by Dr. Joseph Mercola
from
Mercola Website
Since this is a bit of an unusual type of
article I thought I would put my comment first. It appears some very
dangerous legislation is being prepared to be implemented in the US.
If this legislation passes, in brief:
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You will have a mandatory vaccination or
you will be charged with a crime
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You will get a mandatory medical exam,
or you will be charged with a crime
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Doctors will give the exam or you will
be charged with a crime
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Your property can be seized if there is
'REASONABLE CAUSE TO BELIEVE" that it may pose a public health
hazard... it can be burned or destroyed and you will NOT have
recourse or compensation.
Action Step
You can go to
http://www.aapsonline.org/ and click on the
Emergency Dictatorial Powers act in the left column. Then click on
the December 13th Action Alert which will provide information on how to
respond to your legislators on this issue.
Additional Resource -
http://www.publichealthlaw.net/
(For a copy of the proposed law, look to
http://www.publichealthlaw.net/MSEHPA/MSEHPA.pdf)
Summary
This Act would:
-
broaden government access to private
medical records;
-
greatly weaken protections against the
taking of private property without compensation
-
criminalize refusal to be conscripted
for public service or to take medical treatment
-
potentially increase the risk of
infection to many individuals on the pretext of protecting the
common good
-
subjugate scientific analysis and
deliberation to the raw assertion of power; greatly expand the power
of government to interfere with commerce
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and immunize state officials from
sanctions against gross abuses of power.
Although certain extraordinary government
interventions might be warranted in a true emergency, the government already
has significant emergency powers as well as the ability to convene a special
session of the legislature. It is highly inadvisable to completely suspend
our delicate system of checks and balances upon the word of a Governor that
an emergency requires it.
This Act, in effect, empowers the Governor to create a police state
by fiat, and for a sufficient length of time to destroy or muzzle his
political opposition.
The most telling sentence is:
"The public health authority shall have the
power to enforce the provisions of this Act through the imposition of
fines and penalties, the issuance of orders, and such other remedies as
are provided by law, but nothing in this Section shall be construed to
limit specific enforcement powers enumerated in this Act."
Article VIII Section 802.
It is unlikely that the vast expansion of
governmental powers would be restricted to combating a smallpox outbreak.
Once the precedent is established, it could be expanded to other types of
"emergencies."
This proposal violates the very principles that its author, Lawrence O
Gostin, has previously outlined, while giving them lip service.
His article recommends that "public health
authorities should bear the burden of justification and, therefore, should
demonstrate:
-
a significant risk based on scientific
evidence
-
the intervention's effectiveness by
showing a reasonable fit between ends and means
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that economic costs are reasonable
-
that human rights burdens are
reasonable...." (see
JAMA 2000;283:3118-3122).
Background
HHS Secretary Tommy Thompson is urging State legislatures to adopt
the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act, prepared by the Center for
Law and the Public's Health at Georgetown and Johns Hopkins Universities
for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
This Act grants unprecedented and unchecked powers to the Governors of the
50 States. It can be downloaded from
www.publichealthlaw.net.
It is likely that HHS will tie passage of the Act to billions of dollars in
federal funding: the usual method of bribery/coercion to get States to pass
legislation that would otherwise never be considered.
Paul Weyrich of the Free Congress Foundation said:
"Tommy Thompson, whom I have considered a
friend for thirty years, should be ashamed of himself for advocating
this kind of Big Brother legislation. This is not the Tommy Thompson we
knew as a four-term governor of Wisconsin."
HHS is using the 9/11 emergency as a pretext to
rush passage of an Act that has been in the works for more than a year. Its
main author, Lawrence O. Gostin, was a member of Clinton's Task
Force on Health Care Reform, whose secret documents were exposed to
public view as a result of the AAPS lawsuit (AAPS
et al v. Hillary Rodham Clinton et al.)
He was a member of Working Group 17, Bioethics, of Cluster V, The Ethical
Foundations of the New System, and also a member of the informal group
promoting Single Payer. It is odd that Tommy Thompson should be urging
adoption of a plan originating with the most extremist left wing of
Clinton's Health Care Task Force.
This legislation is a serious threat to our civil liberties. Indeed, "this
law treats American citizens as if they were the enemy," stated George
Annas, chairman of the Health Law Department at the Boston University
School of Public Health (San Francisco Chronicle, 11/25/01).
