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Does independent thought mean you (or your child)
need a thorazine drip?
He (John Dewey) said the society or group is most
important, and that independent individualists have a form of "insanity."
UNESCO: ITS PURPOSE AND ITS PHILOSOPHY that "political
unification in some sort of world government will be required."
"New Freedom Initiative"/Mandatory Mental
Health Screening of American
Children Passes..
Infowars.com | November 23, 2004
On Monday morning, Alex talked to Jeff Diest from Congressman Ron Paul's
office.Diest confirmed that Ron Paul's
amendment requiring parental consent prior
to government psychological testing/mental screening of all school children
was not added to the bill. The New Freedom Initiative passed sans amendment,
as it stood. The implications of this Orwellian initiative are terrifying.
Here is some background: Bush to screen population for mental illness Sweeping
initiative links diagnoses to treatment with specific drugs.
WorldNetDaily.com | June 21, 2004
President Bush plans to unveil next month a sweeping
mental health initiative that recommends screening for every citizen and
promotes the use of expensive antidepressants and antipsychotic drugs favored
by supporters of the administration.
The New Freedom Initiative, according to a progress report , seeks to
integrate mentally ill patients fully into the community by providing
"services in the community, rather than institutions," the British Medical
Journal reported.
Critics say the plan protects the profits of drug companies at the expense
of the public.
The initiative began with Bush's launch in April 2002 of the New Freedom
Commission on Mental Health, which conducted a "comprehensive study of the
United States mental health service delivery system."
The panel found that "despite their prevalence, mental disorders often go
undiagnosed" and recommended comprehensive mental health screening for
"consumers of all ages," including preschool children.
The commission said, "Each year, young children are expelled from preschools
and childcare facilities for severely disruptive behaviors and emotional
disorders."
Schools, the panel concluded, are in a "key position" to screen the 52 million
students and 6 million adults who work at the schools.
The commission recommended that the screening be linked with "treatment and
supports," including "state-of-the-art treatments" using "specific medications
for specific conditions."
The Texas Medication Algorithm Project, or TMAP, was held up by the panel as
a "model" medication treatment plan that "illustrates an evidence-based
practice that results in better consumer outcomes."
The TMAP -- started in 1995 as an alliance of individuals from the
pharmaceutical industry, the University of Texas and the mental health and
corrections systems of Texas -- also was praised by the American Psychiatric
Association, which called for increased funding to implement the overall
plan.
But the Texas project sparked controversy when a Pennsylvania government
employee revealed state officials with influence over the plan had received
money and perks from drug companies who stand to gain from it. Allen Jones, an employee of the Pennsylvania Office of the Inspector General
says in his whistleblower report the "political/pharmaceutical alliance"
that developed the Texas project, which promotes the use of newer, more
expensive antidepressants and antipsychotic drugs, was behind the
recommendations of the New Freedom Commission, which were "poised to
consolidate the TMAP effort into a comprehensive national policy to treat
mental illness with expensive, patented medications of questionable benefit
and deadly side effects, and to force private insurers to pick up more of
the tab."
Jones points out, according to the British Medical Journal, companies that
helped start the Texas project are major contributors to Bush's election
funds. Also, some members of the New Freedom Commission have served on
advisory boards for these same companies, while others have direct ties to
TMAP.
Eli Lilly, manufacturer of olanzapine, one of the drugs recommended in the
plan, has multiple ties to the Bush administration, BMJ says. The elder
President Bush was a member of Lilly's board of directors and President Bush
appointed Lilly's chief executive officer, Sidney Taurel, to the Homeland
Security Council.
Of Lilly's $1.6 million in political contributions in 2000, 82 percent went to
Bush and the Republican Party.
Another critic, Robert Whitaker, journalist and author of "Mad in America,"
told the British Medical Journal that while increased screening "may seem
defensible," it could also be seen as "fishing for customers."
Exorbitant spending on new drugs "robs from other forms of care such as job
training and shelter program," he said.
However, a developer of the Texas project, Dr. Graham Emslie, defends
screening.
