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			Chapter Twenty-Three 
			THE DOUBLE STANDARD 
			
			  
			
				
					
						| 
						 
						An analysis of the FDA's double standard in which harmless non-drug 
			materials such as vitamins and food supplements are burdened with 
			restrictions in excess of those applied to toxic and dangerous 
			drugs.  | 
					 
				 
			 
			
			 
			 
			An analysis of the FDA's double standard in which harmless non-drug 
			materials, such as vitamins and food supplements, are burdened with 
			restrictions in excess of those applied to toxic and dangerous 
			drugs. 
			 
			The FDA's unrelenting war on vitamins, food supplements, and 
			non-drug medicines is well known. Much of the agency's time and 
			resources are spent each year warning the public about the dangers 
			that lurk in the nutritional approach to health. When it comes to 
			drugs, however, there is a more permissive attitude with the implied 
			assurance: "Don't be overly concerned about harm from drugs. Take 
			whatever we have approved and relax. You're in safe hands." 
			 
			In July of 1971 the FDA issued a "Fact Sheet" on the subject of drug 
			side effects. Under the heading: "Should People Fear Drugs Because 
			of Possible Side Effects?" we find this answer: 
			
				
				Drugs should be respected rather than feared. A physician's decision 
			to use a drug is a considered one. It is his decision that it is 
			better to treat a disease with a certain drug than leave it 
			untreated, and that there is greater danger in not using the 
			drug.(1) 
			 
			
			1. "Drug Side Effects," FDA Fact Sheet CSS-D2 (FDA) 72-3001, July, 
			1971. 
			 
			The comment regarding the supremacy of the physician's decision is a 
			worthy statement of principle but, as any physician who has tried to 
			use Laetrile will tell you, the FDA itself does not follow it. And 
			now, with increasing government regulation of what a doctor may or 
			may not prescribe for individual patients (through such federal 
			agencies as PSRO) it is evident that the government wants physicians 
			to become mere robots who are trained to administer only approved 
			"Federal treatment number
			9714-32" in response to "Federal group diagnosis number 7482-91." 
			 
			
			  
			
			But the statement "Drugs should be respected rather than feared" is 
			an accurate reflection of FDA philosophy and, when compared to its 
			paranoia over vitamins, offers a good vantage point from which to 
			observe the operation of its double standard. 
			 
			Congressman Craig Hosmer, outspoken critic of the FDA's one-sided 
			attack on the nutrition and vitamin industry, has said: 
			
				
				I have been informed that there never has been an accidental death 
			due to vitamin overdosage, but it is said one person dies every 
			three days from taking lethal doses of aspirin...  
				  
				
				But, despite the 
			fact that Americans buy twenty-million pounds of aspirin a year, FDA 
			has never publicly considered any kind of regulation or warning on 
			labels. Instead, the agency has spent its time and millions of the 
			taxpayer's dollars establishing arbitrary daily dosages for harmless 
			vitamins and minerals.(1) 
			 
			
			Congressman Hosmer has hit the bull's eye. The danger to public 
			health does not lie in organic food supplements or vitamins sold in 
			health-food stores. It lies in the vast inventories of toxic 
			man-made drugs. Nothing recommended by a health lecturer ever 
			produced such tragedies as thalidomide babies. Five percent of all 
			hospital admissions are the result of adverse reactions to legally 
			acquired prescription drugs.(2)  
			
			  
			
			It has been estimated that no less 
			than one and a-half-million people are sent to the hospital each 
			year as a result of orthodox drugs - which means that these legally 
			acquired materials are injuring hundreds of times more people than 
			all the illegally acquired psychedelic drugs put together. And, 
			after a patient is admitted to the hospital for reasons other than 
			drug reactions, his chances of falling victim of drug sickness more 
			than doubles.  
			
			  
			
			Drug sickness in the hospital now strikes well over 
			three and a half-million patients each year.(3) 
			 
			As long ago as 1960, it was acknowledged that at least forty new 
			diseases or syndromes had been attributed to drugs used in 
			therapy,(4) and the number has grown impressively since then. 
			
			  
			
			1. Garrison, The Dictocrats, op. cit., p. 217. 
			2. "Important Prescribing Information from FDA Commissioner Charles 
			C. Edwards, M.D.," U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, 
			1971. 
			3. Martin Gross, The Doctors, (New York: Random House, 1966). 
			4. President Kennedy's Consumers' Protection Message of March 
			15,1962. 
			 