It must be exposed to the light of day in the
next month and a half.
"If protests are sufficient and if
conservative legislators in state legislatures are properly alerted,
perhaps there is a chance to beat back this monster," Weyrich said.
Major Provisions
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Declaring an Emergency
Under this Act, any Governor could
appoint himself dictator by declaring a "public health emergency."
He doesn't even have to consult anyone.
The Act requires that he "shall consult with the public health
authority," but "nothing in the duty to consult ... shall be
construed to limit the Governor's authority to act without such
consultation when the situation calls for prompt and timely action."
The legislature is prohibited from intervening for 60 days, after
which it may terminate the state of emergency only by a two-thirds
vote of both chambers. (Apparently, it does not have the authority
to find that the state of emergency never really existed.) Article
III, Section 305(c). There is also the possibility that the Governor
could declare a new emergency as soon as his powers were about to
expire.
What is a public health emergency?
It is whatever the Governor decides it
should be. By the definition in the Act, it could be an "occurrence"
- or just an "imminent threat" - of basically any cause that
involves a biological agent or biological toxin that poses a
"substantial risk" of a "significant number" of human fatalities or
disability. Article I, Section 104(g).
Terrorism need not be involved; any
threat of an epidemic would suffice.
The Act does not define "substantial risk." Could it mean a
1-in-1,000,000 chance? Risks of that magnitude are already being
invoked as a cause for alarm, say of a measles outbreak with
transmission through an unvaccinated child, and a pretext for
removing exemptions to mandatory vaccines. The EPA (Environmental
Protection Agency) also uses such low (and purely hypothetical)
risk as the rationale for very costly regulations, so the precedent
is well-established.
Is a "significant number" five (the number of deaths from anthrax as
of the date of this writing); 24 (the number of deaths from
chickenpox in 1998 and 1999 combined, 12 of them in persons under
the age of 20, used as a reason for mandatory childhood
vaccination); 100 cases of AIDS; or is it thousands of deaths from
smallpox, as most readers may assume-or a single case?
It could be any of these because the definition is at the sole
discretion of the Governor. The most plausible of the dire threats
generally cited is a smallpox outbreak.
However, given the nature of the disease and advanced medicine and
sanitation, such an outbreak could be contained without any of the
extreme measures in this Act, just as in the 1970s. (See, for
example, "Super
Smallpox Saturdays?" by Michael Arnold Glueck,
M.D., and Robert J. Cihak, MD, Nov. 15, 2001.)
Because of the adverse side effects of the vaccine (including
death), more harm than good could be done by an ill-advised,
unnecessary mass vaccination campaign.
-
Patient Privacy Abolished
The Act would impose significant new
reporting requirements on physicians and pharmacists, further
diminishing the confidentiality of medical records.
Personal identifying information would have to be reported in
writing, without patient consent, in the event of "an unusual
increase" in prescriptions related to fever, respiratory, or
gastrointestinal complaints that might represent an epidemic disease
or bioterrorism, or of any other illness or health condition that
could represent bioterrorism or epidemic or pandemic disease. Such
conditions are legion.
Gostin concedes that his privacy provision is based on his own model
privacy act of 1999, which apparently no state has adopted. Like the
Clinton privacy regulations that AAPS is now challenging in court,
Gostin's view of privacy is to allow unrestricted disclosure to
federal authorities. Section 506.
-
Unlimited Power
How would the Governor handle the
emergency? By whatever means he chose. He is under no obligation to
use scientifically valid methods, or to choose the least destructive
method, or to perform any kind of risk-benefit analysis.
He may suspend any regulatory statute, or the rules of any state
agency, if they would "prevent, hinder, or delay necessary action."
Article III, Section 303(a)(1). Among the laws to be suspended would
probably be those permitting religious, medical, or philosophical
exemptions to mandatory vaccines.
The Governor may not only utilize all the resources of the State and
its political subdivisions, but commandeer any private facilities or
resources considered necessary, and,
-
"take immediate possession thereof.
Such materials and facilities include, but are not limited to,
communication devices, carriers, real estate, fuels, food,
clothing, and health care facilities."
