Printer Friendly Version Since I wrote about the potentially lethal implications of the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health last week, a painful memory surfaced. I drifted back to 1994, the year my oldest child was born with a severe case of colic. Taking care of him was mentally and physically exhausting, but my son's pediatrician recommended a prescription drug to curb his shrieking cries. I gave him his first dose and anxiously awaited the moment we would both be feeling relief. Within an hour, I had thrown the medication in the trash. Through my tears and guilt, I watched his little dilated eyes and his hapless stupor, asking myself what I had done. From that moment on, it was back to the old-fashioned remedies such as running the vacuum, taking car rides, and gently rocking him in a swing. But recalling the effect of his medication, I fear the NFCMH may pave the way to have this same impact on thousands if not millions of children in the United States. The proposal undoubtedly preys on the most vulnerable segments of our population, and in particular children. It is easy to target the young when they are innocently and neatly amassed in schools. Pregnant women, as seen in the Illinois implementation of the NFCMH proposals, are also easy prey. Post-partum blues can be labeled depression and dictate the need for medication for an unknown length of time. Hey, maybe colic could be classified as an emotional disorder, and then more infants in Illinois could achieve that glossy stupor I saw on my son's face. But these potential victims are certainly not alone. The Commission's interim report to the president suggested there are " hundreds of thousands of people with serious mental illness " in settings such as " nursing homes, jails, and homeless shelters. " The report goes on to warn this problem will likely get worse with " the aging of the population and the demographic growth of minority populations. " Gee, I had no idea that minorities are more prone to mental illness. It must be their faulty biology, right? And medication can fix that, right? The young, the old, criminals, homeless people, and women-all vulnerable sitting ducks in American pharmaceutical gaming. Jon Rappoport, a veteran freelance investigative journalist, has examined this current phenomenon that sounds more like a sci-fi plot than an initiative in a democratic society. He writes, " This is the same science that created the eugenics monster. This is the same science that created concentration camps. This is the same science that created 'mental illness' as a rationale for putting people behind bars who disagreed with the power of the State. This is sheer madness perpetrated by those claiming to be able to define 'sanity' and 'insanity'. " Coincidentally, Rappoport's wife is Dr. , a nutritionist who has successfully helped children with ADHD through nutritional supplements and dietary shifts. The algorithmic approach outlined by the NFCMH does not offer such alternative treatments. It offers top-dollar drugs and more top-dollar drugs, overlooking non-medical treatments that could be safer and more effective. Furthermore, TMAP does not address the potential long-term effects these drugs could have on a young developing mind, or any mind for that matter. The drugs have not been existence long enough to know the full extent of their long-term effects. And yet, the FDA, the same FDA which claims buying cheaper drugs from Canada may be unsafe, doesn't seem to care that many Americans are being prescribed drugs whose effects remain largely unknown and potentially dangerous. And earlier this year, the FDA gagged scientist Mosholder from sharing his findings that increased suicide risks exist in children taking anti-depressants. It is not to say that these drugs do not have a valid or useful purpose. Undoubtedly, they have improved the lives of those whose doctors have expended more safe and effective methods. It is the exploitation of these drugs for the sheer sake of pharmaceutical greed and the risk to our children that is so very wrong. Despite its claims of genuine concern for those who legitimately need help, the NFCMH appears more like a scheme to weed out new victims and then exact the fast-food TMAP approach on them. Adding to this suspicion is the overwhelming support from groups like TeenScreen. While TeenScreen pushes for mental health screenings in schools and has managed to earn support from schools in 26 different states, few people likely realize that TeenScreen was developed under the leadership of Shaffer, who is the director of Columbia University's Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, but ALSO a spokesperson for Eli Lilly Pharmaceuticals. Imagine that, a member of th e pharmaceutical encouraging mental health screenings. Life's a business, huh? Without understanding the entire scope of the NFCMH agenda, it is easy to see how consumers could be misled about this wolf in sheep's clothing. After all, we are a society that wants a quick fix for everything. Obese? Take a pill. Feeling bad? Take a pill. Wrinkles? We've got a pill for that. We welcome quick fixes for all of our ailments, and we simultaneously feed into the hands of greedy pharmaceutical predators who simply want their profits and claim without proof they have the answers for us. And of course we want the best for our children! Unfortunately, these medications could