by Hon. Ron Paul, Member, U.S. House of
Representatives
September 2005
Who
Should Decide About Your Health - You, Or The State?
Millions of Americans take
dietary supplements everyday and the numbers are growing as
the Baby Boom generation ages. More and more Americans
understandably are frustrated with our government-controlled
health-care system. They have concluded that vitamins,
minerals, and other supplements might help them stay healthy
and less dependent on the system.
They use supplements because
they can buy them freely on the Internet, without government
interference in the form of doctors, prescriptions, HMOs, and
licenses. In other words, they use supplements because they
are largely free to make their own choices, in stark contrast
to the conventional medical system.
But we live in an era of
unbridled government regulation of both our personal lives and
the economy, and Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
bureaucrats burn to regulate supplements in the same manner as
prescription drugs.
The health nannies insist
that many dietary supplements are untested and unproven, and
therefore dangerous. But the track record for FDA-approved
drugs hardly inspires confidence. In fact, far more Americans
have died using approved pharmaceuticals than supplements.
Not every dietary supplement performs as claimed, but neither
does every FDA drug.
The FDA simply gives people a
false sense of security, while crowding out private watchdog
groups that might provide truly disinterested consumer
information. It fosters a complacent attitude and a lack of
personal responsibility among people who assume a government
stamp of approval means a drug must be safe, and that they
need not study a drug before taking it.
The FDA, like all federal
agencies, ultimately uses its regulatory powers in political
ways. Certain industries and companies are rewarded, and
others are punished. No regulatory agency is immune from
politics, which is why the FDA should not be trusted with
power over our ultimate health-care decisions.
The real issue is not whether
supplements really work, or whether FDA drugs really are
safe. The real issue is: Who decides, the individual or the
State? This is the central question in almost every political
issue. In free societies, individuals decide what medical
treatments or health supplements are appropriate for them.
Over the past decade the
American people have made it clear they do not want the
federal government to interfere with their access to dietary
supplements. In 1994, Congress bowed to overwhelming public
pressure and passed the Dietary Supplement Health and
Education Act, which liberalized the rules regarding the
regulation of dietary supplements. Congressional offices
received a record number of comments in favor of the act,
which demonstrates how strongly Americans feel about health
freedom.
The FDA simply has thumbed
its nose at Congress and ignored the new rules in many
instances, by attempting to suppress information about health
supplements. But in 1999 a federal appellate court affirmed
that the American people have a First Amendment right to such
information without interference from the FDA. However,
members of Congress have had to intervene with the FDA on
several occasions to ensure that they followed the court
orders.
My regular readers already
know about another looming threat to dietary-supplement
freedom. The Codex Alimentarius Commission, an offshoot of
the United Nations, is working to "harmonize" food and
supplement rules between all nations of the world. Codex will
restrict Americans' access to high-potency vitamins and
dietary supplements.
As Europe moves ever closer
to adopting Codex standards, it becomes more likely that the
World Trade Organization (WTO) will attempt to force those
standards on the United States.
This is yet another example
of how the WTO threatens American sovereignty. By cooperating
with Codex, the FDA is blatantly ignoring the will of Congress
and the American people.
Ron Paul, a medical
doctor, is a Republican member of the U.S. Congress who
represents the 14th District of Texas. For many years he has
been a strong supporter and defender of, among other things,
health-freedom rights and has consistently fought for those
rights in Congress and elsewhere. In turn, the National
Health Federation has strongly supported Representative Paul.
Call his office toll free at 1-888-322-1414 or visit his
website at www.ronpaul.org.