			The situation with non-prescription, over-the-counter drugs is
			almost as bad. Aspirin - which was first produced by Bayer of
			I.G. Farben - is a classic example. By 1974, Americans had been "sold" 
			on aspirin to the tune of over twenty-million pounds per year. 
			That's approximately sixteen-billion tablets, or an average of 
			eighty tablets per person, each year! 
			 
			Although Aspirin is an analogue of a natural substance, it is a 
			man-made drug. It is widely recognized as dangerous if taken in high 
			doses - especially for children. Overdoses can result, not only from a 
			single large ingestion, but also from continuous use which produces 
			accumulative effects. Every year, there are at least ninety deaths 
			in the United States from overdoses of aspirin.(1) 
			 
			Ninety deaths each year is no small matter. Yet, the FDA does 
			nothing except to require each aspirin label to state the 
			recommended safe dosage plus the admonition: "or as recommended by 
			your physician."  
			
			  
			
			The important point is not that the FDA should do 
			more, but that it applies a glaringly unfair double standard against 
			nutritional supplements. In November of 1973 it stopped the 
			production and distribution of a product known as Aprikern. Aprikern 
			is the trade name given to apricot kernels that have been ground, 
			cold pressed to remove the fatty oils, and encapsulated.  
			
			  
			
			The process 
			retains the nitriloside or vitamin B17 content, increases the 
			potency concentration by approximately 20%, reduces the caloric 
			content, and increases the resistance to rancidity. Aprikern, 
			therefore, had become popular among those who were familiar with the 
			vitamin B17 story. 
			 
			Based upon obscure "studies," allegedly conducted at the University 
			of Arizona School of Pharmacology, the FDA announced that Aprikern 
			contained "a poison which would kill both adults and children."(2) 
			
			  
			
			1. FDA Fact Sheet, July 1971, (FDA) 72-3002. 
			2. "These Two Health Foods 'Dangerous'," (UPI) News Chronicle, Nov. 
			28,1973,
			p. 11. 
			 
			Note that the FDA did not say that Aprikern actually had killed any 
			adults or children - as aspirin does every week - but that it could do 
			so.  
			
			  
			
			Note also that, during the court case that resulted from the 
			legal action instituted by the FDA against the manufacturer, the 
			scientists from the University of Arizona who had conducted the 
			toxicity experiments on rats which supposedly proved that Aprikern 
			was dangerous, testified that the results of their tests were 
			inconclusive and that they would not stand behind the interpretation 
			widely publicized by the FDA. 
			 
			Undaunted, the FDA continued to press its case stating that it was 
			conducting tests of its own and that these surely would "prove" that 
			Aprikern is dangerous.(1) 
			 
			William Dixon, chief of the Arizona Consumer Protection Division, 
			which worked jointly with the FDA in the initial action against Aprikern, told newsmen: 
			
				
				We could wait six months for the FDA tests, but if some kid died 
			from eating this stuff, I wouldn't want our office to be 
			responsible.(2) 
			 
			
			From this, may we conclude that Dixon's office is responsible for 
			deaths from aspirin overdose? Or are we to suspect that all of this 
			pretended concern for the public welfare is just so much eye wash to 
			conceal an unconscionable double standard whereby agencies of 
			government are being used on behalf of the drug cartel to harass and 
			destroy competition from the non-drug health industry?  
			
			  
			
			We may ponder 
			what Mr. Dixon's concern would be if "some kid," or some adult, for 
			that matter, dies from not "eating this stuff." 
			 
			Leaving no stone unturned, Arizona's Health Commissioner, Dr. Louis Kassuth, went so far as to issue a public warning that, even though 
			whole apricots would not be affected by the government embargo, 
			their pits should not be cracked open and, above all, the kernels 
			must not be eaten.(3) 
			 
			Ah, it is comforting to have such wise and beneficent experts 
			watching over us and protecting us from our own folly. How wretched 
			we would be without them. How reassuring it is to pick up a copy of 
			a government publication entitled Requirements of the United States 
			Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, and read: 
			 
			Because of their toxicity, bitter almonds may not be marketed in the 
			United States for unrestricted use. Shipments of sweet almonds 
			[which do not contain vitamin B17] may not contain more than five 
			percent of bitter almonds. Almond paste and pastes made from other 
			kernels should contain less than twenty-five parts per million of 
			hydrocyanic acid (HCN) naturally occurring in the kernels.(4) 
			 
			1. And it is possible that they will - even if they have to hit those 
			helpless rodents over the head with a hammer to produce the desired 
			results! 
			2. "Suit Labels Health Food as Harmful," Phoenix Gazette, Nov. 
			28,1973. 
			3. "Apricot Pits Hit by Ban, " Phoenix Gazette, Nov. 29,1973, p. 
			B-l. 
			4. That's only one four-hundreths of one percent. FDA Publication 
			No. 2, June, 1970, p. 26. 
			 
