The war for health and survival has
begun. The Codex Alimentarius Commission, run by the United Nations, is
empowered to set standards of operation for the health industry. Created jointly by the
World Health Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organization, the Codex
is a set of standards internationally applied, so that health consumables such
as vitamins, food supplements, minerals, herbs and herbal products could be
shipped from country to country, reducing the problems posed by having different
standards in every nation.
Codex is
working to control such things as the sale of dietary supplements for
preventative or therapeutic reasons and the potency of natural remedies. It also
seeks to convert the definitions of many supplements to drugs and to make its
rules binding on every UN member nation.
Consisting of delegates from 163 member nations, the Codex
Alimentarius Commission represents 97 percent of the world's population. It meets every two years,
either in Rome or Geneva. Ninety percent of CODEX
representatives are from multinational pharmaceutical corporations. Moreover,
the food
supplement industry and the public are barred from attending its meetings.
The Codex Alimentarius Commission's reach is
much
broader than dietary supplements. Its committees are also working on
standards for pesticide residue, labeling of all kinds of foods, food additives
and nutrients, veterinary medicine and drugs, as well as standards and methods
for analysis. The function of this organization is to establish standards for
all food worldwide and to enforce those standards through the power of the World
Trade Organization. However,
the directive in its present form will dramatically limit future innovation in
the food supplements industry and will seriously impact retail outlets,
traditional practitioners and consumers who choose to take responsibility for
their own health and let food be their medicine. The Food and Drug Act defines a "drug" as
including any substance "for use in the diagnosis, treatment, mitigation or
prevention of a disease, disorder, abnormal physical state, or the symptoms
thereof, in man or animal." This broad definition can be interpreted to
include vitamins like Vitamin C, used to treat and prevent the disorder of
scurvy; plants and herbs with therapeutic uses like garlic, ginger and
peppermint; and even ordinary food and water since these act to prevent the
abnormal physical states of dehydration and starvation. Therefore, once someone claims that a vitamin
or herb can have a therapeutic benefit, it becomes a drug. This means that
peppermint and ginger tea can be considered a drug, if the brand name or label
suggests that it could be used as digestive aid. It is not even necessary
for the person selling the herb to make a health claim for the product. As long
as someone, somewhere has claimed that the herb or vitamin can have a health
benefit, it is considered a drug. In fact, some herbs are banned from sale
simply because their names indicate a possible therapeutic use. Eyebright, cramp
bark and feverfew (lemon grass) can all be prohibited for sale, simply because
their names denote their traditional medicinal use.
The banning of herbal supplements is
following the same path that the banning of cannabis did in the thirties. The
contemporary worldwide sanctions against cannabis had their genesis in the
If vitamins, herbs, and other
dietary supplements are to be banned or restricted to protect public health,
then it would make sense that health foods must pose an equal or greater health
risk than the patented pharmaceutical drugs, which are created to replace them. Yet
vitamins and herbs are the most risk-free treatments in the world. When released
to the general population, herbal treatments for particular diseases have
demonstrated their safety and effectiveness more, than their
synthetically-produced pharmaceutical counterparts. Examples of the safety and
effectiveness of herbs over dietary supplements include marijuana as a treatment
for glaucoma, horsetail as a treatment for osteoporosis, and saw palmetto as a
treatment for benign prostate enlargement. Pharmaceutical drug treatments for glaucoma can cause headaches, drug
allergy, metabolic acidosis, rashes, cataracts, hypotension, blood dyscrasia,
kidney stones, and ulcers. Similarly, pharmaceutical solutions to benign
prostate enlargement are approximately 60% less effective than saw palmetto, and
conventional treatments for osteoporosis increase the patient's risk of
developing cancer. A
2.
No dietary supplement, sold as a food, can exceed dosage or potency levels set
by the commission. This means that consumer access to dietary supplements will
be limited to the Recommended Daily
Amount (RDA) as a maximum limit
for vitamins. Supplements without an RDA would be illegal to sell because they
are considered drugs.
3. Codex standards for dietary supplements would become the reference international standard under GATT, and NAFTA.
4. All new supplements would be banned automatically,
unless they go through the Codex approval process, which calls for Good
Manufacturing Practices and Inspections (GMP)
such as those used for the pharmaceutical industry.
