Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Friday, March 10, 2017

US Congress Created a Monster

This Orwellian and absurd expansion was developed by spies and approved by judges on the FISA court. The NSA argued that it would be more efficient to spy on everyone in the United States than to isolate bad people, and the court bought that argument.


by Andrew Napolitano-
( March 10, 2017, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) Those of us who believe that the Constitution means what it says have been arguing since the late 1970s that congressional efforts to strengthen national security by weakening personal liberty are unconstitutional, un-American and ineffective. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which Congress passed in the aftermath of President Richard Nixon’s use of the CIA and the FBI to spy on his political opponents, has unleashed demons that now seem beyond the government’s control and are more pervasive than anything Nixon could have dreamed of.
This realization came to a boiling point last weekend when President Donald Trump accused former President Barack Obama of monitoring his telephone calls during the 2016 presidential election campaign. Can a U.S. president legally spy on a political opponent or any other person in America without any suspicion, probable cause or warrant from a judge? In a word, yes.
Here is the back story.
The president can order the National Security Agency to spy on anyone at any time for any reason, without a warrant. This is profoundly unconstitutional but absolutely lawful because it is expressly authorized by the FISA statute.
All electronic surveillance today, whether ordered by the president or authorized by a court, is done remotely by accessing the computers of every telephone and computer service provider in the United States. The NSA has 24/7/365 access to all the mainframe computers of all the telephone and computer service providers in America.
The service providers are required by law to permit this access and are prohibited by law from complaining about it publicly, challenging it in court or revealing any of its details. In passing these prohibitions, Congress violated the First Amendment, which prohibits it from infringing upon the freedom of speech.
The fruits of electronic surveillance cannot be used in criminal prosecutions but can be shared with the president. If they are revealed publicly, the revelation constitutes computer hacking, a federal crime. Nevertheless, some of what was overheard from telephone conversations between the Russian ambassador to the U.S. and former Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser, was revealed to the public — a revelation that profoundly disturbed the White House and many in the intelligence community and constituted a crime.
The original purpose of FISA was to place the judiciary as an intermediary between the nation’s spies and the foreign agents we all know are among us. The theory was that the NSA would first need to demonstrate to a secret court probable cause that the target of the spying is an agent of a foreign power and this would restrain the NSA from spying on ordinary Americans. This probable cause of foreign agency was a dramatic congressional rejection of the constitutional standard — namely, probable cause of crime — for the issuance of warrants. Foreign agency is not a crime.
This congressional rejection of constitutional norms began the slippery slope in which the foreign agency standard has morphed by legislation and by secret interpretations of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to probable cause of foreign personhood to probable cause of talking to a foreign person to probable cause of being able to talk to a foreign person to — dropping the probable cause standard altogether — anyone who speaks to anyone else who could speak to a foreign person.
This Orwellian and absurd expansion was developed by spies and approved by judges on the FISA court. The NSA argued that it would be more efficient to spy on everyone in the United States than to isolate bad people, and the court bought that argument.
Hence, FISA warrants do not name particular people or places as their targets as the Constitution requires. Rather, they merely continue in place the previous warrants, which encompass everyone in the country. FISA warrants are general warrants, allowing intelligence agents to listen to whomever they wish and retain whatever they hear. General warrants are expressly prohibited by the Fourth Amendment, which requires that all warrants for all purposes be based on probable cause of crime and particularly describe the person or thing to be seized — e.g., a conversation — or the place to be searched.
Even though the NSA already has the legal, though unconstitutional, authority to capture any phone conversation or computer keystroke it wishes, its 60,000 agents lack the resources to listen to all conversations or read all electronic communications in real time. But it does capture the digital versions of all computer keystrokes made in or to the U.S. and all conversations had within the U.S. or involving someone in the U.S.; it has been doing so since 2005. And it can download any conversation or text or email at will.
That’s why the recent argument that Obama ordered the NSA to obtain a FISA warrant for Trump’s telephone calls and a judge issued a warrant for them is nonsense. The NSA already has a digital version of every call Trump has made or received since 2005. Because the NSA — which now works for Trump — is a part of the Defense Department, it is subject to the orders of the president in his capacity as commander in chief. So if the commander in chief wants something that a military custodian already has or can create — such as a transcript of an opponent’s conversations with political strategists during a presidential campaign — why would he bother getting a warrant? He wouldn’t.
All of this leads to information overload — so much material that the communications of evil people are safely hidden in with the mountain of data from the rest of us. The NSA captures the digital equivalent — if printed — of 27 times the contents of the Library of Congress every year.
All of this also leads to the monstrous power of the NSA to manipulate, torment and control the president by selectively concealing and selectively revealing data to him. The Constitution does not entrust such power to anyone in government. But Congress has given it.
All of this also substantially impairs a fundamental personal liberty, the right to be left alone — a right for which we seceded from Great Britain, a right guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment and a right for which we fought wars against tyrants who we feared would take it from us.
Yet after we won those wars, we permitted our elected representatives to crush that right. Those faithless representatives have created a monster that has now turned on us.
Andrew P. Napolitano, a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey, is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano has written seven books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent is Theodore and Woodrow: How Two American Presidents Destroyed Constitutional Freedom.To find out more about Judge Napolitano , visit www.judgenap.com.

