I have learned so much by simply listening to the people
I’ve met while producing my films
Let Truth Be The Bias and We
Become Silent. As journalists, as Producers, we are
supposed to be good listeners; we are supposed to be the
link to reason, to balance, and to well-researched wisdom.
This kind of wisdom, however, can come only from meeting
countless someones scattered across the globe, people who
willingly bare their souls for the sake of the greater
good. By sharing their health challenges, big and small,
and by stepping forward to be counted, the wisdom of
common people allows the masses to judge on their own
whether they believe natural cures are a viable option.
At a recent public appearance in Philadelphia, I was
asked, “Who will lead us in the fight for health freedom?”
The question alluded to the threats against health freedom
such as Codex Alimentarius and the ongoing threat to DSHEA,
the Dietary Supplement Health Education Act. His question
resonated throughout the hall, and in the moments that
followed his words echoed rather eerily through the
auditorium.
The audience leaned forward, waiting for my answer. Here
is what I told them.
During the 1990s, a juggernaut of real-people coalitions
came together with industry forces, bound by their desire
to preserve “medical freedom of choice.” They represented
the plurality of America and came from every political,
racial, religious and socio-economic stratum. The amazing
happened: people actually put aside their differences and
forced Congress to honor their wishes. . .a rare
occurrence in American political life.
Collectively, they unearthed a new day in America—a time
when the wisdom of common people became not only relevant,
but also dominant. Millions—no, tens of millions stood up
to the forces of power and money and called for change.
They besieged Washington with millions of letters, faxes,
and phone calls. As a result, DSHEA, the greatest health
law written heretofore, passed in an overwhelming fashion.
“You are the people who accomplished that,” I emphatically
reminded them. “You made the calls, you passed out the
literature, you wrote the letters, YOU created a your own
kind of pre-internet blogs, and passed the word across the
nation.”
These days, however, this wonderful consortium of
individuals and interests has become divided by a myriad
of so-called health freedom leaders. We have lazily
allowed others to do the thinking for us—and the results
have been toxic, to say the least. Certain vitamin, herbal
and health food trade associations—among others—have
replaced the wisdom of common people with the elitist
attitude that “only we know what’s right for consumers,”
and dismissed those who sounded the alarm about Codex and
other health freedom issues as “alarmists.” They seem to
have forgotten that is the loyal buyer, the local or
regional health advocates—through thousands of health food
stores, co-ops, and doctors’ offices—who made DSHEA
happen. In truth, it is we consumers who fund the vitamin
and health food industries in the first place, so it’s
time we made our voices heard again.
As I told the crowd in Philadelphia, quit waiting for
leaders to lead. . .you might not like where they are
taking you. It may be a tired adage, but it is true
nonetheless: think globally and act locally.
The people who say “Codex is no threat to us here in the
USA,” well, let them know that you disagree with them.
Email, call, fax, blog, and write letters-to-the-editor.
In short, do whatever you can—communicate in the strongest
terms possible—and tell them what you think. If you see a
story on the local news, call or write to voice your
displeasure. You are in charge of our collective health
freedom—and the time for allowing others to do the work
for you is over.
As health advocate Scott Tips of the National Health
Federation often says, “be persistently vocal,” don’t give
up—and don’t give in.
Arm yourself with information from trusted sources like
Dr. Robert Verkerk’s Alliance for Natural Health (www.alliance-natural-health.org/)
in the UK, the Dr. Rath Health Foundation (www.dr-rath-foundation.org/),
and the National Health Federation (www.thenhf.com/).
These are credible websites for consumers to examine.
Finally, for those who believe Codex, CAFTA, the Free
Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), and our membership in
the WTO don’t impact health freedom, simply go to
www.welltv.com/ and see my
documentary We Become Silent.
It was put online free as a service to consumers—and you
can spread the word by referring people to the website or
by buying this film, which is narrated by the world-class
UK actress Dame Judi Dench.
These are such immensely complicated issues that most
people need reliable and easy-to-understand information in
order to form an intelligent opinion. My film is one
resource that delivers that in about 30 minutes time.
Multi-national food and drug companies are edging us
closer to the precipice. If we don’t act soon, we will
fail to preserve the hard-fought health freedom efforts of
the past 20-30 years. . . and we could find ourselves
facing a new allopathic version of the Dark Ages for
generations to come.
The wisdom of common people is what we need — as we fight
for our right to preserve not only our basic access to
vitamins and minerals, but to the ancient medicines that
preceded them.
Name:Kevin Miller
Location:Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Kevin P. Miller is an international-award-winning
Writer/Producer whose films Let
Truth Be The Bias, The
Promised Land and We Become
Silent have brought him critical recognition. He is
currently working on bringing his weekly news/health
program called HealthCenter to nationwide television. You
can find out more about his work at
www.WellTV.com