Rated
May 09 2006
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1 review
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health, civil rights, corprocracy
• tennessean.com
Autism is just one of many side affects suspected to originate with the administration of mandatory vaccines. By eliminating the ability to sue for bad vaccines these laws protect corporations but place every person required to take these vaccines for whatever reason, at risk. The checks and balances are gone. Plus it allows for the export of expired vaccines to third world countries. This article is an excellent example of how legislation is drafted by congress which directly places the American population at risk, (ie kids can't go to school without the vaccines...even if the parents do not want them) and then remove all accountability by shielding the company, not our people. Next to the Israeli lobby, I consider the pharmaceutical, health insurance and related industry lobbies the most dangerous threat to American security and long-term viability. Why? Because profits replace people and our congress is willing to sell us out for sponsorship. This clandestine workaround through Frist with the vaccine manufactures illustrates the point.
Here's the full Article
Vaccine Makers Helped Write Frist-Backed Shield Law
By Bill Theobald
The Tennessean
Monday 08 May 2006
E-mails reveal private meetings.
Washington - Vaccine industry officials helped shape legislation behind the scenes that Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist secretly amended into a bill to shield them from lawsuits, according to e-mails obtained by a public advocacy group.
E-mails and documents written by a trade group for the vaccine-makers show the organization met privately with Frist's staff and the White House about measures that would give the industry protection from lawsuits filed by people hurt by the vaccines.
The communications were made public in a report released this week by the group Public Citizen. Its study follows a February story in The Tennessean that Frist, along with House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., ordered the vaccine liability language inserted in a defense spending bill in December without debate and in violation of usual Senate practice.
The group, called the Biotechnology Industry Organization, wanted such language in the bill, the e-mails reflect.
"At Senator Frist's staff's request, this morning, BIO (Tom and I) participated in a meeting with three other industry representatives (Sanofi and an outside counsel who works for both Pfizer and Roche, I believe), administration staff (HHS, DoJ and WH Leg Affairs), and Liz Hall to further discuss liability," BIO official Dave Boyer wrote in a November e-mail obtained by Public Citizen.
In a written statement, Frist spokeswoman Amy Call stated that the senator had promised publicly to include the vaccine liability protection in the defense spending bill. She did not address the issue of the influence of industry lobbyists.
The statement points out that the Public Citizen board includes prominent trial lawyers and liberals. "Trial lawyers oppose these provisions because it will strip them of the ability to line their pockets at the expense of the American public," Call said.
Frist and the White House reached out to the industry, according to the communications cited by Public Citizen, and Boyer, chief lobbyist for the industry group, was asked to provide an analysis of draft legislation.
The group asked that the legislation make clear that a vaccine maker could only be successfully sued if "willful misconduct" on its part were proved. The law includes that standard and says a company is protected from claims of negligence or recklessness.
The analysis, which Public Citizen quoted from, included BIO's concerns that the draft bill would have still allowed people hurt by vaccines to get jury trials.
"The lack of any restriction on jury trial is problematic," the analysis said. "Where injured parties have no other avenue for relief, juries are likely to find ways to award damages."
In another e-mail, Boyer described a meeting in which a deputy of Bush strategist Karl Rove said it was "important to the President that a bill move this year," and said "they had invited industry to discuss what they understood to be a few key remaining points" of contention.
"The intimacy of this, we think, is quite unusual," said Joan Claybrook, president of Public Citizen, about the relationship between the organization's lobbyists, Frist and the Bush administration. "We think it is an interesting case study of how the inside operation works in Washington."
In a January interview with The Tennessean, Frist denied the vaccine liability provisions were added improperly. Later, when others challenged his version of events, Call simply restated Frist's commitment to protecting people from a bioterror emergency.