Source: https://www.personalconsult.com/articles/accountablefda.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-18 23:04:29+00:00

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In the interest of understanding the current attempts of the FDA to restrict herbal manufacture and dispensing, it is useful to review the legal principles of administrative law so that we can recognize potential violations by FDA officials. Those who remain ignorant of these principles, and especially those who fail to learn about their rights and to exercise them, will not only place themselves at risk, but will endanger the livelihoods of their fellow herbalists by promoting foolhardy courses of political action.
A relevant issue in the regulation of herbal manufactures involves the distinction between corporations and non-incorporated professionals and businesses. The failure to recognize this distinction has affected almost every aspect of American life for the worse. Ralph Nader was the only recent presidential candidate who intelligently discussed this problem. [kpm] [krn] Many people are under the mistaken impression that corporations have the same rights as individuals, since corporations are considered to be legal "persons" who can enter into contracts with other legal persons and individuals.
Due to gradual evolution of legal case law, corporate privileges have increased steadily at the expense of individual rights. In theory, and still in law, however, corporations are creatures of the state, and they can and should be regulated for the protection of the public. [zda] [zha] Corporations are granted the privileges of limited liability for debt and the ability to enter into contracts as legal persons to facilitate industry. The primary task of Congress for many decades after the establishment of the U.S. was to regulate these corporations. It is well known that a board of directors of a company, or a mob, or any group of people is more capable of violence in the name of a symbol of authority or a fictitious legal entity than most individuals acting alone. [mil] [kel] [rei] This is sometimes known as the Nazi effect: "I was only following orders." "I don't approve of this personally, but the board voted on it." For these reasons, citizens have a reasonable expectation that corporations shall be closely regulated, for which state and federal government were given many of their powers. That these powers were purchased by the very corporations to be regulated and were turned against us is an unfortunate fact of life in the 20th century. That many individuals are not even aware of the legal theory behind corporate governance compounds the problem.
In summary, private citizens, non-incorporated businesses, and sole proprietor businesses cannot be regulated under the powers granted to state and federal government for the regulation of corporations, at least not if the individual citizen or private business has the good sense not to volunteer into the jurisdiction applicable to corporations. By entering into such jurisdiction, they exchange some of their rights for privileges, which can be taken away. And in the corporate world, the biggest sharks tend to win more privileges and the less powerful may lose everything.
While anyone can make a mistake, an individual's mistakes can often be more easily corrected as they affect relatively fewer people; on the other hand, a corporation's mistakes are magnified a thousand or million-fold. For a particularly nasty example of this, The Poisoning of Michigan [poi] describes the PCB contamination disaster in Michigan several decades ago. In this incident one careless worker in a chemical factory mistook bags of PBB powder (white) for magnesium chloride (also white). The former is deadly and highly toxic even in parts per billion. The container of PBB was accidentally mixed into cattle feed, which poisoned many of the dairy cows in the state. This is another example of why lots of individual small manufacturers may be safer than large chemical companies. Small herbal product manufacturers are seldom engaged in the production of PBB's, anthrax toxins, or sarin in their spare time, whereas large chemical and pharmaceutical manufacturers may attempt to juggle the transport, storage, and manufacture of a wide variety of chemicals under one roof.
The meat industry provides another example of corporate irresponsibility which FDA regulations have helped to control. [or1] [or2] Here again, the large corporations, whose board of directors may never face eye-to-eye their customers, or even their blue-collar employees, may endorse unsanitary and dangerous business practices that would be unthinkable for an individual who grows and sells meat for consumption by his family, neighbors, and fellow townfolk.
Unless one is involved in interstate commerce or comes under federal jurisdiction on being granted a privilege (federal alcohol license, etc.), regulations applicable to corporations may not apply to private individuals and dispensing herbalists, regardless of how certain officials will try to mislead these individuals into assuming that they are corporate entities. [zda] The only way Congress can justify regulating unincorporated businesses that are not federally licensed or chartered is to exercise their authority over "interstate commerce", [za1] which has steadily expanded until about 1980, based on the tenuous theory that everything ultimately affects interstate commerce. (A person sneezing in Kansas may affect the purchase of tissues in Nebraska if the sneezing is severe enough, thus requiring the regulation and licensing of sneezing, and taxes on particularly violent sneezes, etc.) Recently this pernicious doctrine is slowly being reversed by the courts, and one by one, federal jurisdiction is being denied in matters that formerly were proper subjects of state regulation.