Article IV Section 402(a). He may
"compel a health care facility to provide services," but it is not
clear what means he may use to compel its personnel to work (Article
IV Section 402(b)), except that any physician or other health care
provider who refuses to perform medical examination or testing as
directed shall be liable for a misdemeanor. Article V Section
502(b).
The Governor may destroy any material or property "of which there is
reasonable cause to believe that it may endanger the public health."
Article IV Section 401(b). And while the State shall pay just
compensation to the owner of any facilities that are "lawfully
taken" or appropriated (Article IV Section 406), there is a huge
exception:
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"Compensation shall not be provided
for facilities or materials that are closed, evacuated,
decontaminated, or destroyed when there is reasonable cause to
believe that they may endanger the public health pursuant to
Section 401." Article IV Section 406.
The Governor is in charge of determining
"reasonable cause." There is a strong incentive for him to declare
any losses to private owners to be non-compensable.
"Reasonable cause" might mean "contaminated." Is the Senate Hart
Office Building contaminated with anthrax? Yes. Should it therefore
be destroyed, or subjected to fumigation with chemicals that would
destroy much of the equipment and furnishings? Most think not.
The problem is that given a sufficiently sensitive testing method,
everything is probably "contaminated" with almost everything else.
Moreover, every testing method has some level of false positives.
The late Conrad Chester of Oak Ridge National Laboratory
stated that any place that has ever supported cattle has anthrax
contamination (lecture before Doctors for Disaster Preparedness
annual meeting, 1996). The same probably applies to any land that
has supported sheep or goats, or any land that has had the wind
deposit soil from such an area.
In other words, anthrax spores are probably ubiquitous, though at a
concentration that very rarely causes any harm. Such harm as was
done may have been misdiagnosed by physicians who were unfamiliar
with anthrax and not specifically looking for it.
Under this law, nothing would stop the Governor from ordering a
citizen to turn over his house to be used as an isolation facility,
and later destroying the house on the grounds that it is
contaminated. This order, like any other, could be enforced at
gunpoint by any law enforcement officer.
In a time of public hysteria, fanned by press coverage based on the
"if it bleeds, it leads" policy, common sense is likely to be an
early casualty. It is even possible that terrorists-or persons bent
on radical transformation of society and the American form of
government-could deliberately raise a false alarm and influence a
Governor to take action that would result in more damage to freedom
than the terrorists themselves could ever accomplish.
Or radical environmentalists (who haven't, to date, generally had
the label of terrorist applied to them) could bring about the
destruction of an activity that they object to (such as logging,
cattle ranching, or modern farming).
There are no checks and balances in this
Act to prevent such an occurrence, and no meaningful accountability
for the public officials who carry out a basically misguided policy,
however destructive.
-
Command and Control
The Act assumes that the best method to
use in an emergency is force and central control. There is no
evidence that force works better than leadership, which can bring
out the best in citizens coming together to meet the crisis, just as
firefighters, police, medical professionals, hotel owners, and other
businessmen did in New York City.
Totalitarianism is not only evil but has had uniformly disastrous
results.
Although the world has 40 centuries of experience to show that the
effect of price controls on the economy is comparable to that of an
asteroid impact on the earth, the Act empowers the Governor to
ration, fix prices, and otherwise control the allocation, sale, use,
or transportation of any item as deemed "reasonable and necessary
for emergency response."
This specifically includes firearms. Article IV Section 402(c) and
Section 405(b). Moreover, the Governor can simply seize such items.
Article IV Section 402(a).
The Act grants Governors the exclusive power to control the
expenditure of funds appropriated for emergencies; the intent and
priorities set by the Legislature would be irrelevant.
The Governor may delegate powers at his sole discretion to unelected
political appointees.
-
Criminalizing Refusal of Medical
Treatment
The Act empowers the public health
authority to decide upon medical treatment or immunizations and to
impose its view on individuals, who are liable for a misdemeanor
should they refuse.
Article V Section 504(b). Although it might in some circumstances be
prudent and justified to quarantine a person who refuses
immunization during an outbreak, it is tyrannical to criminalize the
medical choice to decline a treatment.
An immunization or treatment might well cause serious harm to
certain individuals even if the public health authority does not
recognize that it is "reasonably likely" to lead to "serious harm"-
another two important undefined terms.