			Needless to say, there is not a single over-the-counter drug on the 
			market today that could pass toxicity restrictions as severe as 
			these. The law does not protect us. It is a weapon against us. 
			 
			In a letter to this author dated December 26, 1971, Dr. Ernst T. 
			Krebs, Jr. anticipated the FDA's action against Aprikern by over two 
			years when he explained: 
			
				
				The full awareness of the significance of vitamin B17 (nitriloside) 
			is now registering in the minds of our bureaucrats and those whom 
			they serve. The attitude is becoming obvious even to us that these 
			people feel vitamin B17 is too good and too valuable for the 
			Indians.  
				  
				
				Just as in the past when valuable minerals or oil were 
			discovered on Indian lands, government bureaucracy would move the 
			Indians away to "better land," so attempts are being made now to 
			move all innovators and pioneers on vitamin B17 away from the 
			development - through the invocation of one legal ruse or 
			another - until it "cools," and then allow monopoly supporting the 
			involved bureaucracy to preempt the field...
  Please keep in mind that the potential or waiting market for 
			Aprikern is at least as great as that for all the other vitamins, 
			including C. Today, bureaucracy can make or break a billion-dollar 
			market within a few days with merely a few pronouncements or edicts. 
			A Surgeon General bought just like fresh beef (but not as 
			intrinsically valuable), can say "yes" or "no" on phosphate or 
			nonphosphate detergents on evening TV.  
				  
				
				He reads his lines as they 
			are given to him, and the markets move accordingly. Despite a few 
			twists and turns for window trimming, monopoly is almost always 
			sustained in this game.(1) 
			 
			
			1. Letter from E.T. Krebs, Jr., to G. Edward Griffin, Dec. 26, 1971; 
			Griffin, Private Papers, op. cit. 
			
			  
			
			The FDA perpetually informs the public that "nutritional quackery" 
			is big business with huge profits. But it remains silent about the 
			really big business and the super profits of the drug industry.  
			
			  
			
			FDA 
			spokesmen express great concern over a supposed 3.3-billion dollars 
			spent each year on nutritional supplements. Even if that figure is 
			accurate, it is minuscule compared to the staggering annual 
			expenditure of 55.2-billion dollars spent on prescription drugs plus 
			another 14-billion for drugs sold over the counter. The absence of 
			FDA "concern" over this sector of its responsibility is revealing. 
			 
			The FDA acknowledges it has received reports of "excessive 
			promotional activity by some representatives of pharmaceutical 
			manufacturers" - meaning that not all field representatives from
			the drug firms are totally honest in the description of their 
			company's product.  
			
			  
			
			Nevertheless, the agency generally ignores this 
			area of inquiry and devotes a major portion of its resources and 
			manpower to wiretapping, bugging, and following health lecturers in 
			an attempt to catch them making a claim that, even though it may be 
			true, comes into conflict with an FDA ruling.  
			
			  
			
			At a time when the FDA 
			is pleading inadequacy of tax funds to properly enforce sanitation 
			standards within the processed food industry, or safety standards 
			within the drug industry, it boasts about expanding its operations 
			against such public enemies as the purveyors of wheat germ, rose 
			hips, honey, and apricot kernels. 
			 
			Another example of the FDA's double standard is its attitude toward 
			sodium fluoride, the substance that is added to the water supplies 
			of over four thousand communities in the United States on the 
			supposition that fluoridated water helps to reduce cavities. The 
			original 1939 studies by Dr. H. Trendley Dean that led to this 
			speculation, warned that those communities with low rates of tooth 
			decay had in their natural drinking water, not only unusually high 
			levels of fluoride, but also much more calcium.  
			