Must enacted for explicit purposes of protecting health, safety and welfare of the public.
Must not violate property rights or other personal rights recognized and guaranteed by the Constitution.
Must adhere to requirements of due process of law and equal protection of the laws as required by the 14th Amendment.
Must not be administered arbitrarily under the guise of protecting the public.
Cannot be used as a means for exercising control over harmless and innocent activities and businesses.
Cannot be used to prohibit or destroy otherwise lawful businesses.
The numerous examples of FDA harassment mentioned previously provide abundant evidence that the FDA has violated all of the above requirements numerous times and with premeditated malice.
One can expect that the FDA will engage in the same cynical trickery that Health Canada (the Canadian equivalent of the FDA) has used to restrict herbal product availability. By engaging in a dialog with herbalists, Health Canada proclaimed it solicited input from the herbal community, then proceeded to adopt the most restrictive proposals which were discussed. The official responses of herbal organizations to the FDA should be formulated very carefully, planning the overall strategy before presenting any written position statements. All correspondence with the FDA should be backed up with solicitations of support from sympathetic Senators and Congressmen, since it is Congress that has the power to restrain and control the FDA. Pleas to the FDA without such backing and political pressure are more likely to be ineffective, and may even be detrimental to herbalists' interests.
Herbal product associations submitting an official position statements to the FDA should back these up with support from their U.S. Congressman and Senator, if possible. Supporting herbalists' rights has proven to be a winner for many representatives during the last election, since the large volume of crazed and angry letters from constituents over FDA actions are still fresh in their memory.
Do not rely solely on expectations of rational and equitable behavior by the FDA. Remember the tricks played by Health Canada with the rights of Canadian citizens and herbalists. Do make it clear to them that you are knowledgeable about the range of their authority and jurisdiction, that you have already notified members of Congress and Senate about your concerns that they may again exceed such authority, and that you are concerned lest they break the laws again and diminish public trust in their agency (what little remains).
Be aware of the divide and conquer ploy. For example, one group of alternative health practitioners or manufacturers may be offered easy treatment or special regulatory loopholes in exchange for agreeing to help them harrass another group. Lest any group be tempted to take this bait, consider that federal legislation is like shifting sand: the wind blows every two years, and a legislative advantage can be taken away as quickly as it is given. However, organizational goodwill can be destroyed overnight by such venality and may take decades to restore. Any rational organization would not engage in such tricks, if interested in pursuing long-term objectives. Due to the increasing popularity of herbs and alternative health care, the public no longer responds as well to the tired old medical establishment propaganda about "lack of scientific proof" and "quackery". Instead people are more likely to quack back at the FDA and AMA. So expect the divide and conquer ploy to be used more frequently; it is a sign of desperation.
Since most members of alternative health organizations would not be so foolish as to sabotage their own organization's goodwill by favoring underhanded deals with the AMA or FDA, these deals are usually consummated in other, more subtle ways. For example, say that group A is relatively powerful, but sees group B coming up in the ranks. Group A may decide to plant a sleeper agent in group B who pretends to be in favor of group B's agenda, or group A may be more bold and simply state that it wants to "help" group B. Often such an agent will be in the guise of a political consultant or lawyer advising the group's top officials. After agent of A becomes well trusted by B, he suggests a course of action to the group's leaders that involves lobbying for legislation advantageous to group B, but that will be at the expense of group B's competition (groups C, D, etc.). The agent advises secrecy to ensure the other groups will have little time for an effective countermeasure. At the last minute, group A arranges for the scheme to be leaked to the press, so that the whole world knows about group B's duplicity. Of course, groups C, D, E, etc. will all be outraged at their betrayal. Group A walks away laughing while groups B through E sling mud at each other. Replace A with AMA or FDA, and groups B, C, D, and E with alternative health professions, and you get the idea.
Please don't let this happen.
Turn the tables on the FDA. The FDA is effectively challenging herbalists to justify why they should not be regulated. Yet a cardinal principle of use of the police powers is that it is up to the governing agency to demonstrate that to protect public health and welfare, other means are inadequate and regulation is necessary. What specific abuses of herbal dispensing or manufacture have been documented? How could these best be remedied (voluntary compliance, independent watchdog organizations, etc.)? In the author's opinion, Ralph Nader has done a better job of embarrassing corporations into changing their wayward habits than many government agencies. That's because public education and political pressure can be effective in promoting change.