Infographic: Can North Korean Missiles Reach U.S. Shores?

 Infographic: Can North Korean Missiles Reach U.S. Shores?

No automatic alt text available.BY ROBBIE GRAMER-MARCH 10, 2017

North Korea launched four missiles into the sea near Japan Monday, fueling already-high regional tensions and stress-testing President Donald Trump’s crisis response chops.

Japan, South Korea, and China all condemned the launch. While the U.S. Strategic Command told Foreign Policy the missiles didn’t post a threat to North America, future tests could. Coupled with its nuclear program, North Korea’s stubborn pursuit of the bomb has U.S. policymakers worried.

“North Korea is developing an offensive doctrine for the large-scale use of nuclear weapons in the early stages of a conflict,” warned arms control expert Jeffrey Lewis Thursday in a piece for Foreign Policy.

Experts at the Center for Nonproliferation Studies for the Nuclear Threat Initiative put together an infographic that shows just how big this threat is. Here’s the arsenal North Korea has in development — and how its range covers the United States and allies in Japan and South Korea.

Screen Shot 2015-08-10 at 11.44.56 AM
At least two of the missile variants North Korea is developing, the Musudan and KN-14, potentially have the range to reach the mainland United States. North Korea has at least six launchers for these missiles, but has not yet tested them.

The missiles launched Monday flew up to a height of 160 miles and traveled 600 miles, or 1,000 kilometers, indicating they were of a smaller missile variant. They landed in the sea, some 300 miles off the coast of Japan.

A day after the launch, the United States deployed elements of a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile defense system to South Korea to counter the threat from the Hermit Kingdom. The move sparked a sharp rebuke from Beijing, which claimed THAAD could undermine China’s own nuclear deterrent.

Image Credit: The Center for Nonproliferation Studies / Nuclear Threat Initiative

Park Geun-Hye’s impeachment: What’s next?

outh Korean acting Constitutional Court's Chief Judge Lee Jung-mi (top C) speaks during the final ruling of South Korean President Park Geun-hye's impeachment at the Constitutional Court in Seoul, South Korea, March 10, 2017. Pic: Reuters
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People celebrate after hearing that President Park Geun-hye’s impeachment was accepted in front of the Constitutional Court in Seoul, South Korea, March 10, 2017. Pic: Reuters

10th March 2017

THE SOUTH Korean Constitutional Court’s ruling to uphold the impeachment of President Park Geun-hye has made her the first democratically elected leader to be forced from office.

The decision prompted calls for early elections and for criminal proceedings to be leveled against the fallen head of state, who has since last year been struggling to disentangle herself from what is said to be the biggest scandal in South Korean history.

When the 65-year-old Park leaves South Korea’s presidential palace, she will return to her home in Seoul’s luxury Gangnam district surrounded by a high wall and bamboo trees. This will provide some respite but not for long. Park may well have to move again – this time, to a cramped jail cell.

Shielded from prosecution while in office, Park would now likely be hauled to court like any other criminal offender. She also faces the possibility of detention pending trial, and finally, should she be convicted, many long years in prison for her alleged crimes.


Several pundits say Park’s ouster, which follows months of political discontentment and wide-scale protests in the capital, has raised the chances of left-leaning candidates at wresting federal power in the next elections due in the next 60 days.

According to national news agency Yonhap, the scandal affecting the rightist leader and her associates is serving in favour of the liberals, catapulting Moon Jae-in, former head of the liberal opposition Democratic Party who lost the 2012 election to Park, as a front-runner.

Moon’s dominance in presidential opinion polls, according to the analysis by Yonhap, has gone unchallenged over the last two months.