			  
			
			The report then 
			stated that:  
			
				
				"... the possibility that the composition of the water 
			in other respects [than fluoride] may also be a factor should not be 
			overlooked". (1) 
				  
				
				It was overlooked, however, and remains so today. In truth, there is 
			little hard evidence that fluorides actually do what is claimed for 
			them, and much evidence to the contrary. In the original 
			investigation by Dr. Dean, he reported that, in 1938, in Pueblo, 
			Colorado, thirty-seven percent of the people were caries-free with 
			0.6 parts per million of fluoride in the water.  
				  
				
				Yet, in East Moline, 
			Illinois, with 1.5 ppm of fluoride - almost three times as much - only 
			eleven percent of the population were found without caries. We note, 
			also, that in the city of Washington, D.C., which has had a 
			fluoridated water supply for over twenty years, instead of having 
			fewer cavities than citizens of non-fluoridated communities, 
			Washingtonians have almost a third morel." (2) 
			 
			
			1. Dean, "Domestic Health and Dental Caries," Public Health Report, 
			May, 1939, 54:862-888. 
			2. Garrison, op. tit., pp. 229, 230. 
			 
			But that is not really the important point. Even if sodium fluoride 
			did reduce cavities as its promoters claim, the fact is that this 
			chemical is extremely toxic even in small quantities. So much so 
			that drug companies are required to warn consumers that the
			presence in pills of as little as one milligram of this substance 
			can cause illness in some persons. 
			 
			Studies in Antigo, Wisconsin, Grand Rapids, Michigan, and Newburgh, 
			New York, all showed that within months of adopting fluoridation of 
			the water supply the death rate from heart disease in these cities 
			nearly doubled and leveled out at about twice the national average. 
			Likewise, in the Philadelphia Zoo there was a sharp increase in 
			animal and bird deaths that coincided with the introduction of 
			fluoridated water.(1) 
			 
			Dr. Paul H. Phillips, a University of Chicago biochemist who spent 
			twenty-nine years in research on fluoride toxicity, has pointed out 
			that sodium fluoride, even when taken in extremely minute 
			quantities, accumulates and builds up in the skeletal parts of the 
			body.  
			
			  
			
			Symptoms of chronic fluoride poisoning may not appear for many 
			years, and when they do, they can be very hard to diagnose. They can 
			manifest themselves in many forms such as vascular calcification, 
			disorders of the kidneys, bowels, skin, stomach, thyroid, and 
			nervous system, and may be responsible for headaches, vomiting, 
			mongolism, mouth ulcers, pains in the joints, and loss of appetite. 
			 
			Dr. Simon A. Beisler, chief of Urology at New York's
			Roosevelt Hospital, has said: 
			
				
				I just don't feel this thing has been researched the way it should
			have been. Fluoride in water can reach every organ in the body and
			there are indications that it can be harmful over a long period of
			(2)
			time.
  Aluminum companies, as a result of their manufacturing process, 
			produce fluoride compounds as waste products. Much of this goes into 
			the air and eventually finds its way back to earth where it becomes 
			noxious to both man and animal.  
				  
				
				Breathing the fumes is bad enough 
			but, once it is absorbed into edible plants, it is converted into 
			organic compounds such as fluoracetate or fluorcitrate which are at 
			least five-hundred times more poisonous than the inorganic salt. 
			This means that vegetables and fruits which have been irrigated by 
			fluoridated water supplies could become potential killers.(3) 
			 
			
			1. See news release dated August 1972 and "Is Fluorine Pollution 
			Damaging Hearts," by K.A. Baird, M.D., (Citizen Action Program, 608 
			Gowan Rd., Antigo, Wisc, 54409). 
			2. Garrison, op. tit., pp. 228-230. 
			3. K.A. Baird, M.D., op. tit., p. 4. 
			 
			As a result of this toxic waste, aluminum companies have been the 
			objects of successful damage suits.  
			
			  
			
			In 1946 a plant in Troutdale, 
			Oregon, was sued by a local citizen who proved that the health of 
			his family had been damaged by fluoride fumes. In 1950 a Washington 
			plant was ordered by a Tacoma court to pay damages to a rancher 
			whose cattle had been poisoned by eating fluoride contaminated 
			grass. In June, 1958, Blount County, Tennessee farmers were awarded 
			indemnity for fluoride damage to cattle and crops.(1) 
			 
			Europe also has had its fluoride problems. The "death fogs" of 1930 
			were finally attributed to acute fluoride intoxication. In a similar 
			1940 disaster in Donora, Pennsylvania, fluoride concentrations in 
			the blood of victims were found to be twelve to twenty-five times 
			higher than in the blood of unaffected persons.(2) 
			 
			The November 13, 1972, issue of the Journal of the American Medical 
			Association published the results of a Mayo Clinic investigation 
			into two cases of fluoride poisoning that occurred after drinking 
			water that was fluoridated to the extent of 2.6 parts per million in 
			one case and only 1.7 ppm in the other.  
			