Do not be fooled by the FDA's expressed concern for charlatans and quacks in the alternative health fields. The FDA benefits by a steady parade of charlatans before the public's eyes in order to justify its continuing assault on honest scientists and innovators who threaten the status quo. No doubt there are frauds and quacks in any field, especially allopathic medicine, but how effectively have FDA regulatory restraints curbed these abuses?
Coordinate your efforts worldwide with anti-Codex groups internationally. Codex is an international trade proposal which is being pushed by the major pharmaceutical companies. It is the international equivalent of what the FDA is attempting within the U.S. This type of legislation is being promoted in many countries simultaneously, together with Codex, as they are mutually complementary.
Involve the Chinese whole herb importers in this issue. They may have a lot to lose, both with Codex and with national legislation of this type. They are also influential and powerful.
Become personally knowledgeable in the law. Don't rely on attorneys to do it all for you, since their favorite game is to unnecessarily complicate matters to increase their billing time. Often the legal issues are surprisingly simple once you get to the heart of the matter. Keywords: corporation, privilege, right, due process, citizen, person, police power, interstate commerce.
Make a clear distinction between the FDA's beneficial role in controlling unsanitary food manufacturing from its role as protector of pharmaceutical cartel profits. Herbs should be regulated in the same manner as foods; there is no compelling public interest in doing otherwise. To endorse their regulation as drugs or medicines will only prolong the criminal mischief and harassment the FDA has inflicted on physicians and health care professionals who have challenged the status quo by their attempts to improve their fellow citizens' health.
Member of Investigations and Oversight Subcommittee of the House Commerce Committee investigating FDA Abuses of Authority.
1507 Longworth Building; Washington, DC 20515; (202) 225-5831. He sits on the Appropriations Subcommittee that funds the FDA.
Also, send comments to the U.S. Senators representing your state and the U.S. Congressional Representative for your district.
As in all walks of life, in government there coexist scoundrels as well as saints. Many FDA officials may privately feel remorse over the shady history of their agency. (In the Burzynski case, "while the scientific divisions of the FDA have been cooperative, helpful and anxious to conduct clinical trials of antineoplastons, the Enforcement Division has long been obsessed with shutting Dr. Burzynski down." [fco]) However well meaning some of them may be, good intentions alone do not remedy the pattern of abuse of government authority, although it may help. The actions of conscientious FDA officials may be easily overwhelmed by the politically motivated policies of its director and by the irresponsible and often criminal actions of its enforcement branch. The issues should remain the legal causes of action, the political and legal authority to remedy them, and the need to reform the FDA as an agency so that its stated intentions become aligned with its actions. The rights of herbalists and of consumers are in jeopardy until this realignment occurs.
The stated purpose of the FDA to protect consumers against fraud and unsafe products is a valid one, and could be beneficial if FDA officials are constrained to obey the laws of this country as the rest of us are required to do. However, this valid purpose has frequently been used as a subterfuge for committing terrorism against honest individuals whose ideas and products are an economic threat to the status quo. Where institutional wrong-doing has become a way of life, no progress can be made until the FDA takes internal measures to reform rogue agents and bureaucrats; such individuals should be fired and prosecuted to the full extent of the law for any criminal violations of public trust. [zv1] [zv2] [zv3] [zv4] To pretend that the FDA has American citizens' health uppermost in its concerns without major internal reform would be foolhardy. Until this happens, no mere words on paper, no reasonable-sounding regulations, or public statement of good intentions will have any weight.
While the herbal professions, both in the clinic and in manufacturing, may have room for improvement, it may be a serious mistake to endorse the FDA as the agency most able to foster this improvement, when its legal authority and jurisdiction do not extend this far. Many of the professional deficiencies of herbalists, especially of herbalists dispensing preparations for individual clients, are not proper subjects for regulation by the FDA, since they far exceed their jurisdiction based on Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution giving Congress authority to regulate interstate commerce. While the company that ships herbs to the dispensing herbalist may fall under such jurisdiction, the dispensing of herbs within each state is not a federal question, but a state one, and herbalists who accede to the FDA's intentions to regulate such areas are helping to spawn a serious breach of power.
[dsh] Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994. <https://vm.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/dietsupp.html>. U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, 1995.dec.01. Summary of its main effects on health product manufacturers.
