Benjamin Rush Founding Father of the United States signed the Declaration of Independence and served in the Continental Congress. |
A Founding Father wanted medical freedom included in the Constitution
Health care reform is a hot topic today, as it has been for much of America’s history. Benjamin Rush, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, warned in 1787 that medical freedom needed to be included in the American Constitution.
Without this protection, Rush warned that the medical establishment would naturally progress – as many of mankind’s institutions do – into an oppressive dictatorship. His words, echoing from over 200 years ago, ring strikingly true today:
“The Constitution of this Republic should make special provision for medical freedom. To restrict the art of healing to one class will constitute the Bastille of medical science. All such laws are un-American and despotic. … Unless we put medical freedom into the constitution the time will come when medicine will organize into an undercover dictatorship and force people who wish doctors and treatment of their own choice to submit to only what the dictating outfit offers.”The spirit of managerial scientific control that drives this beast is summarized in the words of Frederick Taylor, a pioneer in “scientific management.” As Taylor stated in 1907, ”Too great liberty results in a large number of people going wrong who would be right if they had been forced into good habits.” This spirit of quasi-altruistic scientific control begins to fade away towards the higher ranks of the system, however.
The potential for medical tyranny that Benjamin Rush perceived over 200 years ago crystallized when the Rockefeller and Carnegie foundations transformed the American medical establishment in the early 20th Century.
They strove to create a system of schooling to manufacture a predictable, rule following group of professionals to enforce the establishment regulations. Additionally, tax exempt foundations – through their grant making power – are able to mold the idea-sphere from which medical research emerges, or is suppressed.
(Infowars)
2 comments:
Concerned. The B.Rush quote here is different from the one on goodreads which doesn't mention the "forced to use their cures" part. Do you have a hard-copy source?
Mariane.. this might help?
The quote below was taken from Dr. Rush's introductory remarks to a course lecture at the University of Pennsylvania on November 3, 1801. He was describing 24 “causes which have retarded the progress of our science” and this was one of the causes that he listed.
However, Dr. Benjamin Rush did state:
#22 -- “Conferring exclusive privileges upon bodies of physicians, and forbidding men of equal talents and knowledge, under severe penalties from practicing medicine within certain districts of cities and countries.
"Such institutions, however sanctioned by ancient charters and names, are the Bastilles of our science.”
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