			  
			
			These concentrations are 
			significant because many fluoridated water supplies are maintained 
			at one ppm! One can only wonder how many cases of mild fluoride 
			poisoning go unreported or are attributed to some other cause. 
			 
			"We're not exactly sure what the problem is," says the doctor, "but 
			it's probably some kind of viral infection. Take these pills four 
			times a day for a week and, if they don't do the job, we'll try 
			something else. Tricky things, those viruses." 
			 
			While one community after another in the United States rushes to 
			fluoridate its water supply, many European countries are moving in 
			the opposite direction. West Germany banned fluoridation on January 
			4, 1971. Sweden did so on November 18, 1971. And the highest court 
			of the Netherlands declared fluoridation illegal on June 22, 1973. 
			 
			
			  
			
			As the National Health Federation asked pointedly:  
			
				
				"Do these 
			countries know something we don't or refuse to accept?"(3) 
			 
			
			1. "Industry's Fluoride Problem," by Lee Hardy National Health 
			Federation Bulletin, Oct. 1973, p. 20. 
			2. See K. Roholm, "The Fog Disaster in the Meuse Valley, 1930," 
			Journal of Industrial Hygiene Toxicology, 1937, 19:126-136. Also 
			Philip Stadtler, "Fluorine Gases in Atmosphere Blamed for Death," 
			Chemical and Engineering News, 1948, 26:3962. 
			3. National Health Federation anti-fluoride petition, March, 1974. 
			 
			If fluorides were not used in water supplies of the nation, they 
			probably would be discarded as a waste byproduct with little other 
			commercial use except in aerosol sprays, drugs, rat poison, and 
			certain brands of toothpaste. It is significant, therefore, that 
			while the FDA has waged relentless war against harmless vitamins, 
			apricot kernels, and Laetrile, it has endorsed the wide-spread and 
			compulsory consumption of sodium fluoride in every glass of water we 
			drink. 
			 
			As noted in a previous chapter, the FDA has denied approval for the 
			testing of Laetrile by its promoters because of so-called 
			"deficiencies" in the mountains of paperwork required for IND 
			(Investigation of New Drug). It has stated that Laetrile's safety 
			has not been sufficiently established to warrant its use on human 
			beings.  
			
			  
			
			Aside from the fact that Laetrile's safety record is 
			well-documented, and that all the currently FDA approved drugs are 
			notoriously unsafe, this action is even more unpalatable when 
			compared to the favorable treatment given to new drugs marketed by 
			some of the large drug companies. In 1970, for example, the Searle 
			Pharmaceutical Company received FDA approval to market an estrogen 
			oral contraceptive within just one week after application.  
			
			  
			
			In 
			testimony before the House Subcommittee on Intergovernmental 
			Relations, however, it was revealed that the data submitted was 
			British (it is normal FDA policy to insist on American data), and 
			that the British data itself clearly stated that it concerned 
			effectiveness only, not safety. 
			 
			When Congressman Fountain asked FDA Commissioner Dr. Charles C. 
			Edwards what was the primary reason behind his agency's favorable 
			handling of Searle's application, he replied that it was "public 
			safety."  
			
			  
			
			When asked to explain how public safety was involved in 
			this decision, Edwards blurted out that it is, 
			
				
				"not our policy to 
			jeopardize the financial interests of the pharmaceutical 
			companies."(1) 
			 
			
			1. "Who Blocks Testing of Anti-Cancer Agent?" Alameda Times Star 
			(Calif.), Aug. 3, 1970. 
			
			  
			
			Serc is another drug that has received FDA favorable treatment. First marketed in 1966 by Unimed, Inc., it was offered to the
			public for use in treating Meniere's Syndrome, a complication of
			the inner ear leading to dizziness and loss of balance. There was
			substantial evidence that Serc actually made the symptoms of
			Meniere's Syndrome worse in many patients.  
			