"There are good data showing that if you identify kids at an earlier age who
are aggressive, you can intervene ... and change their trajectory."
Rep. Ron Paul seeks to yank program, decries use of drugs on children
WND |September 9, 2004
By Ron Strom
Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, plans to offer an amendment
in the House of
Representatives today that would remove from an appropriations bill a new
mandatory mental-health screening program for America's children.
"The American tradition of parents deciding what is best for their children
is, yet again, under attack," writes Kent Snyder of the Paul- founded Liberty
Committee. "The pharmaceutical industry has convinced President Bush to
support mandatory mental-health screening for every child in America,
including preschool children, and the industry is now working to convince
Congress as well."
As WorldNetDaily reported, the New Freedom Initiative recommends screening
not only for children but eventually for every American. The initiative came
out of the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, which President Bush
established in 2002.
Critics of the plan say it is a thinly veiled attempt by drug companies to
provide a wider market for high-priced antidepressants and antipsychotic
medication, and puts government in areas of Americans' lives where it does
not belong.
Writes Snyder: "The real payoff for the drug companies is the forced
drugging of children that will result - as we learned tragically with
Ritalin - even when parents refuse."
Paul's amendm ent to the Labor, HHS and Education Appropriations Act for
Fiscal Year 2005 would take the new program out of the funding bill.
The congressman, who is known for his strict adherence to the Constitution,
wrote in a letter to his colleagues: "As you know, psychotropic drugs are
increasingly prescribed for children who show nothing more than children's
typical rambunctious behavior. Many children have suffered harmful effects
from these drugs. Yet some parents have even been charged with child abuse
for refusing to drug their children. The federal government should not
promote national mental-health screening programs that will force the use of
these psychotropic drugs such as Ritalin."
The New Freedom Commission found that "despite their prevalence, mental
disorders often go undiagnosed" and recommended comprehensive mental-health
screening for "consumers of all ages," including preschool children.
The commission said, "Each year, young children are expelled from preschools
and childcare facilities for severely disruptive behaviors and emotional
disorders."
Schools, the panel concluded, are in a "key position" to screen the 52 million
students and 6 million adults who work at the schools.
The state of Illinois has already approved its own mental-health screening
program, the Children's Mental Health Act of 2003, which will provide
screening for "all children ages 0-18" and "ensure appropriate and culturally
relevant assessment of your children's social and emotional development with
the use of standardized tools."
Members of the Illinois Children's Mental Health Partnership have held several
public hearings on the program in recent months, hearing from parents and
others who oppose the mandatory screening.
Karen R. Effrem, M.D., is a physician and leading opponent of mandatory
screening. She is on the board of directors of EdWatch, an organization that
actively opposes federal control of education.
"I am concerned, especially in the schools, that mental health could be used
as a wedge for diagnosis based on attitudes, values, beliefs and political
stances - things like perceived homophobia," Effrem told WorldNetDaily.
"There are several violence-prevention programs that do say if a person is
homophobic, they could be considered potentially violent."
Continued Effrem: "This mental-health program could be used as an enforcement
tool to impose a very politically correct, anti-American
curriculum."
Effrem emphasized the new program has no guarantees of parental rights,
noting some children have died because parents were coerced to put their
kids on psychiatric medications.
Snyder says the following groups have come out in opposition to the screening
program: Eagle Forum, Gun Owners of America, the Association of American
Physicians and Surgeons, Concerned Women of America, Freedom 21, the Alliance
for Human Research Protection, and the International Center for
the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology.
A screening program in Paul's home state began nearly ten years ago. The
Texas Medication Algorithm Project, or TMAP, was held up by the New Freedom
Commission as a "model" medication treatment plan that "illustrates an
evidence-based practice that results in better consumer outcomes."
The TMAP - started in 1995 as an alliance of individuals from the
pharmaceutical industry, the University of Texas and the mental health and
corrections systems of Texas - also was praised by the American Psychiatric
Association, which called for increased funding to implement the overall
plan.
But the Texas project sparked controversy when a Pennsylvania government
employee revealed state officials with influence over the plan had received
money and perks from drug companies who stand to gain from it.
