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Dear Herbalists,

As I have long thought that there are other less severe handlings

for children than turning them into drug addicts, I thought you may be

interested in this.

I am specifically appalled at the waste of millions of the taxpayers

money on the experimental drugging of under 7 year olds. Whose children

are they going to experiment on? Yours?..................Well, they

certainly aren't going to give any of mine an addictive, brain damaging

drug.... " to find out if it works " ...Repulsively Penny

 

> " Patty Schwartz " <mpschwartz

> " Administrator " <drugfree

>Fw: Tipper and Hillary

>Mon, 29 May 2000 11:13:26 -0700

>

> >Tipper and Hillary

> >

> >

> >> Friends,

> >>

> >> With all the press swirling around about school

violence and

>psychotropic

> >> drugs for school children, please read this article for

an

> >up-to-the-minute

> >> factual look at where things stand and what the facts

are.

> >>

> >>

> >> Sincerely,

> >>

> >>

> >> Scott

> >>

> >> P.S. Email me if you'd like more information about

this topic.

> >>

> >>

> >> A Hill and Tip Trip

> >> By Kelly Patricia O'Meara

> >>

> >> Insight Magazine

> >>

> >> This Clinton-Gore team advocates identifying

schoolchildren as mentally

> >ill

> >> and requiring them to take psychotropic drugs to

control any

>inattentive

> >> behavior.

> >>

> >> " I think that part of what we've got, though, is to

reflect how we can

> >> both identify and get help to children who need it,

whether or not they

> >want

> >> it or are willing to accept it, " declared first lady

and wanna-be

>junior

> >> senator from New York, Hillary Rodham Clinton. The

first lady's

>comment,

> >put

> >> in the context of how to deal with tragedies such as

the shooting at

> >> Col-umbine High School in Littleton, Colo., was

delivered to a

> >> standing-room-only crowd at the June 7, 1999, White

House Conference on

> >> Mental Health. She was directly advocating the forced

drugging of

> >> schoolchildren with psychotropic drugs such

> >> as Ritalin.

> >>

> >> The first lady, however, was not alone in advocating

this chilling

>agenda

> >> for dealing with schoolhouse behavioral problems.

During the conference

> >that

> >> critics dubbed a cheerleading session for the

pharmaceutical industry,

>the

> >> president's top mental-health adviser and candidate for

first lady,

>Tipper

> >> Gore, joined in leading the psychopharmacological

charge. In fact,

>nodding

> >> to Tipper, President Clinton told the mesmerized crowd:

" She knows more

> >and

> >> cares more about this issue than anyone else I

personally know. "

> >>

> >> The vice president's wife " knows more " about this

issue? Beyond earning

>a

> >> masters' degree in psychology more than 20 years ago

and having been

> >treated

> >> for depression, say critics, Gore's knowledge of mental

illness is

>limited

> >> at best and misinformed at worst. For example, Gore

displayed some of

>her

> >> knowledge on this subject during the president's weekly

radio address

>to

> >the

> >> nation just before the White House conference when she

announced that

> >> Americans must change their attitudes and " dispel the

myths about

>mental

> >> illness once and for all. " She said, " One of the most

widely believed,

>and

> >> most damaging, myths is that mental illness is a

personal failure, not

>a

> >> physical disease ... and we are learning that many

mental disorders are

> >> biological in nature and can be medically treated. "

> >>

> >> Members of the opposing team, which include a growing

number of

> >> well-respected physicians who have spent their lives

resisting

>subjective

> >> diagnoses of mental illnesses, are astonished by such

pronouncements.

> >They

> >> tell Insight they would jump at the opportunity to

present their

>contrary

> >> data from such a highly visible platform as the

well-publicized

> >Clinton-Gore

> >> White House conference but were not invited to offer

opposing research.

> >> Instead, the spotlight was given to Steven Hyman,

director of the

>National

> >> Institute of Mental Health, or NIMH.