be having the very opposite effect on our children, and all for the sake of profit. I would never wish upon another parent that which I witnessed when I gave my son his first and last dose of an anti-colic prescription. In the most dramatic irony of all, here is one final excerpt from the Commission's interim report to the president: " Something is terribly wrong, terribly amiss, with the me ntal health system. " Indeed there is, and its name is the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health. References: http://www.mentalhealthcommission.gov/reports/Interim_Report.htm http://www.nomorefakenews.com/bio.htm http://www.adhdoutreach.com/drlaura.htm http://www.teenscreen.org/ http://mentalhelp.net/poc/view_doc.php?type=news & id=61325 & cn=206 Original Link: http://www.independent-media.tv Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 6, 2004 Report Share Posted October 6, 2004 So sad, that we are not encouraged to know that a few pellets of homeopathic chamomilla or nux vomica under the baby's tongue (at a cost of pennies) can, if properly chosen -- there are about half a dozen other remedies that can help the body release colic -- do a better job than expensive pharmaceuticals, while promoting the over-all health of the body. And yet the hypocrisy rules, where we are encouraged to go for the " quick fix, " but only so long as it is expensive, and manufactured by the pharmaceutical industry. The same people who push us to go along with this, work overtime to criminalize or eliminate traditional and natural therapies, calling them " quackery. " gertie The New Freedom Commission and Our Children http://www.independent-media.tv/item.cfm?fmedia_id=9282 & fcategory_desc=Under%20R\ eported The New Freedom Commission and Our Children October 06, 2004 By: Carr Independent Media TV Printer Friendly Version Since I wrote about the potentially lethal implications of the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health last week, a painful memory surfaced. I drifted back to 1994, the year my oldest child was born with a severe case of colic. Taking care of him was mentally and physically exhausting, but my son's pediatrician recommended a prescription drug to curb his shrieking cries. I gave him his first dose and anxiously awaited the moment we would both be feeling relief. Within an hour, I had thrown the medication in the trash. Through my tears and guilt, I watched his little dilated eyes and his hapless stupor, asking myself what I had done. From that moment on, it was back to the old-fashioned remedies such as running the vacuum, taking car rides, and gently rocking him in a swing. But recalling the effect of his medication, I fear the NFCMH may pave the way to have this same impact on thousands if not millions of children in the United States. The proposal undoubtedly preys on the most vulnerable segments of our population, and in particular children. It is easy to target the young when they are innocently and neatly amassed in schools. Pregnant women, as seen in the Illinois implementation of the NFCMH proposals, are also easy prey. Post-partum blues can be labeled depression and dictate the need for medication for an unknown length of time. Hey, maybe colic could be classified as an emotional disorder, and then more infants in Illinois could achieve that glossy stupor I saw on my son's face. But these potential victims are certainly not alone. The Commission's interim report to the president suggested there are " hundreds of thousands of people with serious mental illness " in settings such as " nursing homes, jails, and homeless shelters. " The report goes on to warn this problem will likely get worse with " the aging of the population and the demographic growth of minority populations. " Gee, I had no idea that minorities are more prone to mental illness. It must be their faulty biology, right? And medication can fix that, right? The young, the old, criminals, homeless people, and women-all vulnerable sitting ducks in American pharmaceutical gaming. Jon Rappoport, a veteran freelance investigative journalist, has examined this current phenomenon that sounds more like a sci-fi plot than an initiative in a democratic society. He writes, " This is the same science that created the eugenics monster. This is the same science that created concentration camps. This is the same science that created 'mental illness' as a rationale for putting people behind bars who disagreed with the power of the State. This is sheer madness perpetrated by those claiming to be able to define 'sanity' and 'insanity'. " Coincidentally, Rappoport's wife is Dr. , a nutritionist who has successfully helped children with ADHD through nutritional supplements and dietary shifts. The algorithmic approach outlined by the NFCMH does not offer such alternative treatments. It offers top-dollar drugs and more top-dollar drugs, overlooking non-medical treatments that could be safer and more effective. Furthermore, TMAP does not address the potential long-term effects these drugs could have on a young developing mind, or any mind for that matter. The drugs have not been existence long enough to know the full extent of their long-term effects. And yet, the FDA, the same FDA which claims buying cheaper drugs from Canada may be unsafe, doesn't seem to care that many Americans are being prescribed drugs whose effects remain largely unknown and potentially