By Investigating Journalist Jon Rappoport
January 5, 2011
NewsWithViews.com
Across America, millions of people who believe in health freedom are either asleep or waiting for some trigger to move them into action.
These people stand for the right to manage their health in any way they want to, without government intervention or imposed limits. This includes access to the full range of nutritional supplements, and access to alternative practitioners who have wandered off the conventional reservation.
Many of these rebels have lulled themselves into thinking that ObamaCare is just a minor blip on the radar screen. They don't realize that, up ahead on the road to perdition, federal bureaucrats will determine which disease treatments are legal and which are not. And in the years to come, this unconstitutional program will infect the national landscape and put citizens in great jeopardy.
But right now, the rebels see no need to understand the meaning of nullification, a vibrant strategy by which individual states of the union can turn back ObamaCare and refuse to fall under its sway.
This situation has to be remedied.
In a sense, the health freedom movement has been taken over by the baby boomers, who have a very narrow range of self-interest. If they can find organic food in the market, supplements on the shelves of health food stores, and yoga teachers and chiropractors in their neighborhoods, they are satisfied.
They have no political awareness. They are not rebels. In fact, they see themselves as privileged members of mainstream society. Many of them ascribe to notions of liberalism, a philosophy they vaguely comprehend through the lens of “charity” or “altruism.”
Beyond that, they're in the dark.
And nutritional companies and health food stores realize these boomers make up their most affluent customer base. The companies spend very little time thinking about what the federal government can and will do to torpedo the nutritional supplement business. Sales are good—who cares about anything else?
So when I say rebels, I'm not talking about boomers. I'm talking about millions of people who came out of the woodwork in the early 1990s and demanded that the FDA keep their hands off supplements.
These people need to know about nullification. It's a key to what they want.
We're at a crossroads. Governments all over the world are going broke. They are reaping the consequences of massive spending and massive debt.
In the US, as state governments begin to sense that the federal government isn't going to bail them out forever, the need to fall in line with every federal program is waning.
Twenty states are considering or taking some form of action against ObamaCare. This is a form of nullification—based on the premise that the Constitution doesn't give the central government the right to impose a product (health insurance) on the populace.
ObamaCare is a good test case. It represents the feds in their “share and care” pose against people who can, through education, realize that this program will morph into something far more sinister in years to come—when the concept of universal medical help turns out to mean an Orwellian mandate to submit to diagnoses and treatments, no matter how ineffective and toxic those treatments are. FULL STORY
Exactly the same thing that's happened with government "Child Welfare". See Best interest of the child- A new "Civil Right"
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