His approval numbers are at 36.1 percent, a more than 20 percentage-point lead over his rivals, including acting President and Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn, a conservative, and South Chungcheong Governor An Hee-jung, a liberal, based on a survey by Realmeter.

Hwang’s approval ratings are at 14.2 percent, followed by An with 12.9 percent, the poll numbers show.

“The court’s decision can be considered as a death sentence for the Liberty Korea Party, as well as the pro-Park faction,” said Yu Yong-wha, a visiting professor of politics at Dongguk University, was quoted by Yonhap as saying. “But we cannot also say Moon is the dominant player in the game yet.”

Yu added: “The situations can change anytime. We need to wait until the end of this month.”
Park’s replacement will face a host of problems: a growing threat from nuclear-armed North Korea that prompted deployment of a US missile-defense system, Chinese retaliation against Korea businesses over that move, and pressure to reform the family-run conglomerates that played a key role in the scandal that caused Park’s downfall.

The following is an introduction to the leading candidates and their key policies, according to Reuters.

Moon Jae-in

The 64-year-old former lawmaker and ex-leader of the main opposition Democratic Party lost to Park in the 2012 election by 3 percentage points. Moon favours closer engagement with North Korea. He has also called for the next government to review a decision to deploy the US THAAD missile defence system, which prompted China to squeeze Korean companies on the mainland and clamp down on tourism to South Korea.

He has also pledged to get tougher on South Korea’s conglomerates, saying they need reform.

Moon has been at the top of polls, registering 32 percent in the latest one released by Gallup Korea on Friday. The polling company is not affiliated with US-based Gallup Inc.

An Hee-jung

A youthful-looking provincial governor, An, 51, surged to second place in opinion polls after former U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon dropped out of the race. An was an aide to former President Roh Moo-hyun, a liberal, when Moon was Roh’s chief of staff. He is a two-term governor of rural South Chungcheong province. Some supporters have nicknamed him the “Obama of South Korea”.

An came second in the latest poll, with support of 17 percent of the 1,005 people questioned.

An also favours more engagement with North Korea but has said the THAAD deal should be respected as South Korea and the United States have agreed to deploy it. He has called for a fair, transparent market economy.

Ahn Cheol-soo

Ahn, 55, is a former doctor and computer businessman.
Ahn’s popularity waned in recent months after stepping down as co-chair of the new opposition People’s Party, after it became embroiled in a kickback scandal over advertising funds. Ahn was not implicated. He is a member of parliament.
He got the support of 9 percent of respondents in the latest poll.
He is open to dialogue on North Korea, though has also advocated a tough line. He says the THAAD system must be deployed and South Korea must make greater efforts to convince China it is not aimed at them. On the economy, he advocates the expansion of small- and medium-sized enterprises.

Hwang Kyo-ahn

Prime Minister Hwang, 59, became acting president after Parliament voted to impeach Park on Dec 9. Hwang was a state prosecutor for nearly 30 years before launching a career in politics and is considered a loyalist in Park’s cabinet. He has not said if he will run for president but has, nevertheless, emerged as a top conservative candidate.
Hwang got 9 percent in a latest poll.
Hwang reflects Park’s tough line on North Korea and whole-hearted support for THAAD. His economic thinking is conservative.

Lee Jae-myeong

Lee, the 52-year-old mayor of Seongnam, a city southeast of Seoul, has surged in opinion polls as an outspoken critic of Park since the scandal that led to her impeachment erupted.
A member of the main opposition Democratic Party, Lee has said he wants to be the South Korean Bernie Sanders, after the U.S. Democratic Party insurgent who ran against Hillary Clinton.
He got the support of 8 percent in the latest poll.
Lee has billed himself as the inheritor of the “Sunshine policy” of engaging with North Korea. He recently told Chinese media the THAAD deployment should be called off. He is well known for his staunch criticism of the chaebol.

Additional reporting by Reuters

Mali plans new Senate chamber in shake up of constitution

Mali's President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita   in Bamako, Mali, January 14, 2017. REUTERS/Luc Gnago
Mali's President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita in Bamako, Mali, January 14, 2017. REUTERS/Luc Gnago

 Sat Mar 11, 2017

Mali's government proposed a bill on Friday to establish a new Senate chamber as part of a shake up of its constitution designed to reinforce democracy in the West African country, according to a government statement.