dangerous. And earlier this year, the FDA gagged scientist Mosholder from sharing his findings that increased suicide risks exist in children taking anti-depressants. It is not to say that these drugs do not have a valid or useful purpose. Undoubtedly, they have improved the lives of those whose doctors have expended more safe and effective methods. It is the exploitation of these drugs for the sheer sake of pharmaceutical greed and the risk to our children that is so very wrong. Despite its claims of genuine concern for those who legitimately need help, the NFCMH appears more like a scheme to weed out new victims and then exact the fast-food TMAP approach on them. Adding to this suspicion is the overwhelming support from groups like TeenScreen. While TeenScreen pushes for mental health screenings in schools and has managed to earn support from schools in 26 different states, few people likely realize that TeenScreen was developed under the leadership of Shaffer, who is the director of Columbia University's Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, but ALSO a spokesperson for Eli Lilly Pharmaceuticals. Imagine that, a member of th e pharmaceutical encouraging mental health screenings. Life's a business, huh? Without understanding the entire scope of the NFCMH agenda, it is easy to see how consumers could be misled about this wolf in sheep's clothing. After all, we are a society that wants a quick fix for everything. Obese? Take a pill. Feeling bad? Take a pill. Wrinkles? We've got a pill for that. We welcome quick fixes for all of our ailments, and we simultaneously feed into the hands of greedy pharmaceutical predators who simply want their profits and claim without proof they have the answers for us. And of course we want the best for our children! Unfortunately, these medications could be having the very opposite effect on our children, and all for the sake of profit. I would never wish upon another parent that which I witnessed when I gave my son his first and last dose of an anti-colic prescription. In the most dramatic irony of all, here is one final excerpt from the Commission's interim report to the president: " Something is terribly wrong, terribly amiss, with the me ntal health system. " Indeed there is, and its name is the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health. References: http://www.mentalhealthcommission.gov/reports/Interim_Report.htm http://www.nomorefakenews.com/bio.htm http://www.adhdoutreach.com/drlaura.htm http://www.teenscreen.org/ http://mentalhelp.net/poc/view_doc.php?type=news & id=61325 & cn=206 Original Link: http://www.independent-media.tv Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 6, 2004 Report Share Posted October 6, 2004 Just follow the money. I was reading Health magazine from August yesterday. Pure pharma propaganda through the whole thing with some truth mixed in for some real flavor. Made me sick. The New Freedom Commission and Our Children > > > http://www.independent-media.tv/item.cfm?fmedia_id=9282 & fcategory_desc=Under%20R\ eported > The New Freedom Commission and Our Children > > October 06, 2004 > > > By: Carr > Independent Media TV > > Printer Friendly Version > > > > Since I wrote about the potentially lethal implications of the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health last week, a painful memory surfaced. I drifted back to 1994, the year my oldest child was born with a severe case of colic. Taking care of him was mentally and physically exhausting, but my son's pediatrician recommended a prescription drug to curb his shrieking cries. I gave him his first dose and anxiously awaited the moment we would both be feeling relief. Within an hour, I had thrown the medication in the trash. Through my tears and guilt, I watched his little dilated eyes and his hapless stupor, asking myself what I had done. From that moment on, it was back to the old-fashioned remedies such as running the vacuum, taking car rides, and gently rocking him in a swing. But recalling the effect of his medication, I fear the NFCMH may pave the way to have this same impact on thousands if not millions of children in the United States. > The proposal undoubtedly preys on the most vulnerable segments of our population, and in particular children. It is easy to target the young when they are innocently and neatly amassed in schools. Pregnant women, as seen in the Illinois implementation of the NFCMH proposals, are also easy prey. Post-partum blues can be labeled depression and dictate the need for medication for an unknown length of time. Hey, maybe colic could be classified as an emotional disorder, and then more infants in Illinois could achieve that glossy stupor I saw on my son's face. > > But these potential victims are certainly not alone. The Commission's interim report to the president suggested there are " hundreds of thousands of people with serious mental illness " in settings such as " nursing homes, jails, and homeless shelters. " The report goes on to warn this problem will likely get worse with " the aging of the population and the demographic growth of minority populations. " Gee, I had no idea that minorities are more prone to mental illness. It must be their faulty biology, right? And medication can fix that, right? The young, the old, criminals, homeless people, and women-all vulnerable sitting ducks in American pharmaceutical gaming. > > Jon Rappoport, a veteran freelance