[dle] The Dietary Supplement and Health Education Act: Key Provisions. <https://venable.com/govern/dietact.htm>. By Geoffrey M. Levitt. A summary of key provisions of the regulations enacted 1994.oct.25.
[dfl] Proposed Rules for Food Labeling: Nutrient Content Claims, General Principles; Health Claims, General Requirements and Other Specific Requirements for Individual Health Claims. <https://204.31.98.5/~feddemo/19951221/docs/95-31008/95-31008.txt>. From the Federal Register, 1995.dec.21 (Vol.60, No.245), Department of Health and Human Services, Food and Drug Administration, 21 CFR Part 101.
[fbu1] Antineoplastons: FDA Declares War. <https://cancermed.com/antineo3.htm>. 1996 January. The case of Dr. Burzynski.
[fbu2] Antineoplastons: How the FDA Stops Medical Progress. <https://cancermed.com/fdamore.htm>.
[fbu3] FDA and Courts Block Dr. Burzynski's Patient's Treatments. <https://www.lef.org/fda/burzynsk.htm>. By the Life Extension Foundation. 1996 February. Includes list of legislators to contact with demands for Congressional action against FDA abuses.
[fco] Congress Holds Hearings on FDA Abuses of Authority. <https://cancermed.com/fda.htm>. Summary of hearing on 1995.jul.25. Opening comments by Congressman Richard Burr.
[fqu] FDA Backgrounder - Top Health Frauds. <https://www.fda.gov/opacom/backgrounders/tophealt.html>. 1996 November. The FDA considers herbs "quackery". Read their official website for this and other humourous but disturbing commentary.
[fre1] DeMeo, James; Anti-Constitutional Activities and Abuse of Police Power by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and other Federal Agencies. <https://id.mind.net/community/orgonelab/fda.htm>. Reprinted from On Wilhelm Reich and Orgonomy , Pulse of the Planet #4, 1993.
[frh1] Power-Hungry FDA Is Hazardous to Our Health. <https://www.independent.org/ahiggsp.html>. By Robert Higgs, Ph.D. 1995.aug.10.
[frh2] Public Health vs. Bureaucratic Self-Interest: Don't Trust the FDA to Reform Itself. <https://www.independent.org/ahiggsfs.html>. 1995.may.18.
[fsb] Strong-arming American Business. <https://www.sbsc.org/sbsc/rw-fda2.html>. SBSC Reg Watch: Second in a Three-Part Series on the FDA. 1995 July.
[gahg] American Herbalists' Guild. <https://www.healthworld.com/herbalists/>. For their position paper on the proposed regulations related to the Dietary Supplement and Health Education Act: <https://www.healthworld.com/herbalists/LaborCom.htm>.
[gapm] American Preventative Medical Association. <https://www.arxc.com/apma/index.html>.
[gahp] American Herbal Products Association. <https://206.135.37.254/pan/trade/ahpa/>.
[gcfh] Citizens for Health. <https://www.citizens.org/index3.htm>. Also: up-to-date synopses on current legislation affecting health care and availability of natural and alternative health products.
[ghan] Health Action Network Society (Canada). <https://www.hans.org/lynes.htm>.
Codex: international trade agreement proposal that would restrict herbal product and nutritional supplement availability in all countries who become signatories to this treaty.
[ica]Lesso, John; Codex Update and the Significance of the German Proposal to Australia. <https://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/newsl/codx-aus.html>.
[ich] Letters to Senator Orrin Hatch by Milton Bass regarding UN/WHO Codex Alimentarius. <https://www.lef.org/fda/codex.htm>.
[icl] Life Extension Foundation: Fighting for Health Freedom. <https://www.lef.org/fda/fda.htm>. Articles by Saul Kent and William Faloon on the FDA and Codex.
[icn] Hammell, John; American health freedom threatened by international commission. <https://www.serv.net/~net_usa/news/codex.html>. Published by the Tribune.
[kpm] Ralph Nader and the Real Presidential Race: Corporate Oligarchy vs. Resurgent Democracy. <https://www.tnews.com/text/Nader3.html>. By Patrick Mazza, posted to Cascadia Planet, 1996.sep.19.
[kra] Ending Corporate Governance; We The People: Revoking Our Plutocracy. <https://www.ratical.com/corporations/index.html>. Articles and resources for people wishing to restrain the influence of large corporations in government.
