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The Assault On Medical Freedom ... Stephen Barrett and his Dubious Activities



 
 
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Old January 17th 07, 05:27 PM posted to misc.health.alternative,talk.politics.medicine,misc.kids.health
Ilena Rose
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Posts: 1,139
Default The Assault On Medical Freedom ... Stephen Barrett and his Dubious Activities

Is it true that NCAHF.org still "begs for donations" (to use their
terms) altho the State of CA suspended their license 3 1/2 years
ago???

Thanks to Myrl Jeffcoat and Willa Nidiffer for bringing the light on
these dubious and shady operations.

www.BreastImplantAwareness.org/
http://www.BreastImplantAwareness.or...WatchWatch.htm
www.BreastImplantAwareness.org/myrl.html
http://www.BreastImplantAwareness.or...weedkiller.htm


The Assault On Medical Freedom - by P. Joseph Lisa c 1994
http://www.groupsrv.com/religion/about83774.html

Excerpts:

Section: The Problem

Chapter 3 - Rising Out of the Ashes



"Research shows that during the first one hundred years of the AMA's
existence it formed councils and committees which sat in judgement of
its
economic competitors. These committees would "investigate" the various
alternative health-care systems and would then report on their
findings and
make determinations and recommendations that the public should stay
away
from such "quackery." The CCHI and the AMA's Committee on Quackery
continued
to serve this function from 1963 to 1975. However, when the writing
was on
the wall, Doyl Taylor saw that his propaganda department was "going
down for
the count." He apparently took steps to see that his work continued
even if
he weren't around to supervise the AMA's campaigns against the
"quacks."

In his description of what the CCHI should be, he took steps to
maintain its
secrecy by dictating that no minutes of their meetings should be
taken. This
made finding the new CCHI (or "shadow" CCHI) a lot more difficult.
However,
even those most careful to cover their tracks often leave clues for
determined investigators to find. In the case of the CCHI, Taylor left
one
big clue. In the OBJECTIVES and GOALS of the CCHI, he stated:

Protection of the public by gathering and disseminating by all means
possible any and all information involving health quackery to each
member
[of the conference], particularly those agencies involved in law
enforcement.

By itself it isn't much of a clue. But when one dissects this stated
GOAL of
the CCHI and looks closely, one can clearly see several good leads to
follow
in unearthing this "shadow CCHI." To find such an organization, one
needs to
find a group who:

First, is pretentious and arrogant enough to espouse the principle
that the
public needs to be "protected" in the health-care marketplace. From
what are
we being "protected"? Health "quackery" of course. Exactly what is
health
"quackery"? Apparently it's simply anything that the medical and
pharmaceutical industry cannot control. Interestingly, it is also the
[italics] economic competition [end italics] to drugs and medical
treatment.

Second, claims to be "protecting" the public by "gathering and
disseminating
any and all information involving health quackery." One would have to
find a
group that has a large storage of information on "health quackery."

Third, is connected to the government and whose members are "gathering
and
disseminating" information on "health quackery," particularly to
"those
involved in law enforcement."

Fourth, has a [italics] vested interest [end italics] or is doing the
work
of or for a vested interest. It was proven that the AMA had a vested
interest in the original CCHI.

Fifth, consists of most of the same members of the CCHI, or at least
is
connected to the members of the CCHI.

Sixth, serves the same or similar function as did the CCHI in terms of
spreading the propaganda through Congresses on Quackery or some
similar type
of "conference"on "quackery."

With these leads in mind, I began the search for the link between the
old
AMA campaign and the current one. I began to build the bridge between
the
two with information I had come across over the years, as well as
information I obtained during my current investigation, which began in
earnest in 1984.

Looking back at my visits with Doyl Taylor, I began to assemble the
pieces
of the puzzle using information he had bestowed upon me regarding
activities
the AMA was involved in regarding its fight against "quackery."