investigative journalist, has examined this current phenomenon that sounds more like a sci-fi plot than an initiative in a democratic society. He writes, " This is the same science that created the eugenics monster. This is the same science that created concentration camps. This is the same science that created 'mental illness' as a rationale for putting people behind bars who disagreed with the power of the State. This is sheer madness perpetrated by those claiming to be able to define 'sanity' and 'insanity'. " Coincidentally, Rappoport's wife is Dr. , a nutritionist who has successfully helped children with ADHD through nutritional supplements and dietary shifts. > > The algorithmic approach outlined by the NFCMH does not offer such alternative treatments. It offers top-dollar drugs and more top-dollar drugs, overlooking non-medical treatments that could be safer and more effective. Furthermore, TMAP does not address the potential long-term effects these drugs could have on a young developing mind, or any mind for that matter. The drugs have not been existence long enough to know the full extent of their long-term effects. And yet, the FDA, the same FDA which claims buying cheaper drugs from Canada may be unsafe, doesn't seem to care that many Americans are being prescribed drugs whose effects remain largely unknown and potentially dangerous. And earlier this year, the FDA gagged scientist Mosholder from sharing his findings that increased suicide risks exist in children taking anti-depressants. > > It is not to say that these drugs do not have a valid or useful purpose. Undoubtedly, they have improved the lives of those whose doctors have expended more safe and effective methods. It is the exploitation of these drugs for the sheer sake of pharmaceutical greed and the risk to our children that is so very wrong. Despite its claims of genuine concern for those who legitimately need help, the NFCMH appears more like a scheme to weed out new victims and then exact the fast-food TMAP approach on them. Adding to this suspicion is the overwhelming support from groups like TeenScreen. While TeenScreen pushes for mental health screenings in schools and has managed to earn support from schools in 26 different states, few people likely realize that TeenScreen was developed under the leadership of Shaffer, who is the director of Columbia University's Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, but ALSO a spokesperson for Eli Lilly Pharmaceuticals. Imagine that, a member of! > th e pharmaceutical encouraging mental health screenings. Life's a business, huh? > > Without understanding the entire scope of the NFCMH agenda, it is easy to see how consumers could be misled about this wolf in sheep's clothing. After all, we are a society that wants a quick fix for everything. Obese? Take a pill. Feeling bad? Take a pill. Wrinkles? We've got a pill for that. We welcome quick fixes for all of our ailments, and we simultaneously feed into the hands of greedy pharmaceutical predators who simply want their profits and claim without proof they have the answers for us. And of course we want the best for our children! Unfortunately, these medications could be having the very opposite effect on our children, and all for the sake of profit. I would never wish upon another parent that which I witnessed when I gave my son his first and last dose of an anti-colic prescription. In the most dramatic irony of all, here is one final excerpt from the Commission's interim report to the president: " Something is terribly wrong, terribly amiss, with the me n! > tal health system. " Indeed there is, and its name is the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health. > > References: > > http://www.mentalhealthcommission.gov/reports/Interim_Report.htm > > http://www.nomorefakenews.com/bio.htm > > http://www.adhdoutreach.com/drlaura.htm > > http://www.teenscreen.org/ > > http://mentalhelp.net/poc/view_doc.php?type=news & id=61325 & cn=206 > > > > > > > > Original Link: http://www.independent-media.tv > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2004 Report Share Posted October 28, 2004 How dare they call it " New Freedom. " If that aint Orwellian doublespeak, I don't know what is!!! > http://www.independent-media.tv/item.cfm? fmedia_id=9282 & fcategory_desc=Under%20Reported > The New Freedom Commission and Our Children > > October 06, 2004 > > > By: Carr > Independent Media TV > > Printer Friendly Version > > > > Since I wrote about the potentially lethal implications of the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health last week, a painful memory surfaced. I drifted back to 1994, the year my oldest child was born with a severe case of colic. Taking care of him was mentally and physically exhausting, but my son's pediatrician recommended a prescription drug to curb his shrieking cries. I gave him his first dose and anxiously awaited the moment we would both be feeling relief. Within an hour, I had thrown the medication in the trash. Through my tears and guilt, I watched his little dilated eyes and his hapless stupor, asking myself what I had done. From that moment on, it was back to the old-fashioned remedies such as running the vacuum, taking car rides, and gently rocking him in a swing. But recalling the effect of his medication, I fear the NFCMH may pave the way to have this same impact on thousands if not millions of children in the