The body will be one of eight key institutions of state that include the president, government, national assembly and supreme court, the government said after an extraordinary meeting of the council of ministers headed by President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita.

"The draft law gives the president of the republic the responsibility to determine the policy of the nation and the right to appoint the prime minister and to terminate his functions without the need for him to resign," it said.

"It creates a parliament consisting of two chambers: the national assembly and the Senate," it said. The bill must be passed by the national assembly before it becomes law.

Security in Mali is bolstered by a deployment of French troops and a U.N. peacekeeping mission but despite this and years of peace talks, the country faces problems of banditry, unrest and Islamist militancy.

Keita was sworn in to a five-year term as president after a multi-party election in 2013.
(Reporting by Adama Diarra; Editing by Matthew Mpoke Bigg and Sandra Maler)
Judge resigns over rape trial comment: ‘Why couldn’t you just keep your knees together?’

 
A Canadian federal judge who asked an alleged rape victim in court why she couldn’t “just keep your knees together” resigned Thursday, after a judicial panel released a scathing report calling for him to be removed from office.
Justice Robin Camp of the Alberta Federal Court came under fire in 2014 for badgering the woman during trial about whether she could have done more to defend herself against the man she claimed had attacked her. The Canadian Judicial Council conducted a 15-month review of the exchange after receiving dozens of complaints from the public.
In its report Thursday, the council found that Camp’s conduct was “manifestly and profoundly destructive of the concept of impartiality, integrity and independence.”
“Public confidence is sufficiently undermined to render the judge incapable of executing the judicial office,” the council wrote. “The judge’s removal is warranted.”
Within hours, Camp, 64, said he would step down. He apologized in a statement to “everyone who was hurt” by his comments. Federal Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould accepted his resignation, saying she was confident he had received due process, according to the BBC.
“Sexual assault and gender-based violence is in no form acceptable and we will continue to stand up for victims,” she said.
Camp presided over the sexual assault trial of Alexander Wagar, a 29-year-old Calgary man. The accuser was identified as a 19-year-old woman who said Wagar had raped her over a bathroom sink during a house party, as The Washington Post has reported.
Throughout the trial, Camp falsely referred to the woman as “the accused” and suggested she could have staved off the alleged attack.
“Why couldn’t you just keep your knees together?” Camp asked at one point.
He later said that young women “want to have sex, particularly if they’re drunk,” and told the accuser that “some sex and pain sometimes go together” and “that’s not necessarily a bad thing.”
Camp also questioned why the woman didn’t “just sink your bottom down into the basin so he couldn’t penetrate you,” saying that she could have avoided the attack if she had turned her pelvis “slightly” away.
Camp acquitted Wagar in September 2014, but an appeals court overturned the ruling. In January 2017, Wagar was acquitted again in his retrial, with a new judge finding that there was reasonable doubt that he had sexually assaulted the woman.
The Canadian Judicial Council opened an investigation in November 2015, after a group of law professors filed complaints against Camp. Dozens of other complaints from members of the public, and Camp went on to recuse himself from cases involving sex crimes, as The Post’s Kristine Phillips has reported.
Wagar’s accuser said she felt so browbeaten by Camp that she considered suicide.
“What did he get from asking that,” she said. “He made me hate myself and he made me feel like I should have done something, like I was some kind of a slut.”
During the council’s investigation, Camp said he didn’t realize his comments were problematic until his verdict was appealed, according to Canadian Broadcasting Corp. He said his words came from a “deep-rooted” bias “that all women behave in the same way and should resist.”
Camp grew up in South Africa and received commerce and law degrees from the University of Stellenbosch, according to judicial records. After practicing as a barrister there, he moved his wife and three children to Calgary in 1998, focusing mostly on contract, trust and bankruptcy litigation. The council noted that he had almost no experience in Canadian criminal law.
At a hearing, Camp’s daughter testified that she herself is a rape victim. She called her father’s comments “disgraceful,” but said she stood by him, describing how he supported her when she told him she had been raped in her home, the CBC reported at the time.
“I have seen him advance in understanding and empathy for victims, vulnerable litigants and those who have experienced trauma,” Camp’s daughter wrote.
Camp later admitted to misconduct but argued that he should be able to keep his job. His words, he told the panel in written submissions, were the product of “unconscious bias or ignorance,” not hostility toward the accuser. He said he had spent months educating himself on Canada’s sexual assault laws, speaking with feminist scholars and seeking sensitivity training.
The council was unconvinced.
“He spoke in a manner that was at times condescending, humiliating and disrespectful,” the report read.
“Having regard to the totality of the Judge’s conduct and all of its consequences,” the council wrote, “his apologies and efforts at remediation do not adequately repair the damage caused to public confidence.”