[krn] Ralph Nader on Corporatism and Plutocracy. <https://connix.com/~harry/nader.htm>. Excerpts from a speech given at Harvard University.
Footnotes are listed in order by their alphanumeric codes as they appear in the body of this report.
[age] Gerson, Max; A Cancer Therapy: Results of 50 Cases ; Gerson Institute, Bonita, Calif., c1990.
[aho] Ausubel, Ken; Hoxsey: How Healing Becomes a Crime ; Mystic Fire Video, Malibu, California, c1987.
[ajw] FDA Versus The People of the United States ; Jonathan Wright Legal Defense Fund, Citizens For Health, PO Box 368, Tacoma, WA 98401; 206/922-2457, fax:206/922-7583.
DeMeo, James; "Author's Preface", The Orgone Accumulator Handbook ; Natural Energy Works, El Cerrito, Calif., c1989.
[ari] Lynes, Barry L.; "The End of the Line: Royal Raymond Rife - Corrections and Perspective"; c1996(?). <https://www.endoftheline.com/health/rife_new.htm>.
Lynes, Barry L.; "The Cancer Bureaucracy: How The Real Cures Are Suppressed"; Health Action Network Society, <https://www.hans.org/lynes.htm>.
[arm] Culbert, Michael L.; Medical Armageddon, vol. 1-2 and vol. 3-4 ; C and C Communications, San Diego, Calif., c1994. These volumes contain detailed descriptions of numerous FDA abuses, describing a systematic campaign of suppression of alternative health modalities from its beginnings in the early part of this century. The FDA began as an agency devoted to protecting the allopathic patent medicine manufacturers who sold their medicines without identifying the ingredients, unlike the herbalists and homeopathic manufacturers of that era.
[asu] A list of FDA raids; from Life Extension Magazine, republished by Sumeria. <https://www.livelinks.com/sumeria/health/raids.html>.
[awr] With Guns Drawn FDA Makes Vitamin Bust; Health Action Network Society. <https://www.hans.org/fdabust.htm>.
[dir] Walker, Martin J.; Dirty Medicine ; Slingshot Publications, c1993. Chapters 1 and 2 describe the historical beginnings of the FDA in 1938 as part of a New Deal trend toward government regulatory agencies assuming responsibility for the scientific improvement of industry and society. Unfortunately, the largest corporations created a revolving door policy toward government regulatory officials: on leaving government, these officials frequently were offered lucrative jobs in the very same private industries they had regulated, in some cases receiving money and bribes while still in office.
[guy] Guyton, Arthur; "The Chemical Senses, Taste, and Smell"; in: Textbook of Medical Physiology ; W.B. Saunders Co., Philadelphia, c1971; p.645. Human olfaction is capable of detecting 4x10-14 g/ml of the compound methyl mercaptan.
[mil] Milgram, S. (1963); Behavioral studies of obedience; Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology , 67, 371-378.
[mir] Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. (United States Reports) 436.
[kel] Kelman, H. (1973); Violence without moral restraint. Journal of Social Issues , 29, 25-61.
[or1] Pathogen Reduction; Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) Systems; Proposed Rule. <https://www.dfst.csiro.au/fshbull/fr60_23.txt>. From the Federal Register, 1995.feb.03, p.6773, Department of Agriculture, Food Safety and Inspection Service, 9 CFR Part 308, et al. Describes how meat inspectors rely on organoleptic methods (smell and appearance) for effective detection of spoiled or contaminated meat and poultry.
[or2] Testimony of Dr. Michael Friedman before the Subcommittee on Livestock, Dairy, and Poultry; Committee on Agriculture, U.S. House of Representatives; 1996.may.22. <https://www.fda.gov/ola/cfood.html>. Mentions the effective use of organoleptic criteria in the detection of seafood spoilage by trained testers.
[poi] Egginton, Joyce; The Poisoning of Michigan ; W.W. Norton and Co., c1980.
[rei] Reich, Wilhelm; The Mass Psychology of Fascism ; St. Albion Press; c1970.
[tcm] Wicke, Roger; What is traditional Chinese herbology? (How to choose herbs using methods of Chinese herbology) <https://www.rmhiherbal.org/a/e.chooshrbs.html>.
[za1] U.S. Constitution, Article I, section 8.
"The Congress shall have Power... to regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;..."
[zbu] U.S. v. William M. Butler, 297 U.S. 1.
