Post by ANTHILL on Jun 29, 2005 17:42:46 GMT -5
If you think there isn't a conspiracy going on with what we have look at the past record of th AMA and there gangster like activity's
I'm not one to take up with conspiracy's theory's redly
but this just blows me away
Adding to my comment I know that allot of this stuff happend years ago but does a leppard change it's spots
you decide
The American Medical Association - Quacks and Gangsters.part I
_______________________________________________
"Since the regimentation of Medicine by quacks and
medical gangsters in control of the American Medical
Association, this organization has become one of the most
vicious rackets in the country. A large majority of the people
have lost faith in the medical doctor and looks elsewhere for
relief. "
-Dr. Charles Lyman Loffler,
as cited by Morris Bealle in The Drug Story, 1949.
__________________________________________________
The American Medical Association (AMA) has a long
history of corruption. Its most infamous leader was Morris
Fishbein who reigned from 1924 until 1949. He had failed
anatomy in the state board licencing exam, did not finish his
internship and had never practiced medicine a day in his life,
but during his years in power he was recognized as the virtual
dictator of American medicine. Journalist and scholar Ruth
Mulvey Harmer, Ph.D., characterized Fishbein as having the
"ruthlessness of a shark" and concluded that he "managed to
hold back the twentieth century for 50 years for the benefit of
organized medicine". ( American Medical Avarice, 1975)
Those who paid large advertising fees to the AMA Journal
were given the AMA "seal of approval" for their products,
despite the lack of any benefit, while those who wouldn't pay
the advertising tax often had their products labeled as
worthless. It was essentially a lucrative blackmail scheme.
Fishbein supported pharmaceutical treatment but
adamantly opposed any nutritional or natural remedies.
Fishbein's opposition to any therapy or technology unrelated
to pharmaceuticals was based upon the simple fact that the
AMA's power base and economic growth REQUIRED drug
sales. Anything which threatened the growing dependency on
drugs threatened the AMA's entire empire. Public health was
not and could not be the primary concern of the AMA. Pulitzer
Prize (1984) author Paul Starr explained the interlocking
interests in his award-winning book, The Social Transformation
of American Medicine (New York, 1982):
"Medical authority in prescribing drugs and other products
enabled the AMA to stand between the manufacturers and
their markets. This strategic gatekeeping role permitted the
AMA, in effect, to levy an advertising toll on the producers.
Revenues from journal advertisements became the principal
source of funds for the association. In 1912 the AMA set up a
cooperative advertising bureau, which channeled
advertisements to medical journals. The bureau gave the AMA
considerable financial leverage over the state medical societies
and helped bind the national associations even more tightly
together."
Evidence cited by Eustice Mullins in his 1988 book, Murder
by Injection - The Medical Conspiracy Against America,
suggests that Fishbein ignored medical documentation to the
effect that products promoted by the AMA were dangerous.
According to Mullins, one such product caused blindness in a
number of people. Another quietly killed people in their sleep.
Another was so poisonous that it eventually killed many
hundreds. This has only gotten worse in our decades of
promised and boasted about "miracles" that only turn out to be
yet another in the long list of medical and pharmaceutical
disasters, that sometimes kill and maim many tens of
thousands, e.g. Thalidomide, Clioquinol, DES, et cetera ad
nausiam.
Another of Fishbein's primary interests was his attempt to
corner the rights on any promising cancer treatments, or
ensure that any cancer treatment that threatened the AMA
financial interests was kept from the public. When the owners
of a promising cancer treatment refused to sell it to the AMA,
"diffculties" started.
In collaboration with the government and private interests
within the cancer industry, Fishbein and his successors have
left a history of illegal acts, bribery, conspiracy against medical
innovation, monopolistic suppression of competitors and
contributing to the physical mutilation and death of patients and
consumers.
In the 1930s, a California researcher named Royal R. Rife
developed a bio-electronic instrument which destroyed various
viruses in a non-invasive, painless treatment. In association
with the University of California, a number of clinics used Rife's
technology to cure terminal cancer during the period 1934-38.
Some of the leading researchers in the country and leading
physicians in Southern California participated. In 1938, the
AMA's Fishbein found out about the Rife cancer cure and tried
to "buy in". When the offer was refused, the entire program was
destroyed within six months. First all the doctors were visited
and told to abandon the instrument or they would lose their
medical licenses and be imprisoned. Then the leading medical
electronic laboratory in America, where Rife's treatment was
being independently validated, was burned to the ground at 3
A.M. in the morning while its director was in California
consulting with Rife. Rife was hauled into court and the
treatment was effectively quashed. This was not the only
occasion when scientists or doctors whi opposed the AMA or
whose discoveries threatened the AMA's financial gains were
"burned out", or arrested on trumped-up charges, or died
mysteriously. Howard Beard, Ph.D., Director of Biochemistry at
LSU Medical School and developer of a urine test for
determining cancer, recalled:
"Early one morning in 1946, our lab was mysteriously
destroyed by fire... We then established a lab at our present
location. Then again one morning in 1947 this lab was set on
fire and completely destroyed." (Howard H. Beard. A New
Approach to the Conquest of Cancer. Reprinted in R.