> >>

> >> Hyman pulled a slide show out of his black bag and

wowed the

>star-struck

> >> crowd with his evidence that, indeed, mental illness is

a " real

>disorder

> >of

> >> the brain. " To prove his point, Hyman said, " I brought

a few pictures "

> >> because " I think pictures are worth an awful lot. I

just want to show

>you

> >a

> >> picture that is somewhat alarming. What we see here on

the left is a

> >healthy

> >> person with a normal brain, and then on the right,

someone who has had

> >> severe depression for a long time. What you see

outlined in red at the

> >> bottom is that a key structure acquired from memory

actually gets

>smaller.

> >> It deteriorates if depression is not treated. "

> >>

> >> Apparently caught up in the frenzy of breakthrough

medical " proof " of

> >mental

> >> illness, the audience broke into enthusiastic applause.

> >>

> >> Hyman's slide show was nothing if not deeply flawed,

the most basic

> >omission

> >> being a failure to present the case history of the

subject shown in the

> >> slides. For instance, during Hyman's show not once did

he mention

>whether

> >> the patient on the right, who " had severe depression "

and whose slide

> >showed

> >> " red at the bottom " had been given psychotropic drugs

for any length of

> >time

> >> prior to capturing the brain on film. In fact, if this

were the case,

> >> critics tell Insight, the right-brain slides, rather

than being

> >reflective

> >> of a scientific breakthrough supporting the premise

that the depression

> >> caused the mental illness, would support arguments made

by opponents

>that

> >> the change in the brain in fact was caused by

prescribed psychotropic

> >> medication.

> >>

> >> Harold Koplewicz, the vice-chairman of the department

of psychiatry at

>the

> >> New York University Medical Center, an invited guest

speaker at the

>White

> >> House conference, even went beyond the contention that

mental illnesses

> >are

> >> brain disorders. Koplewicz said, " Essentially, these

diseases are

>no-fault

> >> brain disorders. They are familial, they run in

families and they have

> >> predictable onset and course. " The doctor presented no

data to support

> >such

> >> interesting remarks but " essentially " waived any

personal

>responsibility

> >or

> >> validation that such life experiences as mental

distress or anxiousness

> >> might

> >> be normal.

> >>

> >> Since such problems are physical, and beyond personal

control or

>remedy,

> >> Koplewicz reasons, tragedies such as what occurred in

Littleton are

> " most

> >> probably preventable " as a matter of public health.

" Normal children, "

>he

> >> continued, " just don't snap and go out on a shooting

spree. Children

>who

> >> commit violent crimes almost always have histories of

violence,

>depression

> >> or other mental-health problems. The problem is we have

never really

> >looked

> >> at

> >> the underlying cause of all this violence - which is

childhood

>psychiatric

> >> illness. "

> >>

> >> So what was going on there? Apparently " looking at all

the possible

> >> underlying causes " of school-age violence - the

announced reason for

>the

> >> Hillary-Tipper conference - was not on the agenda.

Making a statement

> >about

> >> the 6 million children being " treated " for ADHD with

highly addictive

> >> stimulants, including Ritalin, did not fit that bill.

Nor did even one

>of

> >> the distinguished speakers raise the issue first

reported last year by

> >> Insight [see " Guns & Doses, " June 28, 1999], faxed to

the White House

> >before

> >> the conference, revealing the dramatic connection

between the then five

> >most

> >> recent school shootings: All the accused shooters had

been treated with

> >> psychotropic drugs, including Ritalin, Luvox and

Prozac.

> >>

> >> It would not be long before the New York Times, the

Washington Post and

> >> national weekly newsmagazines were following Insight's

lead, but when

>the

> >> Hillary-Tipper team had the chance to recognize the

problem quickly and

>in

> >> prime time they demurred.