For some years prior to the 1975 dissolution of his Department, Taylor
worked to get groups outside the AMA to take an active role in their
campaign against "quackery." One of Taylor's tactics had been to get
other
groups to take a stand against quackery, to develop position papers on
quackery, and to parallel what the AMA was doing in this area. Quite
often
these groups would simply duplicate the AMA's position on the issue.
The AMA
would help that group develop their statements, and then the AMA would
tout
the group's position as being independent of the AMA's. In this
fashion the
AMA used the other group's statements to strengthen its own campaign.
In the
seedy world of intelligence this is known as "multiple reports." One
creates
outlets from outside one's immediate area, and then points to these
reports
as evidence that there is a "national movement" or "public opinion"
against
one's target in a campaign.

Another way of doing this is to create either a front group or a cover
organization to carry on one's campaign. In the case of a front group,
one
simply helps to start up a group which parallels one's own
organization. One
then can feed that group money or information or both.The front group
usually has a different name, but its function is the same. It is
always run
by someone who knows what the group is all about. This leader is
usually in
direct communication with the group that helped set it up, so as to
continue
to receive support from the originating organization. An example of
such an
operation would be the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) setting up a
front
group such as Radio Free Moscow to transmit propaganda into the USSR.
Radio
Free Moscow would receive funding covertly, and the people who would
run the
operation would also be CIA operatives or employees. The role and
mission
would be known to all who work there.

However, the function and mission of a cover organization or group
would be
totally different. Upon cursory inspection it would appear to be just
what
it was held up to be. The employees of a cover group would not
necessarily
know what the group was really all about. The person heading the
organization would know, but the link between this person and the
organization he or she was truly working for would be totally hidden.
Usually the group would be a self-supporting entity and no money trail
would
ever be found going back to the original group that set it all up.

For example, a public relations firm set up in New York during World
War II
headed by a third-generation German-American could serve as a cover
group
for a German spy. He or she would go about doing the normal business
of a
public relations firm. In actual fact, the head of this cover group
would be
using his firm as a cover to obtain information for the German cause.
Upon
inspection of the office files and operation, it would appear to be
what it
seemed to be, when in fact it is only a cover group.

The AMA was not beyond setting up such groups. The Department of
Investigation was itself a front group, in a sense. It appeared to
function
as a clearinghouse of information on quackery, when in fact it was
much more
than that. It was a propaganda machine involved in effecting the
destruction
of medicine's competition. It didn't just collect, organize, and
disseminate
information on quackery. In its attempts to adversely influence
government
reports and studies on medicine's economic competition, it was
directly
involved in working behin the scenes to get insurance plans to exclude
its
competition. This was an anti-competitive activity.

As far as helping to set up front groups, this apparently came into
play in
the early 1970s. Doyl Taylor made it known that there was a
psychiatrist in
Allentown, Pennsylvania, a Dr. Stephen Barrett, who was a crusader
against
"quackery." Taylor encouraged me in 1970 to make contact with Barrett,
as he
was very involved in the same issues as the AMA, especially in the
area of
chiropractic. Taylor said that he had given Barrett full access to the
"quackery" files in the department of Investigation between 1969 and
1975.
Barrett's group was known as the Lehigh Valley Committee Against
Health
Fraud. ([italics] Health Fraud [end italics] is a euphemism for
[italics]
quackery [end italics] which is still used interchangeably today.) The
group
was incorporated in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, on April 19, 1970.

In reviewing published statements by the AMA and Dr. Barrett, I was
able to
find some of the pieces of the puzzle in the AMA News, as well as in
the
minutes of the CCHI. These pieces pointed to the distinct possibility
that
organized medicine may very well have been involved in setting up, or
helping to set up, the first group outside the AMA to fight "quackery"
or
"health fraud."

The following are Dr. Stephen Barrett's own words, published in the
AMA News
on August 25, 1975, describing the Lehigh Valley Committee Against
Health
Fraud. This was five years after it was incorporated.

[quote follows]

Several of the professional socieities endorsed our group and donated
money
to help the Lehigh Valley Committee Against Health Fraud, Inc. The
medical
society allowed us to use its office equipment until we obtained our
own.

.....By working "undercover" using assumed names and box numbers, we've
gotten
all sorts of information and publications other groups, like the
medical
societies, haven't been able to lay their hands on.

.....Really, we're a bunch of guerrillas - we're not a large group,
there are
about 40 members, but we're the only such group in the country.