Hovnavian, Medical Dark Ages. Evanston, Illinois)
Dr. William F. Koch, the inventor of Glyoxylide, was a
particular target of Fishbein and the AMA. So were the doctors
who supported Koch and used the cancer remedy Dr.Koch had
invented.
"One doctor ... Dr. J. W. Kannel, saved a young girl ... She
had hopeless cancer of the spleen ... one shot of Glyoxide and
she became well (in 1943 and was still alive in 1983) ...Kannel
was barred from all the hospitals in Fort Wayne." (Wayne
Martin, We Can Do Without Heart Attack, 1983. Reprinted in R.
Hovnavian, Medical Dark Ages)
"One death from poisoning, and one from being run down
by an automobile, both victims being physicians of distinction
and prominent in the advocacy of the Koch treatment... Dr.
Koch himself was the target of at least 13 unsuccessful
attempts on his life." (M. Layne, The Koch Remedy for Cancer.
Reprinted in Hovnavian, Medical Dark Ages)
Fishbein and his associates at the AMA had been
interested in the Harvey Hoxsey cancer treatment since 1924.
In that year, Dr.Malcolm Harris, the chief surgeon at the two
Chicago hospitals and later president of the AMA, offered to
purchase the Hoxsey cancer tonic. Hoxsey would get 10% of
the profits after ten years! The AMA doctors would set the fees
and keep all the profits for the first nine years and 90% of all
the profits from the tenth year on.When Hoxsey refused the
offer of Dr. Harris, Fishbein began years of official intimidation.
Doctors who worked for Hoxsey lost their licences.
Pathologists who examined tumors for Hoxsey lost their
businesses. State medical boards closed free clinics where
hundreds of "terminal' cancer patients were being saved.
In Iowa, Hoxsey was treating 300 patients a day in the late
1920s. During the vicious 1937-39 period when Fishbein was
stopping Rife's treatment, Hoxsey was charged more than one
hundred times with practicing medicine without a licence in
Texas.
Still, Hoxsey's Dallas clinic grew to the point where it was
handling as many as 12,000 patients, with affiliate clinics being
established in Illinois, Pennsyvania and other states. In a legal
action against Fishbein and the AMA in 1949, Hoxsey won.
Fishbein's attorney admitted that Hoxsey's treatment did cure
cancer. Judge W.L.Thornton ruled:
"I am of the firm opinion and belief that Hoxsey has cured
these people of cancer, Hoxsey has been done a great
injustice and ... articles and utterances by defendant Morris
Fishbein were false, slanderous and libelous."
Nevertheless, through an organized conspiracy of the AMA,
the FDA, and the NCI, Hoxsey's cancer clinics were closed. His
treatments have never been officially tested., despite
admissions by opponents that they work and court testimony
by experts which resulted in a jury concluding that Hoxsey's
cancer treatment had therapeutic value. Hoxsey's primary
assistant still operates a Hoxsey clinic in Mexico. (Ken
Ausubel, "The Troubling Case of Harry Hoxsey." New Age
Magazine, July-August 1988. Also see Judith Glassman, the
Cancer Survivors, New York, 1983 and Harry Hoxsey, You
Don't Have to Die, New York, 1956)
A documentary film on Hoxsey is available from Realidad
Products, P.O. Box 1644, Santa Fe, N.M. 87504.
In 1946, Fishbein initiated an attack against Dr.Max Gerson,
whose dietary treatments for cancer were anathema to the
drug and business-oriented Fishbein. The laboratories used by
Dr.Gerson were later threatened with economic ruin if they
continued to provide services to him. His diet, so vehemently
opposed by the AMA in 1946, now closely resembles the anti-
cancer diets recommended by the orthodox cancer
organizations in the 1980s. (Gary Null, "Medical Genocide Part
8", Penthouse)
Attempts against Gerson's life were also made.:
"On two occasions Gerson became violently ill ... lab tests
showed ... arsenic in his urine. Some of Gerson's best case
histories mysteriously disappeared from his files. The
manuscript and all its copies for Gerson's almost completed
book were stolen and never recovered." (Norman Fritz, Healing,
Journal of the Gerson Institute. Reprinted in Hovnavian)
In 1946, a Senate subcommittee heard testimony from
cancer patients successfully treated by ...
read more »
I'm not one to take up with conspiracy's theory's redly
but this just blows me away
Adding to my comment I know that allot of this stuff happend years ago but does a leppard change it's spots
you decide
The American Medical Association - Quacks and Gangsters.part I
_______________________________________________
"Since the regimentation of Medicine by quacks and
medical gangsters in control of the American Medical
Association, this organization has become one of the most
vicious rackets in the country. A large majority of the people
have lost faith in the medical doctor and looks elsewhere for
relief. "
-Dr. Charles Lyman Loffler,
as cited by Morris Bealle in The Drug Story, 1949.