> >>

> >> The controversy surrounding the use of psychotropic

drugs on children

> >began

> >> after the diagnosis for ADD/ADHD was voted into the

Diagnostic and

> >> Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, or DSM-IIIR, in

1987. The

> >> prescription of Ritalin (methyl-phenidate), a highly

addictive

>stimulant

> >> categorized as a Schedule II drug by the Drug

Enforcement Agency, or

>DEA,

> >> skyrocketed from less than a quarter of a million in

1986 to 6 million

> >> today. Certainly it is unlikely that Clinton-Gore

psychiatric

>spokesmen

> >> Hyman and Koplewicz were unaware that Ritalin is

pharmacologically

>similar

> >> to cocaine in its pattern of abuse, given that red

flags were raised

>years

> >> ago by the World Health Organization, or WHO, the DEA

and even the

> >Archives

> >> of General Psychiatry.

> >>

> >> Within the year since Insight began reporting on this

issue, not only

>are

> >> many mental-health experts questioning the overuse of

psychotropic

>drugs

> >on

> >> children but also the validity of the latest Diagnostic

and Statistical

> >> Manual of Mental Disorders, the DSM-IV, as it continues

to broaden the

> >> circle of mental illness to in-clude practically every

child, with the

> >> implication that pharmacology offers a quick solution.

For example, in

>the

> >> January 2000 issue of Clinical Psychiatry News,

respondents were asked

>to

> >> evaluate the psychiatric diagnoses presented in the

DSM-IV. The result

>was

> >> dramatic. " The DSM-IV has gone too far. There are too

many diagnoses

> >without

> >> any objective basis or biological support, " said

Houston psychiatrist

> >> Theodore Pearlman. " There has never been any criterion

that

>psychiatric

> >> diagnoses require a

> >> demonstrated biological etiology, " said Harold Pincus,

vice chairman of

> >the

> >> DSM-IV task force.

> >>

> >> To indicate how far from reality are the advocates of

passing out pills

>in

> >> the schools, it is noteworthy that Hyman apparently was

not even

> >> communicating with his colleagues at the American

Academy of

>Pediatrics,

> >or

> >> AAP. All of the new AAP guidelines for diagnosing ADHD,

like thosen

>listed

> >> in the DSM-IV - for example, exhibiting behaviors such

as not listening

> >when

> >> spoken to directly, failing to follow directions,

losing things, being

> >> forgetful and easily distracted and fidgeting with

hands or feet - are

> >> subjective observations on the part of the treating

physician. However,

> >> after listing the new guidelines, the AAP concludes

that " other

>diagnostic

> >> tests, sometimes considered positive indicators for

ADHD, have been

> >reviewed

> >> and considered not effective [emphasis added]. These

tests include lead

> >> screening, tests for generalized resistance to thyroid

hormone, and

>brain

> >> image studies [emphasis added]. "

> >>

> >> In other words, the dog-and-pony show that Hyman put on

for the first

>and

> >> second ladies was not based in science, and the AAP is

just another in

>a

> >> long list of experts to refute such fraudulent claims.

Hyman also

> >> wascontradicting his own remarks made earlier in a New

York Times

>article

> >> when he said, " Magnetic Resonance Imaging, or MRIs,

produce

>scientifically

> >> meaningless pretty pictures which are essentially

reminiscent of

> >phrenology.

> >> Who knows where or when the much-sought answers will

emerge? "

> >>

> >> While it is insulting to many physicians who are aware

of the fraud

>that

> >is

> >> being perpetrated in the name of treating mental

illness for men in

> >> positions of extreme power to continue to push the

strict

>pharmacological

> >> line, this has been endemic in the Clinton-Gore

administration. David

> >> Satcher, the U.S. surgeon general, is a case in point.

> >>

> >> Fred Baughman, a pediatric neurologist dedicated to

exposing fraudulent

> >> medical diagnoses of mental illnesses, took the surgeon

general to task

> >for

> >> what Baughman called Satcher's " attempt to represent

mental disorders

>as

> >> actual diseases. " In response to a first-ever Surgeon

General's Report

>on

> >> Mental Illness, made public in December 1999, just

months after the

> >> Columbine shooting tragedy, Baughman wrote to the

nation's top medicine

> >man

> >> asking,

> >> " Why have you chosen to be the first-ever Surgeon

General to issue a

> >> report on mental health? As I have shown, it has little

or nothing to

>do

> >> with medical science, bona fide diseases or epidemics.