Allen Jones, an employee of the Pennsylvania Office of the Inspector General
says in his whistleblower report the "political/pharmaceutical alliance"
that developed the Texas project, which promotes the use of newer, more
expensive antidepressants and antipsychotic drugs, was behind the
recommendations of the New Freedom Commission, which were "poised to
consolidate the TMAP effort into a comprehensive national policy to treat
mental illness with expensive, patented medications of questionable benefit
and deadly side effects, and to force private insurers to pick up more of
the tab."
Jones points out, according to a British Medical Journal report, companies
that helped start the Texas project are major contributors to Bush's
re-election. Also, some members of the New Freedom Commission have served on
advisory boards for these same companies, while others have direct ties to
TMAP.
Mental Health and "World Citizenship"
Dr. Dennis Cuddy | August 11 2004
In a recent article, I related that the Bush administration's Secretary of
Education Rod Paige last October 3 declared that the U.S. is pleased to
rejoin UNESCO where we could develop common strategies to prepare our
children to become "citizens of the world."
Then on June 21 WorldNetDaily published "Life With Big Brother: Bush to
screen population for mental illness" describing President Bush's "New
Freedom Initiative" that would have every citizen receive a mental health
screening. What one needs to guard against is the use of mental health to
pursue world government.
The theme of the administration of President Woodrow Wilson was "The New
Freedom" and it pursued the ideals of PHILIP DRU: ADMINISTRATOR, written in
1912 by President Wilson's chief adviser, Col. Edward M. House, who wrote of
"socialism as dreamed of by Karl Marx." Education would be a primary vehicle
for achieving the objective, and John Dewey, the father of progressive
education, promoted socialism. He said the society or group is most
important, and that independent individualists have a form of "insanity."
By the late 1940s, Dewey's progressive education was becoming dominant in
American public schools. And in 1948 an International Congress on Mental
Health was held in London with publication of a document "Mental Health and
World Citizenship," declaring that "world citizenship can be widely extended
among all peoples through the application of the principles of mental
health." The Congress promoted the U.N. as the vehicle for promoting this
objective, and UNESCO's director-general Sir Julian Huxley the same year
wrote in UNESCO: ITS PURPOSE AND ITS PHILOSOPHY that "political
unification in some sort of world government will be required."
The 1950s and 1960s saw the growing strength of Dewey's progressive
educational philosophy and mental health advocacy, and in 1965 the Joint
Commission on Mental Health of Children was established. In 1969, the
Commission released its report, which stated: "As the home and church
decline in influence...schools must begin to provide adequately for the
emotional and moral development of children....The school...must assume a
direct responsibility for the attitudes and values of child development. The
child advocate, psychologist, social technician, and medical technician
should all reach aggressively into the community, send workers out to
children's homes, recreation facilities, and schools. They should assume
full responsibility for all education, including pre-primary education."
In the 1970s, a representative of HEW (U.S. Department of Health, Education
and Welfare) approached North Carolina Governor James B. Hunt, Jr. about
developing a model for child health care around the nation. The N.C. Plan
was called "Child Health Plan for Raising a New Generation," and included
establishing a "health care home" for every child, stating "responsibilities
belonging to child and family are required." The plan was released in 1979,
the same year the N.C. State Health Plan was adopted, linking in two places
religion with mental illness and mental retardation.
In the same year (1979), Bill Clinton (supported by Hillary Clinton) began
Arkansas' Governor's School for the Gifted and Talented, modeled after the
first Governor's School in the nation which was established in 1963 in N.C.,
was funded in part by the Carnegie Corporation, and was attended by the
writer of this article. We were given various psychological tests which, I
believe, looked at us as guinea pigs to be remoulded for the Brave New World
of the future.
When Hillary Clinton became First Lady of the U.S. in 1993, she was in
charge of a health care task force, about half the members of whom were
connected with the Robert Wood Johnson (RWJ) Foundation. On the NBC "Today
Show" (January 23, 1990), Dr. Michael Lewis of the New Jersey Robert Wood
Johnson Medical School had claimed: "Lying is an important part of social
life, and children who are unable to do it are children who may have
developmental problems."