__________________________________________________
The American Medical Association (AMA) has a long
history of corruption. Its most infamous leader was Morris
Fishbein who reigned from 1924 until 1949. He had failed
anatomy in the state board licencing exam, did not finish his
internship and had never practiced medicine a day in his life,
but during his years in power he was recognized as the virtual
dictator of American medicine. Journalist and scholar Ruth
Mulvey Harmer, Ph.D., characterized Fishbein as having the
"ruthlessness of a shark" and concluded that he "managed to
hold back the twentieth century for 50 years for the benefit of
organized medicine". ( American Medical Avarice, 1975)
Those who paid large advertising fees to the AMA Journal
were given the AMA "seal of approval" for their products,
despite the lack of any benefit, while those who wouldn't pay
the advertising tax often had their products labeled as
worthless. It was essentially a lucrative blackmail scheme.
Fishbein supported pharmaceutical treatment but
adamantly opposed any nutritional or natural remedies.
Fishbein's opposition to any therapy or technology unrelated
to pharmaceuticals was based upon the simple fact that the
AMA's power base and economic growth REQUIRED drug
sales. Anything which threatened the growing dependency on
drugs threatened the AMA's entire empire. Public health was
not and could not be the primary concern of the AMA. Pulitzer
Prize (1984) author Paul Starr explained the interlocking
interests in his award-winning book, The Social Transformation
of American Medicine (New York, 1982):
"Medical authority in prescribing drugs and other products
enabled the AMA to stand between the manufacturers and
their markets. This strategic gatekeeping role permitted the
AMA, in effect, to levy an advertising toll on the producers.
Revenues from journal advertisements became the principal
source of funds for the association. In 1912 the AMA set up a
cooperative advertising bureau, which channeled
advertisements to medical journals. The bureau gave the AMA
considerable financial leverage over the state medical societies
and helped bind the national associations even more tightly
together."
Evidence cited by Eustice Mullins in his 1988 book, Murder
by Injection - The Medical Conspiracy Against America,
suggests that Fishbein ignored medical documentation to the
effect that products promoted by the AMA were dangerous.
According to Mullins, one such product caused blindness in a
number of people. Another quietly killed people in their sleep.
Another was so poisonous that it eventually killed many
hundreds. This has only gotten worse in our decades of
promised and boasted about "miracles" that only turn out to be
yet another in the long list of medical and pharmaceutical
disasters, that sometimes kill and maim many tens of
thousands, e.g. Thalidomide, Clioquinol, DES, et cetera ad
nausiam.
Another of Fishbein's primary interests was his attempt to
corner the rights on any promising cancer treatments, or
ensure that any cancer treatment that threatened the AMA
financial interests was kept from the public. When the owners
of a promising cancer treatment refused to sell it to the AMA,
"diffculties" started.
In collaboration with the government and private interests
within the cancer industry, Fishbein and his successors have
left a history of illegal acts, bribery, conspiracy against medical
innovation, monopolistic suppression of competitors and
contributing to the physical mutilation and death of patients and
consumers.
In the 1930s, a California researcher named Royal R. Rife
developed a bio-electronic instrument which destroyed various
viruses in a non-invasive, painless treatment. In association
with the University of California, a number of clinics used Rife's
technology to cure terminal cancer during the period 1934-38.
Some of the leading researchers in the country and leading
physicians in Southern California participated. In 1938, the
AMA's Fishbein found out about the Rife cancer cure and tried
to "buy in". When the offer was refused, the entire program was
destroyed within six months. First all the doctors were visited
and told to abandon the instrument or they would lose their
medical licenses and be imprisoned. Then the leading medical
electronic laboratory in America, where Rife's treatment was
being independently validated, was burned to the ground at 3
A.M. in the morning while its director was in California
consulting with Rife. Rife was hauled into court and the
treatment was effectively quashed. This was not the only
occasion when scientists or doctors whi opposed the AMA or
whose discoveries threatened the AMA's financial gains were
"burned out", or arrested on trumped-up charges, or died
mysteriously. Howard Beard, Ph.D., Director of Biochemistry at
LSU Medical School and developer of a urine test for
determining cancer, recalled:
"Early one morning in 1946, our lab was mysteriously
destroyed by fire... We then established a lab at our present
location. Then again one morning in 1947 this lab was set on
fire and completely destroyed." (Howard H. Beard. A New
Approach to the Conquest of Cancer. Reprinted in R.