Have other

>factors

> >> motivated you? You might have addressed the biggest,

most heinous

>epidemic

> >> of all, that of mandating Ritalin and other addictive,

dangerous, even

> >> deadly amphetamines for 5-6 million entirely normal

American children,

>as

> >> 'treatment' for the wholly fraudulent psychiatric

'disease' ADHD. "

> >>

> >> Baughman concluded his letter: " Your role in this

deception and

> >> victimization is clear. Whether you are a physician so

unscientific

>that

> >you

> >> cannot read their contrived 'neurobiologic' literature

and see the

>fraud,

> >or

> >> whether you see it and choose to be an accomplice - you

should resign. "

> >>

> >> Loren Mosher, a psychiatrist and 30-year member of the

American

> >Psychiatric

> >> Association, or APA, resigned from the organization

over the blatant

> >> infiltration of pharmaceutical money now permeating the

organization

>and

> >> concurs with Baughman about the surgeon general's

mental health report.

> >> Mosher tells Insight that " the report is a joke. " He

says, " There are

>no

> >> tests for these so-called mental diagnoses. You can't

do that with

> >> psychiatric diagnoses. "

> >>

> >> Regardless of the continual stream of articles from

reputable

>physicians

> >> contradicting the biochemical advocacy being pushed by

the

> >> administration, Satcher, Hyman and Koplewicz have been

elevated in

>stature

> >> and now are considered foremost authorities on

psychiatric public

>health,

> >> greatly due to the platform provided by the nation's

first and second

> >> ladies. Now the first lady has announced a $5 million

research grant

>for

> >> Hyman's NIMH to study the effects of psychotropic drugs

on children

>under

> >> the age of 7.

> >>

> >> For David Oaks, coordinator of Support Coalition

International, an

> >> Oregon-based organization representing 80 groups

working for

>mental-health

> >> rights, the first lady's research announcement was a

warning shot over

>the

> >> bow. Oaks is alarmed by what he considers the push to

medicate. " There

>is

> >no

> >> safety anywhere, " he tells Insight. " The forced

administration of drugs

>is

> >> definitely going up. Nearly 40 states have laws where

they have

> >> forced-drugging in your own home. Out of the White

House conference

>came

> >the

> >> endorsement of the Program of Assertive Community

Treatment, or PACT.

> >> That's the teeth of the outpatient forced-drugging:

at-home drug

>delivery,

> >> here they will come to your home every day if necessary

for medication

> >> compliance. Drugging is the be-all and end-all. "

> >>

> >> Not everyone is buying the Clinton administration line.

In mid-May a

> >> class-action lawsuit was filed in Dallas for alleged

fraud and

>conspiracy

> >in

> >> overpromoting the stimulant medication Ritalin.

> >>

> >> Three national defendants are named: Novartis

Pharmaceutical Corp.

> >> (formerly Ciba Geigy), the manufacturer of Ritalin;

CHADD

> >> (Children and Adults with Attention

Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder),

> >> a parent's organization that is partially funded by

drug companies;

> >> and the APA.

> >>

> >> Among the allegations: The drug company " deliberately,

intentionally,

> >> and negligently promoted the diagnosis of ADD/ADHD and

sales of Ritalin

> >> through its promotional literature. " The lawsuit also

charges the drug

> >> company with " actively supporting groups such as

Defendant CHADD, both

> >> financially and with other means, so that such

organizations would

>promote

> >> and support the ever- increasing implementation of the

ADD/ADHD

>diagnosis

> >as

> >> well as

> >> directly increasing Ritalin sales. " And the lawsuit

further claims that

> >> " Defendant American Psychiatric Association conspired,

colluded and

> >> cooperated with the other Defendants " while taking

" financial

> >> contributions from Ciba Geigy as well as other members

of the

> >pharmaceutical

> >> industry. "

> >>

> >> Andy Waters of the Dallas law firm of Waters and Kraus,

> >> www.RitalinFraud.com is lead attorney for the

plaintiffs. He tells

>Insight

> >> that " the nature of the lawsuit is for consumer fraud.

