No drugs
should EVER be mandatory: children to ingest psychiatric medication
By Dr.Fourkan
Ali
In one
state, at least, it is no longer permissible to force parents at gunpoint to
allow their children to be given dangerous psychotropic drugs. As reported by The New American (TNA), a
new law in New Mexico to protect kids from coercive psychiatric screening and
medication was approved last year in the state, and now advocates for the law
hope it will spread to other states and provide similar protection for children,
families and parental rights. As TNA reported further, Big Pharma and the Obama Administration have been pushing hard to unconstitutionally spread
mandatory "mental health" screening, treatment and tracking of
children nationwide. But health freedom advocates say laws like the one on the
books in New Mexico "could offer much-needed protection in the years ahead.
And progress is already being made," TNA noted. The legislation in New
Mexico, which was supported by members of both major political parties and
passed nearly unanimously in both chambers of the state legislature, is being
celebrated by its advocates as the toughest forced medication protection law in
the country. Formally titled the "Child Medication Safety Act," the
measure sought to address what is viewed by many as an alarming trend in the
U.S. – threats and coercion against families and their children when it comes
to forcing psychiatric evaluation and subsequent mandatory medication with
dangerous mind-altering drugs.
Refusing consent no longer gives state permission to
remove a child from his or her home
"For
too long parents' rights have been subjugated by the mental health industry,
and children wrongly labeled with mental disorders and drugged with dangerous
mind-altering psychotropic drugs," said the Citizens Commission on Human
Rights (CCHR), a nonprofit mental-health watchdog that backed the law and hopes
similar measures will spread nationwide. "It's encouraging that New Mexico is
taking its place among a growing list of states taking protective actions on
behalf of children and parental rights." The group noted that it was time
for other states to take similar action, TNA reported.
The news
site noted further:
The New Mexico law, HB 53, prohibits school personnel from
forcing children to use psychotropic medications — a common occurrence
in government schools across America, where close to 10 million children are on
such drugs. Among other elements, the measure allows school officials to offer
parents assistance for their children, but never using threats or coercion.
"An employee or agent of a school district or governing body shall not compel or attempt to compel any specific actions by the parent or guardian or require that a student take a psychotropic medication," says the law. In addition, the statute makes it illegal to use a parent's refusal to medicate their child with psychotropic or other mind-altering drugs as a reason to remove the child from their home and place them in the care of the state's child "protective" apparatus. "A child shall not be taken into protective custody solely on the grounds that the child's parent, guardian or custodian refuses to consent to the administration of a psychotropic medication to the child," the law says.
Now, schools must get parental consent for child psych
"screening"
That passage is notably important,
given recent cases around the United States in which state bureaucrats have
literally stolen children and forced them to take medications that are often
dangerous or experimental, in violation of internationally agreed upon human
rights (see here, here and here for just a few examples of Natural News coverage).
Another huge victory for advocates
of traditional medical ethics in New Mexico is a section of the statute that bans mandatory
"mental health" screening, as this has often been used as a phony
pretext for trumped-up charges against parents.
Under the law, schools have to not only request but receive parental consent before "screening" a child for any presumed mental issues."School personnel shall not require a student to undergo psychological screening unless the parent or guardian of that student gives prior written consent before each instance of psychological screening," the law says.
Under the law, schools have to not only request but receive parental consent before "screening" a child for any presumed mental issues."School personnel shall not require a student to undergo psychological screening unless the parent or guardian of that student gives prior written consent before each instance of psychological screening," the law says.
Sources: website
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