Hovnavian, Medical Dark Ages. Evanston, Illinois)
Dr. William F. Koch, the inventor of Glyoxylide, was a
particular target of Fishbein and the AMA. So were the doctors
who supported Koch and used the cancer remedy Dr.Koch had
invented.
"One doctor ... Dr. J. W. Kannel, saved a young girl ... She
had hopeless cancer of the spleen ... one shot of Glyoxide and
she became well (in 1943 and was still alive in 1983) ...Kannel
was barred from all the hospitals in Fort Wayne." (Wayne
Martin, We Can Do Without Heart Attack, 1983. Reprinted in R.
Hovnavian, Medical Dark Ages)
"One death from poisoning, and one from being run down
by an automobile, both victims being physicians of distinction
and prominent in the advocacy of the Koch treatment... Dr.
Koch himself was the target of at least 13 unsuccessful
attempts on his life." (M. Layne, The Koch Remedy for Cancer.
Reprinted in Hovnavian, Medical Dark Ages)
Fishbein and his associates at the AMA had been
interested in the Harvey Hoxsey cancer treatment since 1924.
In that year, Dr.Malcolm Harris, the chief surgeon at the two
Chicago hospitals and later president of the AMA, offered to
purchase the Hoxsey cancer tonic. Hoxsey would get 10% of
the profits after ten years! The AMA doctors would set the fees
and keep all the profits for the first nine years and 90% of all
the profits from the tenth year on.When Hoxsey refused the
offer of Dr. Harris, Fishbein began years of official intimidation.
Doctors who worked for Hoxsey lost their licences.
Pathologists who examined tumors for Hoxsey lost their
businesses. State medical boards closed free clinics where
hundreds of "terminal' cancer patients were being saved.
In Iowa, Hoxsey was treating 300 patients a day in the late
1920s. During the vicious 1937-39 period when Fishbein was
stopping Rife's treatment, Hoxsey was charged more than one
hundred times with practicing medicine without a licence in
Texas.
Still, Hoxsey's Dallas clinic grew to the point where it was
handling as many as 12,000 patients, with affiliate clinics being
established in Illinois, Pennsyvania and other states. In a legal
action against Fishbein and the AMA in 1949, Hoxsey won.
Fishbein's attorney admitted that Hoxsey's treatment did cure
cancer. Judge W.L.Thornton ruled:
"I am of the firm opinion and belief that Hoxsey has cured
these people of cancer, Hoxsey has been done a great
injustice and ... articles and utterances by defendant Morris
Fishbein were false, slanderous and libelous."
Nevertheless, through an organized conspiracy of the AMA,
the FDA, and the NCI, Hoxsey's cancer clinics were closed. His
treatments have never been officially tested., despite
admissions by opponents that they work and court testimony
by experts which resulted in a jury concluding that Hoxsey's
cancer treatment had therapeutic value. Hoxsey's primary
assistant still operates a Hoxsey clinic in Mexico. (Ken
Ausubel, "The Troubling Case of Harry Hoxsey." New Age
Magazine, July-August 1988. Also see Judith Glassman, the
Cancer Survivors, New York, 1983 and Harry Hoxsey, You
Don't Have to Die, New York, 1956)
A documentary film on Hoxsey is available from Realidad
Products, P.O. Box 1644, Santa Fe, N.M. 87504.
In 1946, Fishbein initiated an attack against Dr.Max Gerson,
whose dietary treatments for cancer were anathema to the
drug and business-oriented Fishbein. The laboratories used by
Dr.Gerson were later threatened with economic ruin if they
continued to provide services to him. His diet, so vehemently
opposed by the AMA in 1946, now closely resembles the anti-
cancer diets recommended by the orthodox cancer
organizations in the 1980s. (Gary Null, "Medical Genocide Part
8", Penthouse)
Attempts against Gerson's life were also made.:
"On two occasions Gerson became violently ill ... lab tests
showed ... arsenic in his urine. Some of Gerson's best case
histories mysteriously disappeared from his files. The
manuscript and all its copies for Gerson's almost completed
book were stolen and never recovered." (Norman Fritz, Healing,
Journal of the Gerson Institute. Reprinted in Hovnavian)
In 1946, a Senate subcommittee heard testimony from
cancer patients successfully treated by ...
read more »