			  
			
			In spite of repeated
			complaints from the medical profession and even from Congress,
			the FDA refused to require Unimed to cease marketing the drug even 
			though it admitted that the data submitted on behalf of Serc were 
			"defective," "inadequate," and contained "untrue statements of 
			material facts."  
			
			  
			
			Acknowledging that further studies were needed, the 
			FDA defended its decision to allow Serc on the market by saying: 
			 
			
				
				"The studies could not be financed unless marketing of the drug was 
			permitted to continue."  
			 
			
			In other words, Unimed was given permission 
			to continue(1) to sell a drug already found to be ineffective while 
			consumers were put in the position of financing the research that, 
			hopefully, would prove that it had some value after all. What a 
			contrast to the FDA's unyielding opposition to Laetrile and the 
			nutritional products of nature. 
			 
			As Senator William Proxmire phrased it: The FDA and much, but not 
			all, of the orthodox medical profession are actively hostile against 
			the manufacture, sale and distribution of vitamins and minerals as 
			food or food supplements. They are out to get the health food 
			industry and to drive the health food stores out of business. And 
			they are trying to do this out of active hostility and prejudice.(2) 
			 
			The subject of psychedelic drugs constitutes perhaps the final 
			madness in the FDA's insane asylum of double standards. Omar 
			Garrison recalls the story: 
			 
			Americans reacted with a sense of shock, followed by nationwide 
			cries of indignation, when FDA Commissioner. James L. Goddard told 
			an audience of university students that he would not object to his 
			daughter smoking marijuana any more than if she drank a cocktail... 
			 
			Even the normally permissive Time magazine clucked with mild 
			disapproval, noting that Goddard's opinion,  
			
				
				"was particularly 
			surprising because the FDA director has been so strict in demanding 
			that drug companies show clear proof on the efficacy and safety of 
			their products before he allows them on the market. There is still 
			almost no research, however, into what marijuana does - and does not 
			do - to the human mind and body, and no scientific evidence that 
			proves or disproves that it is better or worse than alcohol." (3) 
			 
			
			1. Consumers Reports, March, 1973, pp. 155-156. 
			2. As quoted in National Health Federation Bulletin, April 1974, 
			cover. 
			3. Garrison, op. cit., pp. 175,176. 
			 
			A short time prior to this, Dr. Goddard had expressed great concern 
			over the extent to which Americans were consuming unneeded vitamin 
			pills, and called for tighter restrictions on the
			formulation and sale of these harmless commodities.  
			
			  
			
			He had supported 
			FDA rulings and penalties calling for up to thirty years in prison 
			for those who advocate the use of harmless herbs and food 
			supplements for the alleviation of metabolic disease. Now he had 
			given his blessings to cannabis sativa which, regardless of all else 
			that might be said about it, is far from harmless. 
			 
			On May 20, 1974, Dr. Hardin B. Jones, professor of medical physics 
			and physiology at the University of California and Assistant 
			Director of the University Donner Laboratories in Berkeley, appeared 
			before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee and testified: 
			
				
				As an expert in human radiation effects [it is my observation
			that damage] ... even in those who use cannabis "moderately" is
			roughly the same type and degree of damage as in persons
			surviving atom bombing with a heavy level of radiation exposure,
			approximately 150 roentgens. The implications are the same... 
				 
				  
				
				Reports of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare are
			inadequate scientifically, do not touch accurately on the principal
			matters needing clarification, and, in many instances, are likely to
			lead the public to believe that science has proven marijuana
			harmless.(1) 
			 
			
			1. "Marijuana Smoking Poisonous, M.D. Says," (AP), Boston Herald 
			American, May 21, 1974, pg. 2. 
			
			  
			
			This, then, is the double standard of the FDA.  
			
			  
			
			We can buy aspirin 
			and a hundred other drugs of questionable safety by the barrel. We 
			can buy alcoholic beverages by the case and tobacco products by the 
			carload. In over four-thousand communities we are forced to drink 
			sodium fluoride in the water supply. But when it comes to food 
			supplements and vitamins, the FDA swoops down like the avenging 
			angel and becomes the super guardian of the nation's health. 
			 
			When a woman takes the life of her unborn child on the
			theory that she may do what she wishes with her own body, she
			receives the sanction of the Supreme Court. But if she purchases
			Laetrile in an attempt to save a life - either her child's or her
			own - she has participated in a criminal act. 
			 
			How much longer will the American people tolerate this
			outrageous double standard? 
			
			  
			
			
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