Pakistan: More on the Indus Water Treaty



by Dr. S.Chandrasekharan-
( March 10, 2017, New Delhi, Sri Lanka Guardian) Media reports indicate that India has agreed to attend the next session of Indus Water Commission on March 20-21 2017 to be held at Lahore. This will be the 113th session of the Commission and the meeting is being held in Pakistan this time as mandated in the Treaty.
The Indian media has started reading too much into the meeting and the change of mind of India. This change is presumed to be the result of the softening of stand in Pakistan and of all things invitation to Indian Artists to the two art and cultural festivals at Karachi and Lahore is being cited as one of the reasons. Nothing could be farther from truth than this. Worse, the media has even speculated that this will pave the way for the two Prime Ministers to meet on the sidelines during the Shanghai Cooperation meeting in June this year!
Following the September Terror strike at Uri last year, India had decided to suspend the talks and also declared that it would review the Indus Water Treaty. Article VIII of the Indus Water Treaty states that the Indus Water Commission must meet once a year alternatively in India and Pakistan.
The Indian announcement was only about suspension of the talks and not the abrogation of the treaty as such. Yet while a review of the treaty internally was welcome and justified, the suspension of talks was wrong and against the rules laid down in the treaty. To say now that “India is always open to settling issues relating to the pact with Pakistan bilaterally” makes no sense as the pact is purely bilateral and the World Bank was only a facilitator and not a guarantor.
In a way it was good that the Indus Water Treaty came into focus once again after the terror strikes in Uri. Pakistan appears to have been rattled by the Indian decision after the review that India would fully utilise the rivers flowing through Jammu and Kashmir and exercise India’s full rights under the pact. This statement was long over due and instead of making empty threats, what is needed is to go ahead in building the infra structure necessary to implement the pact to the full. The pact is not flawless as it totally ignores the needs of Jammu and Kashmir. Yet this was the only way that the Indus Waters could have been shared and what was lacking was India’s failure to fully utilise what is legitimately her’s.
Pakistan cannot export terror on one hand and expect India to reciprocate by being generous. It is time to sensitize both the Indian public and the strategic analysts of the importance of the treaty.
One is not surprised by the vehemence of protests from Pakistan both at official and unofficial levels. It may be recalled that Pakistan had arranged in the past protests by the Pak. sponsored Jihadists at the time of the visits of Indian delegation during the meetings of the Indus Water Commission that India was “stealing the waters” that should legitimately go to Pakistan!
Pakistan has been systematically and some times frivolously raising series of technical objections on every project that is being planned on the Indian side. Besides the two projects Kishenganga and Ratle (refer our paper 6226), objections have also been raised on three other projects- Pakal Dul (1000MW), Miyar (120 MW) and Lower Kalnai (48 MW) all on Chenab river. In the disputes already settled by the neutral experts on the Baglihar and Kishenganga, it has been established that India is entitled to exploit the “western rivers” flowing into Pakistan for generation of hydro power.
It is suspected that Pakistan’s regular objections to the Indian build schemes under the pact is more to hide and divert their people’s attention from the mismanagement of the dwindling water resources and more seriously the unequal sharing of waters among the provinces. The lower riparian Sind Province is said to be not getting its legitimate quota of water while Punjab the upper riparian takes the major share!
It is in this connection that one should welcome the book “Indus Divided” by Prof. Daniel Haines of Bristol University who appears to have done considerable research on the Indus Water Treaty. Prof. Haines focusses on modern environmental history.
The author maintains that the Indus Water Treaty was a boldly unique solution and this could not be replicated anywhere else, although for a while the US toyed with the idea of applying the same principle of dividing the rivers than the waters in the dispute of sharing Ganga waters with the then East Pakistan.
One should recall that David Lilenthal of Tennesse Valley Authority who was instrumental in getting Indus Treaty hoped that solving Indus Water Sharing “was a necessary first step on the way to a Kashmiri settlement.” It was too simplistic a view and was not perhaps aware of many deep-rooted layers of conflicts between the two countries. Prof. Haines has also disabused the theory that Kashmir dispute is all about Pakistan trying to get control of the head waters of the rivers flowing into Pakistan.
One of the comments from the Pakistan on the book was that the book “highlights the fundamental place that Indus Waters have had in Pakistan and Indian politics since 1947″.
I wish it had been so but it was not. At least now, it should be-So that Pakistan is made to realise as PM Modi had said that Blood and Water do not go together!