Traditional medicines will also have to carry specific warnings about interactions with other medicines as well as statements on whether their effectiveness has been demonstrated in clinical trials. This allows makers of effective traditional products to continue their legitimate trade while making it difficult for unscrupulous companies to launch new "wonder cures" without conducting full-scale trials. This approach tries to make quality control for herbal products the same as it is for other medicines. Those practising herbal medicine also face tighter regulation. They will be brought under control using a system of professional self-regulation.
In Europe, herbal remedies can only be licensed once it is
shown to be safe and produced to high standards. This puts them through the same
regulatory tests as pharmaceutical drugs, at estimated costs for licenses
ranging from £10,000 to millions of pounds. It would deter all but the largest
companies from producing well-used herbal remedies such as St Johns Wort, Ginkgo
Biloba, Red Clover and Oil of Evening Primrose. To qualify, products must have
been on the global market since 1973 and in
Disease and dependence continue to
be the tools by which multinational corporations enslave the world's populace.
When the Europeans set out to conquer
Backed by the pharmaceutical industry, the Codex Alimentarius legislation will effectively
" pharmaceuticalise" the dietary
supplement industry. It will force most manufacturers out of business and allow a
pharmaceutical takeover of the industry.
The multinational pharmaceutical companies, by placing themselves between us and
the traditional healing arts, ensure that their hold over us remains strong.
With a monopoly on health, the pharmaceutical companies will have the power to
extort the last penny from ailing seniors and sick children, while those who
cannot pay are left to die.
What does Codex mean to Afrikan people?
According to the World Health Organization, traditional medicine refers to such systems as traditional Chinese medicine, Indian ayurveda, and Arabic unani medicine, and to various forms of indigenous medicine in Africa. Therapies can also include acupuncture, acupressure and spiritual exercises. In Afrika, traditional healers and herbal remedies made from plants play an important role in the health of millions of people. Afrika has a long and impressive list of medicinal plants based on local knowledge. In addition, our melanated biochemistry requires a type of nutritional support (Afrikan Dietetics) that is not readily available in Western cultures or though western pharmaceutical medicines, which includes race-based drugs. The incompatibility of western pharmaceuticals with our biological makeup and melanin is what makes the Codex very threatening to people of Afrikan descent.
The science of Afrikan biochemistry is based on the biochemical molecule melanin, the molecule that gives Afrikans their characteristic colours. Melanin is found in the skin, hair, and eyes, but it is also contained in many vital organs of the body as well, such as in the nervous system, the spinal cord, the glands, the brain, the DNA, the muscles, intestines, heart and liver. Its presence is found throughout nature and in many of our foods, such as plants, seeds, fruits, and vegetables. It is also found in animals, the soil, the bark of trees, in rivers, streams, and seas. For most of us, a lack of melanin-sustaining herbs and foods, such as those found in plant phytonutrients, is one of the contributing causes for our nutritional deficiencies and illnesses. The Afrikan diet is a nutrient-base system. A lack of access to medicinal herbs and our dietary supplements will have a tremendous consequences on the health and welfare of people of Afrikan descent.
Cost and availability are also factors that favor traditional healing. For
example, in
Uganda
there is one doctor for every 18,000 people, but there is one traditional
healer for every 150. Some people live too far from the closest conventional
clinic; others simply cannot afford chemical drugs. There is a comfort level
Ugandans have with their traditional healers, who are members of the
community and live next door to the people they treat.
In September 2004, the Ugandan government
brought traditional medicine, herbs, animal parts, and minerals out of the bush
and began to integrate it into its health system. Uganda
has also established a commission to develop standards and
determine which practices should be sanctioned. The East African nation became
among the first on the continent to add traditional healing studies to its
university curriculum.
When the medicinally beneficial hemp plant was outlawed, we lost a versatile medicine, as well as an efficient means to produce paper, fabric, and many other items. This resulted in the unchecked cutting of our forests and the massive use of pesticides to grow less hardy cotton. If all herbs and medicinal plants are outlawed, from where will our traditional medicine come?
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