Guest guest Posted April 6, 2008 Report Share Posted April 6, 2008 You can contact me personally if you want to talk about it: http://www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view & pageId=60643 > > Government stakes claim to every newborn's DNA > 'We now are considered guinea pigs, instead of human beings with rights' > April 03, 2008 > > By Bob Unruh > © 2008 WorldNetDaily > An Orwellian plan that has state and federal governments staking claim to > the ownership of every newborn's DNA in perpetuity is advancing under the > radar of most privacy rights activists, but would turn the United States' > citizenry into a huge pool of subjects for involuntary scientific > experimentation, according to one organization alarmed over the issue. > " We now are considered guinea pigs, as opposed to human beings with > rights, " Twila Brase, president of the the Citizens' Council on Health Care, > a Minnesota-based organization familiar with the progress in that state. > She warned ultimately, such DNA databases could spark the next wave of > demands for eugenics, the concept of improving the human race through the > control of various inherited traits. Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned > Parenthood, advocated for eugenics to cull those she considered unfit from > the population. > In 1921, she said eugenics is " the most adequate and thorough avenue to > the solution of racial, political and social problems, " and she later > lamented " the ever increasing, unceasingly spawning class of human beings > who never should have been born at all. " > Lawmakers in Minnesota recently endorsed a proposal that would exempt > stockpiles of DNA information already being collected from every newborn > there from any sort of consent requirements, meaning researchers could > utilize the DNA of more than 780,000 Minnesota children for any sort of > research project whatsover, Brase said. > " The Senate just voted to strip citizens of parental rights, privacy > rights, patient rights and DNA property rights. They voted to make every > citizen a research subject of the state government, starting at birth, " she > said. " They voted to let the government create genetic profiles of every > citizen without their consent. " > The result will be that every newborn's DNA will be collected at birth, > " warehoused in a state genomic biobank, and given away to genetic > researchers without parent consent - or in adulthood, without the > individual's consent. Already, the health department reports that 42, 210 > children have been subjected to genetic research without their consent, " > Brase told WND. > She said although her organization works with Minnesota issues, similar > laws or rules and regulations already are in use pretty much all across the > nation. > The National Conference of State Legislatures, in fact, lists for all 50 > states as well as the District of Columbia the various statutes or > regulatory provisions under which newborns' DNA is being collected. > Such programs are offered as " screening " requirements to detect treatable > illnesses. They vary as to exactly what tests are done but the Health > Resources and Services Administration has requested a report that would > " include a recommendation for a uniform panel of conditions. " > Further, <http://dodd.senate.gov/>Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., is on record > proposing a plan that would turn the program into a consolidated nationwide > effort. > " Fortunately, " he said at the time, " some newborn screening occurs in > every state but fewer than half of the states, including Connecticut, > actually tests for all disorders that are detectable. ... This legislation > will provide resources for states to expand their newborn screening > programs... " > His plan specifically would provide millions of dollars for educating and > training health care professionals in " relevant technologies, " and set up > standards for updating tests and maintaining the quality of test results. > So what's the big deal about looking into DNA to hunt for various disease > possibilities? > Nothing, said Brase, if that's where the hunt would end. > However, she said, " researchers already are looking for genes related to > violence, crime and different behaviors. " > " This isn't just about diabetes, asthma and cancer, " she said. " It's also > about behavioral issues. " > " In England they decided they should have doctors looking for problem > children, and have those children reported, and their DNA taken in case they > would become criminals, " she said. > In fact, published reports in the United Kingdom note that senior police > forensics experts believe genetic samples should be studied because it may > be possible to identify potential criminals as young as age five. > " If we have a primary means of identifying people before they offend, then > in the long-term the benefits of targeting younger people are extremely > large, " Gary Pugh, director of forensics at Scotland Yard, was quoted > saying. " You could argue the younger the better. Criminologists say some > people will grow out of crime; others won't. We have to find who are > possibly going to be the biggest threat to society. " > The United Kingdom database already has 4.5 million genetic samples and > reportedly is the largest in Europe, but activists want to expand it. Pugh > said that it is not possible right now to demand everyone provide a DNA > sample, but only because of the costs and logistics. > One published report cited the Institute for Public Policy Research, which > is suggesting children from 5-12 in the United Kingdom be targeted with > cognitive behavioral therapy and Pugh has suggested adding the children in > primary schools, even if they have not offended, to the database. > There, Chris Davis of the National Primary Headteachers' Association > warned the move could be seen " as a step towards a police state. " > But Pugh said the UK's annual cost of $26 billion from violent crime makes > it well worth the effort. > Brase said such efforts to study traits and gene factors and classify > people would be just the beginning. What could happen through subsequent > programs to address such conditions, she wondered. > " Not all research is great, " she said. " There is research that is highly > objectionable into the genetic propensities of an individual. Not all > research should be hailed as wonderful initiatives. " > It can identify some tendencies for potential problems, and that is one of > its downfalls, she said. > " It lends itself to be the beginning of discrimination and prejudice, " she > said. " People can look at data about you and make assessments ultimately of > who you are. " > Further, the invasion of privacy is huge. DNA is the most intimate > identifier that exists, she said. > " This, however, says our DNA is not ours but the government's, " she said. > " It says our values, our ethics, belief systems have to be [subjected] to > the interests of the government. " > Right now various states obtain DNA under different plans, and keep the > information for varying time periods. In Minnesota, the legislature is > working on legal authorization for the state government to take it without > consent, keep it forever, and use it for whatever purposes the state desires > - all without obtaining consent or even letting people know. > A mandatory sample of a newborn's DNA also pulls back the veil on > information about the parents as well, Brase told WND. > " It's like they're collecting information on the whole family, " she said. > The Heartland Regional Genetics and Newborn Screening is one of the > organizations that advocates for more screening and research. > It proclaims in its vision statement a desire to see newborns screened for > 200 conditions. It also forecasts " every student ... with an individual > program for education based on confidential interpretation of their family > medical history, their brain imaging, their genetic predictors of best > learning methods... " > Further, every individual should share information about " personal and > family health histories " as well as " gene tests for recessive conditions and > drug metabolism " with the " other parent of their future children. " > Still further, it seeks " ecogenetic research that could improve health, > lessen disability, and lower costs for sickness. " > " They want to test every child for 200 conditions, take the child's > history and a brain image, and genetics, and come up with a plan for that > child, " Brase said. " They want to learn their weaknesses and defects. > " Nobody including and especially the government should be allowed to > create such extensive profiles, " she said. > The next step is obvious: The government, with information about potential > health weaknesses, could say to couples, " We don't want your expensive > children, " she said. > " I think people have forgotten about eugenics, the fact of the matter is > that the eugenicists have not gone away. Newborn genetic testing is the > entry into the 21st Century version of eugenics, " she said. > " This is in every state, but nobody is talking about it. Parents have no > idea this is happening, " she said. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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