mage courtesy : National Geography 
Photo Credit: amenic181/shutterstock

HomeBy Martha Rosenberg / AlterNet-March 9, 2017

It happens with regularity during citizen open-mike sessions at FDA drug advisory committee hearings. A queue of “patients” materializes out of nowhere to testify, often in tears, about the crucial need for a new drug or new use approval. Some are flown in by Pharma. It can’t be a generic drug, the “patients” cry, because they are just not the same. It has to be the $1000-a-month drug or even the $1000-a-pill drug, so that taxpayers and the privately insured prop up Pharma’s cred on Wall Street.
More than 80 percent of patient groups are Pharma-funded, the New York Times reported this week, including the National Hemophilia Foundation, the American Diabetes Association and the National Psoriasis Foundation. But the most insidious are the mental health front groups like the National Alliance for Mental Health (NAMI) and Mental Health America.
Not only do psychiatric drugs represent four digit outlays per month per patient, and sometimes much more, patients are kept on them for decades or for life, with few medical attempts to determine if patients still need them or ever needed them. Side effects of the drug cocktails are viewed, thanks to Pharma spin, as confirmation of the “mental illness,” not the side effects they almost always are. The use of such drugs in the elderly, despite their links to death in those with dementia, has become epidemic and is an underreported cause of falls.
“Mental illness” is a category deliberately “grown” by Pharma with aggressive and unethical million-dollar campaigns. These campaigns, often unbranded to look like a public service, convince people with real life challenges they are “depressed” or “bipolar” and that their children have ADHD. Despite the Pharma marketing, the New England Journal of Medicine recently reported that the rate of severe mental illness among children and adolescents has actually dropped dramatically in the past generation.
The tactics of these front groups have been widely reported.
“When insurers balk at reimbursing patients for new prescription medications, these groups typically swing into action, rallying sufferers to appear before public and consumer panels, contact lawmakers, and provide media outlets a human face to attach to a cause," reported the Los Angeles Times.
Targeting poor people on government health plans is Pharma’s marketing plan.
“For years, the alliance [NAMI] has fought states’ legislative efforts to limit doctors’ freedom to prescribe drugs, no matter how expensive, to treat mental illness in patients who rely on government health care programs like Medicaid, says the New York Times. “Some of these medicines routinely top the list of the most expensive drugs that states buy for their poorest patients.”
Thanks to the Sunshine Act, which is part of the Affordable Care Act, it is possible to see what Big Pharma is paying patient front groups—and the numbers are astounding. Last year Eli Lilly, one of the primary makers of psychiatric drugs, bestowed an astonishing 22 grants on NAMI including $25,000 for its “Healthy Americas Briefings.”
How objective are those “briefings”? Pfizer gave NAMI $32,500 during one quarter last year.
Lilly also greased the palms of Mental Health America to the tune of $35,000 last year. Government is increasingly funding Mental Health America, adding to the Pharma exploitation and heisting of our tax dollars. Last year, Counterpunch reported that Walgreens had announced a partnership with Mental Health America. The plan empowered Walgreens to “screen” customers to see if they might need expensive psychiatric drugs but not know it—until Pharma magnanimously told them.
Screening is widely viewed, even by the medical establishment, as shameless Pharma marketing that leads to over-diagnosis, over-treatment and over-medication even as people who actually need medical treatment are ignored.
The Pharma business model actually wants people sick. Currently, in radio campaigns, Pharma is trying to convince people they have "exocrine pancreatic insufficiency" and “Non-24 Sleep Wake Disorder,” two conditions so rare as to be laughable as radio campaigns.
How much do the drugs Pharma, NAMI, Mental Health America and Walgreens push cost? If a “bipolar” child is prescribed a middle dose of the mood stabilizers Topamax and Lamictal, the yearly cost would be $23,220. If Seroquel is added, at a cost of $24,000, along with the ADHD drug Concerta at $7,812, and Neurontin at $4,860, one bipolar child would make Pharma $59,892 a year. Remember, you can’t substitute a generic.
Martha Rosenberg is an investigative health reporter and the author of "Born With a Junk Food Deficiency: How Flaks, Quacks and Hacks Pimp the Public Health (Random House)."