"The question is not what power the federal government ought to have, but what powers, in fact, have been given by the people...The federal union is a government of delegated powers. It has only such as are expressly conferred upon it, and such as are reasonably to be implied from those granted. In this respect, we differ radically from nations where all legislative power, without restriction or limitation, is vested in a parliament or other legislative body subject to no restriction except the discretion of its members."
[zda] Davis v. Massachusetts, 167 U. S. 43; Packard v. Banton, 264 U.S. 140, 145.
"Moreover, a distinction must be observed between the regulation of an activity which may be engaged in as a matter of right and one carried on by government sufferance or permission. In the latter case the power to exclude altogether generally includes the lesser power to condition and may justify a degree of regulation not admissible in the former."
[zha] Hale v. Henkel, 201 U.S. 43, 74-75.
"Upon the other hand, the corporation is a creature of the State. It is presumed to be incorporated for the benefit of the public. It receives certain special privileges and franchises, and holds them subject to the laws of the State and the limitations of its charter. Its rights to act as a corporation are only preserved to it so long as it obeys the laws of its creation. There is a reserved right in the legislature to investigate its contracts and find out whether it has exceeded its powers. It would be a strange anomaly to hold that a State, having chartered a corporation to make use of certain franchises, could not in the exercise of its sovereignty inquire how those franchises had been employed, and whether they had been abused, and demand the production of the corporate books and papers for that purpose. "
[zma] Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (Cranch) 137, 174,176, (1803).
[zmi] Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 491.
"Where rights secured by the Constitution are involved, there can be no rule making or legislation which would abrogate them." See also: Boyd v. U.S. 116 U.S. 616.
[zpe] Perry v. U.S., 294 U.S. 330, 353 (1935).
"...the Congress cannot revoke the Sovereign power of the people to override their will as thus declared."
[zpo] Case citations regarding exercise of the police powers.
Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45; Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.S. 356; Butcher's Union Co. v. Crescent City Co., 111 U.S. 746; Lawton v. Steele, 152 U.S. 133; Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U.S 623.
[zte] Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 39 (1967).
"There have been powerful hydraulic pressures throughout our history that bear heavily on the court to water down constitutional guarantees and give the police the upper hand. That hydraulic pressure has probably never been greater than it is today. Yet if the individual is no longer to be sovereign, if the police can pick him up whenever they do not like the cut of his jib, if they can "seize" and "search" him in their discretion, we enter a new regime. The decision to enter it should be made only after a full debate by the people of this country."
"Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any state or territory, subjects or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, equity, or other proper proceeding for redress."
[zv2] Olmstead v. United States, 277 U.S. 438, 485 (1928).
"Decency, security, and liberty alike demand that government officials shall be subjected to the same rules of conduct that are commands to the citizen. In a government of laws, existence of the government will be imperiled if it fails to observe the law scrupulously. Our government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or ill, it teaches the whole people by its example. Crime is contagious. If the government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for the law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy. To declare that in the administration of the criminal law the end justifies the means.... would bring terrible retribution. Against that pernicious doctrine this court should resolutely set its face. "
[zv3] Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U.S. 623, 662.
"It is a fundamental principle in our institutions, indispensable to the preservation of public liberty, that one of the separate departments of government shall not usurp powers committed by the Constitution to another department."
[zv4] From George Washington's Farewell Address.
"It is important, likewise, that the habits of thinking in a free country should inspire caution in those intrusted with its administration, to confine themselves within their respective constitutional spheres; avoiding in the exercise of the powers on one department to encroach upon another. The spirit of encroachment tends to consolidate the powers of all the departments in one, and thus to create, whatever the form of government, a real despotism."
[zyi] Chisholm v. Georgia, 2 Dall 419, 471; McCullock v. Maryland, 4 Wheat 316, 404, 405; Yick Yo v. Hopkins, 118 U.S. 356, 370. In the United States, Sovereignty resides in the people, who act through the organs established by the Constitution."
DR SCHALLER NEITHER SUPPORTS NOR OPPOSES THE MATERIAL ABOVE. IT WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE TO CHECK OUT THE ACCURACY OF ANY SERIES OF STATEMENTS MADE BY THIS THIRD PARTY. PLEASE FEEL FREE TO READ THE FDA�S MANY TAX-SUPPORTED WEB SITES FOR THEIR POSITION OF HERBS, DANGEROUS HERBS AND THEIR ROLE.

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