What Hillary Clinton's task force was proposing was basically socialized
medicine. Hillary's friend, former N.C. Gov. Hunt, became director of RWJ's
Mental Health Services for Youth program. And regarding a January 4-5, 1996
symposium in Frankfurt, KY, attended by attorney Kent Masterson Brown, the
attorney said: "He (former Gov. Hunt) came to Governor Wallace Wilkinson in
Kentucky and told him that RWJ would like Kentucky to become part of this
mental health program for youth, and said we'll give you $100,000 to plan a
program....That's what they do. I mean, you think that's just buying
legislation. Well, it is."
The next year, early in 1997, former Gov. Hunt was chairman of the National
Education Goals Panel (NEGP) and promoted the Early Childhood Public
Engagement Campaign that actor Rob Reiner and others were starting, with the
Carnegie Corporation once again playing a critical role (the Carnegie
Institution in 1904 had financed the establishment of a biological
experiment station related to eugenics at Cold Spring Harbor, NY). The NEGP
indicated a desire for the creation of a nationalized system of child care
from age zero based upon the principles of brain research (mental health).
Roy Roemer, Governor of Colorado at the time, stated: "The ideal system
would be...in every community or county you have an organizational structure
that is responsible for the zero to 6, zero to 3 age level for the
child....And then finally put in a hooker and say, 'Hey, you don't get any
payments from state on their highways until you do this job.'"
It may be this same type of coercive tactic that is used to facilitate the
current New Freedom Initiative. Mental health screenings may be attached to
the current vaccines most children are required to receive to attend public
schools. And for older people, they may be asked by insurance companies to
"voluntarily" accept the screenings if they don't want their premiums to
increase.
In 2001, President George W. Bush worked with U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy to
pass the federal "No Child Left Behind" legislation, which includes provisions for expanding school-based mental health programs. This fits
with the report of The New Freedom in Mental Health Commission, which stressed
that "schools must be partners in the mental health care of our children."
Where is all this leading?
In the third volume of Arthur Calhoun's A SOCIAL
HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN FAMILY, published in 1919 and widely used as a social
service textbook, one reads: "The new view is that the higher and more
obligatory relation is to society rather than to the family; the family goes
back to the age of savagery while the state belongs to the age of
civilization. The modern individual is a world citizen, served by the world,
and home interests can no longer be supreme....As soon as the new family,
consisting of only the parents and the children, stood forth, society saw how
many were unfit for parenthood and began to realize the need of community
care....As familism weakens, society has to assume a larger parenthood. The
school begins to assume responsibility for the functions thrust upon it....The
kindergarten grows downward toward the cradle and there arises talk of
neighborhood nurseries....Social centers replace the old time home
chimney....The child passes more and more into the custody of community
experts....In the new social order, extreme emphasis is sure to be placed upon
eugenic procreation....It seems clear that at least in its early
stages, socialism will mean an increased amount of social control....We may
expect in the socialist commonwealth a system of public educational agencies
that will begin with the nursery and follow the individual through
life....Those persons that experience alarm at the thought of intrinsic
changes in family institutions should remember that in the light of social
evolution, nothing is right or valuable in itself."
Relevant to this, Clinton administration official Mary Jo Bane said almost
30 years ago that "in order to raise children with equality, we must take
them away from families and communally raise them." (TULSA SUNDAY WORLD,
August 21, 1977) And about that same time, HEW Executive Assistant Eddie
Bernice Johnson (who would later become a Congresswoman from Texas) advocated
the licensing of parents before they would be permitted to have children.
Licensing of parents has also been proposed by Prof. Gene Stephens (THE
FUTURIST, April 1981) and Dr. Jack Westman (LICENSING PARENTS, 1994).
Under the American socialism planned for our future, government will
increasingly control our lives via mental health screening and
education, among other means. Only if the American people resist these efforts
as soon as possible will we be successful in thwarting the plans of the power
elite.
Also See:
Over 5200 Concerned Adults Refuse to Comply with New
Freedom Initiative for Mental Health Screening in the Schools
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