Article V Section 504(a)(4). The Act
gives the public health authority the right to isolate or quarantine
a person on an ex parte court order, with no hearing for at least 72
hours. If the public health authority decides that an unvaccinated
person is a risk to others, even if uninfected, he could be
quarantined.
Article V Section 503(e). It is quite possible that public health
authorities could force such a person from his home to a place of
quarantine, where he will be exposed to infected persons. Such
places shall be maintained in a safe and hygienic manner "to the
extent possible," and "all reasonable means shall be taken to
prevent the transmission of infection among isolated or quarantined
individuals."
Article V Section 503(a). The Act itself thus implies that an
uninfected person is at risk by being placed in such a facility; it
is quite likely that he could be at greater risk than if he had the
freedom to protect himself as he saw fit. It is assumed that public
health authorities will be "reasonable"; however, this assumption is
questionable.
Even now,
children not vaccinated against
hepatitis B are being excluded from school even though there
is NO risk that an uninfected child can transmit the disease and a
minuscule risk that he can acquire the disease at school.
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Zero Accountability
If the State does more harm than good
through unfettered use of its draconian power, it can rely on the
state immunity clause:
-
"Neither the State, its political
subdivisions, nor, except in cases of gross negligence or
willful misconduct, the Governor, the public health authority,
or any other State official referenced in this Act, is liable
for the death of or any injury to persons, or damage to
property, as a result of complying with or attempting to comply
with this Act or any rule or regulations promulgated pursuant to
this Act."
Article VIII Section 804
Note that the law would grant certain
immunities even for deaths improperly caused, and allows such
immunity even for advisors who made recommendations based on
conflicts of interest.
An Alternate Proposal
Although this Act should be rejected, there are certain measures that State
governments might want to consider:
-
A reevaluation of the procedures for
effectively quarantining persons who are a significant demonstrable
risk to others, while preserving due process and substantive rights
-
Improving overall preparedness for
attacks with weapons of mass destruction:
-
upgrading and expanding facilities
for the prompt detection and identification of infectious
agents, toxins, chemical weapons, and radioactivity
-
evaluating and augmenting State and
local supplies of vaccines, antibiotics, protective gear for
first-responders and medical personnel, isolation facilities for
treatment of casualties, shelters against radiation, potassium
iodide, other essential equipment and supplies, and information
on self-protection available for rapid public distribution
-
Measures to protect private citizens,
including physicians, against civil liability resulting from efforts
to aid others in an emergency (suggested in Article VIII Section
804)
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Permitting the State to waive certain
licensure requirements for the duration of the emergency to permit
recruitment of additional personnel (Article V Section 507(a))
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Suspending State, federal, or local
regulations or ordinances that interfere with prudent response to an
emergency while providing no scientifically proven significant
benefit, subject to ultimate review and rescission or post-emergency
resumption without retroactive penalties, based on scientifically
valid methods.
There are many EPA requirements, for example,
that are not based on good scientific evidence and could be disastrous in a
real emergency.
At the time of the World Trade Center fire, the
EPA had to acknowledge that asbestos controls were totally excessive, in
order to prevent a public panic about inhaling the white dust. (Indeed the
ban on the use of asbestos above the 64th floor might have hastened if not
caused the collapse of the buildings - see Jon Dougherty,
http://WorldNetDaily.com, November 20, 2001).
The ban on DDT (imposed despite the overwhelming preponderance of scientific
advice and evidence opposed to this action) would severely inhibit the
containment of an outbreak of mosquito or other insect-borne diseases.
The ban on incinerators because of exaggerated concerns about insignificant
releases of dioxins would prevent the safest and most expeditious method of
destroying dangerously contaminated materials.
Conclusions
States can and should improve their ability to respond to disaster,
including bioterrorism. However, having the Governor play doctor and
dictator is not the right response.
Citizens should distribute information about the
actual content of the Model Emergency Health Powers Act to opinion leaders,
newspaper editors, columnists, the Chamber of Commerce, business groups,
medical society officials, legislators, and the
Bush Administration.
Action Step
You can go to
http://www.aapsonline.org/ and click on the
Emergency Dictatorial Powers act in the left column. Then click on
the December 13th Action Alert which will provide information on how to
respond to your legislators on this issue.
Additional Resource -
http://www.publichealthlaw.net/
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