[end quotes]

Here we have, in Barrett's own words, the apparent link between
organized
medicine and his group's operation. Although he didn't name the
specific
"professional societies" that endorsed and donated money to his group,
he
did state that such organizations as medical, dental, osteopathic, and
pharmaceutical groups did help him set up his operation."

"Another piece of the puzzle came to light in the minutes of the May
4,
1973, meeting of the Coordinating Conference on Health Information.
Lois
Smith reported, "Dr. Steven Barrett, psychiatrist, Lehigh Valley,
Pennsylvania, is writing a book entitled [italics] The Deadly
Deceivers [end
italics], covering all phases of quackery."

Doyl Taylor was quick to add that "Dr. Barrett is zealously opposed to
medical quackery," and Taylor suggested that members of the CCHI
cooperate
with Dr. Barrett in his quest to attack "quackery." Barrett's
specialty was
attacking chiropractic, and, as the AMA News pointed out, Barrett's
group
was instrumental in helping to defeat legislation "requiring
chiropractic
coverage under Blue Shield."

This was one of the many connections between Barrett and members of
the CCHI
that have been uncovered over the years. However, this was the first
[italics] published [end italics] link that I could find. As will be
seen
later, Barrett's relationship with the governmental members (U.S. FDA,
FTC,
and U.S. Postal Service) continues even today.

His group was touted by the AMA News as providing the media with "one
of the
country's most complete clearinghouses of information on quackery.""

"At the time Taylor wrote his infamous memorandum to the AMA's Board
of
Trustees in 1971 stating that the Committee on Quackery's prime
mission was
first "the containment of chiropractic, and ultimately, the
elimination of
chiropractic," he was also feeding his files to Barrett, and
apparently had
been doing so for more than a year.

Among the targets that Barrett's group went after, in addition to
chiropractic, were vitamins, "organic food fads," megavitamins;
arthritis
and cancer "quackery," naturopathy, acupuncture, and alternative
"health
promoters." Each of these alternative entities were also on the AMA's
priority list. Considering the source of Barrett's "clearinghouse of
information on quackery," it is not surprising that he pursued the
same
targets as those chosen by the AMA.

Here we see that a group, the Lehigh Valley Committee Against Health
Fraud,
was set up to act as a clearinghouse of information on "health fraud
and
quackery," probably using as a data base the AMA's Department of
Investigation's files, as well as information that Barrett was able to
assemble on his own. This group dedicates itself to attacking the same
targets that the AMA has been going after for years. The AMA then uses
this
group's statements and press articles as a means to strengthen its own
campaign against alternatives by pointing to this group and touting
its work
in the area of anti-quackery as being another source "outside of
organized
medicine" which feels the same way about alternatives."

"In 1975, Barrett stated that his group was the only one of its kind
in the
United States. However, this was soon to change. In December 1977, a
new
group came into being in Southern California. It called itself the
Southern
California Council Against Health Fraud, and it was headed up by a man
named
William Jarvis, headquartered at Loma Linda University in Loma Linda,
California. The group formed several years after the AMA's Department
of
Investigation disbanded. It is unlikely that Jarvis' group had the
same
access to the AMA Department of Investigation's clearinghouse on
"quackery"
that Barrett had. However, the two apparently did hook up. In December
1984,
Jarvis changed the name of his group to the National Council against
Health
Fraud (NCAHF). This group included Dr. Stephen Barrett on its Board of
Directors, and Barrrett's group is an affiliate of the NCAHF to this
day."

"The similarities between the Barrett group, the Jarvis group, and the
AMA's
anti-competitive campaign are many. In one of the newspaper articles
on the
Southern California Council Against Health Fraud in the Los Angeles
Times,
Jarvis quoted as attacking vitamins, raw milk, and laetrile. Each of
these
was a target of the AMA's campaign from the past.

Soon after the NCAHF came into being, another group entered the scene.
This
was the Kansas City Coucil Against Health Fraud and Nutritional Abuse.
It
was headed by Dr. John Renner. His group also became an affiliate of
the
National Council Against Health Fraud. The Kansas City group changed
its
name a few times, also calling itself the Mid-West Council Against
Health
Fraud. Today Dr. John Renner heads up the Consumer Health Information
Resource Institute, in Kansas City. Renner was also on the Board of
Directors of the National Council Against Health Fraud (NCAHF), and
his
group is an affiliate member.