United States. > The proposal undoubtedly preys on the most vulnerable segments of our population, and in particular children. It is easy to target the young when they are innocently and neatly amassed in schools. Pregnant women, as seen in the Illinois implementation of the NFCMH proposals, are also easy prey. Post-partum blues can be labeled depression and dictate the need for medication for an unknown length of time. Hey, maybe colic could be classified as an emotional disorder, and then more infants in Illinois could achieve that glossy stupor I saw on my son's face. > > But these potential victims are certainly not alone. The Commission's interim report to the president suggested there are " hundreds of thousands of people with serious mental illness " in settings such as " nursing homes, jails, and homeless shelters. " The report goes on to warn this problem will likely get worse with " the aging of the population and the demographic growth of minority populations. " Gee, I had no idea that minorities are more prone to mental illness. It must be their faulty biology, right? And medication can fix that, right? The young, the old, criminals, homeless people, and women-all vulnerable sitting ducks in American pharmaceutical gaming. > > Jon Rappoport, a veteran freelance investigative journalist, has examined this current phenomenon that sounds more like a sci-fi plot than an initiative in a democratic society. He writes, " This is the same science that created the eugenics monster. This is the same science that created concentration camps. This is the same science that created 'mental illness' as a rationale for putting people behind bars who disagreed with the power of the State. This is sheer madness perpetrated by those claiming to be able to define 'sanity' and 'insanity'. " Coincidentally, Rappoport's wife is Dr. , a nutritionist who has successfully helped children with ADHD through nutritional supplements and dietary shifts. > > The algorithmic approach outlined by the NFCMH does not offer such alternative treatments. It offers top-dollar drugs and more top- dollar drugs, overlooking non-medical treatments that could be safer and more effective. Furthermore, TMAP does not address the potential long-term effects these drugs could have on a young developing mind, or any mind for that matter. The drugs have not been existence long enough to know the full extent of their long-term effects. And yet, the FDA, the same FDA which claims buying cheaper drugs from Canada may be unsafe, doesn't seem to care that many Americans are being prescribed drugs whose effects remain largely unknown and potentially dangerous. And earlier this year, the FDA gagged scientist Mosholder from sharing his findings that increased suicide risks exist in children taking anti-depressants. > > It is not to say that these drugs do not have a valid or useful purpose. Undoubtedly, they have improved the lives of those whose doctors have expended more safe and effective methods. It is the exploitation of these drugs for the sheer sake of pharmaceutical greed and the risk to our children that is so very wrong. Despite its claims of genuine concern for those who legitimately need help, the NFCMH appears more like a scheme to weed out new victims and then exact the fast-food TMAP approach on them. Adding to this suspicion is the overwhelming support from groups like TeenScreen. While TeenScreen pushes for mental health screenings in schools and has managed to earn support from schools in 26 different states, few people likely realize that TeenScreen was developed under the leadership of Shaffer, who is the director of Columbia University's Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, but ALSO a spokesperson for Eli Lilly Pharmaceuticals. Imagine that, a member of the pharmaceutical encouraging mental health screenings. Life's a business, huh? > > Without understanding the entire scope of the NFCMH agenda, it is easy to see how consumers could be misled about this wolf in sheep's clothing. After all, we are a society that wants a quick fix for everything. Obese? Take a pill. Feeling bad? Take a pill. Wrinkles? We've got a pill for that. We welcome quick fixes for all of our ailments, and we simultaneously feed into the hands of greedy pharmaceutical predators who simply want their profits and claim without proof they have the answers for us. And of course we want the best for our children! Unfortunately, these medications could be having the very opposite effect on our children, and all for the sake of profit. I would never wish upon another parent that which I witnessed when I gave my son his first and last dose of an anti-colic prescription. In the most dramatic irony of all, here is one final excerpt from the Commission's interim report to the president: " Something is terribly wrong, terribly amiss, with the mental health system. " Indeed there is, and its name is the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health. > > References: > > http://www.mentalhealthcommission.gov/reports/Interim_Report.htm > > http://www.nomorefakenews.com/bio.htm > > http://www.adhdoutreach.com/drlaura.htm > > http://www.teenscreen.org/ > > http://mentalhelp.net/poc/view_doc.php?type=news & id=61325 & cn=206 > > > > > > > > Original Link: http://www.independent-media.tv > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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