The legal

>concept

> >is

> >> the unholy alliance of the psychiatrists, manufacturers

and parents

>groups

> >> that have combined to

> >> create a diagnosis that didn't exist and create and

accelerate an

>enormous

> >> market for Ritalin. My sincere hope is that 60 to 90

days from now

>we'll

> >> have a judge ordering the defendants to release

information. I think we

> >will

> >> find that Novartis was involved in the making of the

diagnosis - it's

>just

> >> too close a connection to rule it out. "

> >>

> >> Meanwhile, a growing number of members of state boards

of education,

>state

> >> legislatures and the U.S. Congress have been taking

action to stop the

> >tidal

> >> wave of psychotropic drugs being prescribed for

children under the

>guise

> >of

> >> public health. New York, New Jersey, Idaho, Rhode

Island, Minnesota,

> >> Georgia,

> >> Colorado, Arizona and Pennsylvania have passed or have

legislation

>pending

> >> that confronts the issue of widespread prescription of

psychotropic

>drugs

> >to

> >> school-age children. Legislative topics include

examining the impact of

> >> psychotropic drugs, prohibiting school personnel from

recommending or

> >> discussing medications for schoolchildren, requiring

pharmacists to

> >disclose

> >> the potentially addictive nature of psychotropic drugs

and preventing

> >> any school official from requiring that children be

placed on

>psychotropic

> >> drugs as a condition for remaining in school.

> >>

> >> Back at the White House conference, however, the

solution to the

> >> violence confronting America's youth -the

Hillary-Tipper answer to the

> >> psychotropic-drug epidemic - was more drugging. In

fact, the first and

> >> second ladies exercised all their mental-health

resources to try to

> >convince

> >> the nation that mental illnesses are " real illnesses of

the brain " and

> >> " should be treated the same as physical illness. " This

would mean, of

> >> course, that public-health authorities should have the

right to examine

> >> every American child for mental illness as a matter of

public health -

>and

> >> diagnose and treat them pharmacologically in whatever

way they choose.

> >>

> >> Regardless of the fact that there simply are no data to

support such

> >> claims, the president praised his wife and

mental-health guru - the

>person

> >> " who knows more and cares more, " Mrs. Gore, for the

" truly remarkable

> >> experience. " The White House conference was, to the

president,

> >> " stimulating, moving and humbling, " because " it's so

real. "

> >>

> >> Then, under the guise of exercising presidential

authority, Clinton

> >> in-structed the nation's largest private insurer, the

Federal Employee

> >> Health Benefit Plan, to provide full parity for mental

and physical

> >health.

> >> He directed the Health Care Finance Administration to

encourage states

>to

> >> better coordinate mental-health services, and he called

for medication

> >> targeted at people with the most serious mental

disorders who rely on

> >> Medicaid. And, to wind up his mental-health giveaway,

the president

> >> announced that he had requested the largest increase in

history - some

>$70

> >> million - " to help provide more mental-health

services. "

> >>

> >> Tipper Gore did not respond to questions Insight faxed

to her office

>and

> >> Hillary Clinton's communications director refused

Insight's request for

>an

> >> interview, saying, " We're going to pass on providing

comments to your

> >> questions. " So one only can imagine the kind of

mental-health programs

> >those

> >> ladies will be working for should Hillary be elected to

the Senate and

> >> Tipper take over as first lady. As for the need to

profile, diagnose

>and

> >> dope America's schoolchildren to assure their mental

health, well, the

> >> Clinton-Gore psychiatrists have proved how much

children " need " it -

> >> " whether or not they want it or are willing

> >> to accept it. "

> >>

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