Each of these groups attacked the very same targets that the AMA had
been
attacking from 1963 to 1975, as well as many new ones. The difference
was
that on the surface they had no known connections to the AMA, even
though
they were apparently continuing the AMA's "quackery" campaign. It
would
appear that these groups are paralleling the old anti-competitive
campaign
that the medical establishment initiated with the help of the
pharmaceutical
industry in the name of "consumer protection." Each group claims to be
in
independent of any medical association or the drug industry. However
this
may not be the case. There is a very strong indication from
documentation
obtained over the years that these groups have been acting in the
capacity
of mouthpieces for orthodox medicine. This adds a new twist to the old
anti-competitive propaganda campaign, and has been going on since
1983.

This campaign has been found to be financed by the vested interests
within
the pharmaceutical industry. Additionally, there are direct links
between
these groups and the AMA, the Federal Trade Commission, the United
States
Postal Inspectors, the United States Food and Drug Administration, and
the
Council of Better Business Bureaus. Each of these groups was at one
time a
member of the old Coordinating Conference on Health Information
(CCHI).
Their function today is apparently the same as it was when they were
dictated to by the AMA at the CCHI meetings.

Although these groups claim to be independent of any vested interests,
in
doing their work to "protect the public" from "quackery and health
fraud"
there is every indication that this may not be the case.

What the AMA was to the earlier conspiracy and anti-competitive
campaign
these groups are to the current propaganda campaign. The differences
are (1)
who is fronting the campaign, and (2) who is openly financing the
current
campaign.

The people bearing the message are different than in the earlier
campaign,
but these new messengers are singing the same tune. They are
apparently
carrying forward an older campaign to restrain and eliminate the
competitors
of organized medicine and the pharmaceutical industry. These groups
claim
that they have no financial interest in conducting such
anti-competitive
activities. However, although they are not the direct beneficiaries of
such
a campaign, it is possible to benefit in several other ways. These
groups
and their spokespersons stand to gain (1) publicity, (2) public
exposure,
(3) increased membership, (4) funding for their activity, (5)
financial
rewards from the insurance industry in the form of consulting fees for
"peer
review work" and evaluation of insurance claims, and (6) honorariums
paid to
these "expert" speakers at conventions and conferences.

Who would stand to gain the most today from such an anti-competitive
campaign? Upon inspection the answer would be (a) the medical
establishment,
and (b) the pharmaceutical industry."

"Additionally, this campaign has targeted vitamins, homeopathy,
naturopathy,
and many others. The removal of these options would represent many
billions
of dollars in new drug sales.

The increase in drug sales is good reason in itself to conduct a
campaign
directed at one's economic competitors. The earlier campaign and the
current
one have [italics] dollars and profits [end italics] as one common
denominator. The other common denominator is that both campaigns are
in
blatant violation of antitrust laws, as well as RICO conspiracy laws.
There
can be little doubt that the current crusade is just an extension of
the
earlier campaign.

The current campaign has several elements in it that were not seen as
frequently in the old AMA campaign. These include such illegal acts as
breaking and entry, unauthorized phone taps, the theft of files from
practitioners offices, intimidation and harassment of patients,
violations
of search-and-seizure statutes, physical violence and threats of
violence,
and break-ins into attorneys' offices involving the theft of case
records.
In most cases, the perpetrators of these illegal acts have not yet
been
identified or prosecuted. However, these crimes [italics] are [end
italics]
being committed against alternative practitioners, manufacturers, and
distributors.

The one thing about the current campaign that is very different from
the old
AMA campaign is that the funding lines have been discovered. It is
clear who
is behind this campaign, and it is not a shock to anyone familiar with
the
vested interests in the pharmaceutical industry.

The old campaign and the current campaign have this in common:
[italics] the
vested interests want the whole pie and thus more of the profits
available
in the health-care marketplace. [end italics] Unfortunately, they have
been
very successful in their attempt to accomplish this end."
 




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