Post Number 34: Why Ritalin Rules
Here is information which is very timely at this time.  There are a
number of discussions going on in various groups about public schools
and home schooling.  For what it is worth, here is my opinion; you can
not be a Christian, and send your children to be indoctrinated in public
schools.

I do not take drugs.  Let me be sure you understand what I just said: I
do not take ANY drugs, be they illegal or legal under the laws of man.
THEY ARE DRUGS!  An artificial construction designed for profit, and not
for anyone’s good.  So, why are these drugs being given to millions of
children on a daily basis?  Could the sole reason be profit?  And the
allways-present taxpayer to pick up the tab under the tax-farming
principles so firmly established “within” the United States?

If you really want to understand add (attention deficit disorder), study
nutrition, and in particular, study so many of the things called food,
and which are not, but which are addictive in their own right.  Start
with white flour, white sugar, and pop.  If you want a crash course in
this subject, and in law, Law, cancer and many other subjects, just read
my series.  David G.

Published by The Heritage Foundation: Why Ritalin Rules
By MARY EBERSTADT
There are stories that are mere signs of the times, and then there are
stories so emblematic of a particular time and place that they demand to
be designated cultural landmarks. Such a story was the New York Times’
front-page report on January 18 appearing under the tame, even soporific
headline, "For School Nurses, More Than Tending the Sick."

"Ritalin, Ritalin, seizure drugs, Ritalin," in the words of its
sing-song opening. "So goes the rhythm of noontime" for a typical school
nurse in East Boston "as she trots her tray
of brown plastic vials and paper water cups from class to class,
dispensing pills into
outstretched young palms." For this nurse, as for her counterparts in
middle- and
upper-middle class schools across the country, the day’s routine is now
driven by what
the Times dubs "a ticklish question," to wit: "With the number of
children across the
country taking Ritalin estimated at well over three million, more than
double the 1990
figure, who should be giving out the pills?"

"With nurses often serving more than one school at a time," the story
goes on to explain,
"the whole middle of the day can be taken up in a school-to-school
scurry to dole out
drugs." Massachusetts, for its part, has taken to having the nurse
deputize "anyone from
a principal to a secretary" to share the burden. In Florida, where the
ratio of school
nurses to students is particularly low, "many schools have clerical
workers hand out the
pills." So many pills, and so few professionals to go around. What else
are the
authorities to do?

Behold the uniquely American psychotropic universe, pediatrics zone — a
place where
"psychiatric medications in general have become more common in schools"
and where,
in particular, "Ritalin dominates." There are by now millions of stories
in orbit here, and
the particular one chosen by the Times — of how the drug has induced a
professional
labor shortage — is no doubt an estimable entry. But for the reader
struck by some of
the facts the Times mentions only in passing — for example, that Ritalin
use more than
doubled in the first half of the decade alone, that production has
increased 700 percent
since 1990, or that the number of schoolchildren taking the drug may
now, by some
estimates, be approaching the 4 million mark — mere anecdote will only
explain so
much.

Fortunately, at least for the curious reader, there is a great deal of
other material now
on offer, for the explosion in Ritalin consumption has been very nearly
matched by a
publishing boom dedicated to that same phenomenon. Its harbingers
include, for
example, Barbara Ingersoll’s now-classic 1988 Your Hyperactive Child,
among the
first works to popularize a drug regimen for what we now call Attention
Deficit Disorder (add, called adhd when it includes hyperactivity). Five
years later, with add diagnoses and Ritalin prescriptions already rising
steeply in the better-off neighborhoods and schools, Peter D. Kramer
helped fuel the boom with his best selling Listening to Prozac — a book
that put the phrase "cosmetic pharmacology" into the vernacular and
thereby inadvertently broke new conceptual ground for the advocates of
Ritalin. In 1994, most important, psychiatrists Edward M. Hallowell and
John J. Ratey published their own best selling Driven to Distraction:
Recognizing and Coping with Attention Deficit Disorder from Childhood to
Adulthood, a book that was perhaps the single most powerful force in the
subsequent proliferation of add diagnoses; as its opening sentence
accurately prophesied, "Once you catch on to what this syndrome is all
about, you’ll see it everywhere."

Not everyone received these soundings from the psychotropic beyond with
the same
enthusiasm. One noteworthy dissent came in 1995 with Thomas Armstrong’s
The
Myth of the add Child, which attacked both the scientific claims made on
behalf of
add and what Armstrong decried as the "pathologizing" of normal
children. Dissent also
took the form of wary public pronouncements by the National Education
Association
(nea), one of several groups to harbor the fear that add would be used
to stigmatize
minority children. Meanwhile, scare stories on the abuse and side
effects of Ritalin
popped out here and there in the mass media, and a national controversy
was born.
>From the middle to the late 1990s, other interested parties from all
over — the Drug
Enforcement Administration (dea), the Food and Drug Administration
(fda), the medical
journals, the National Institutes of Health (nih), and especially the
extremely active
advocacy group chadd (Children and Adults with Attention Deficit
Disorder) — further
stoked the debate through countless reports, conferences, pamphlets, and
exchanges on
the Internet.

To this outpouring of information and opinion two new books, both on the
critical side of
the ledger, have just been added: Richard DeGrandpre’s iconoclastic
Ritalin Nation:
Rapid-Fire Culture and the Transformation of Human Consciousness (Simon
and
Schuster, 1999), and physician Lawrence H. Diller’s superbly analytical
Running on
Ritalin: A Physician Reflects on Children, Society and Performance in a
Pill
(Bantam Books, 1998). Their appearance marks an unusually opportune
moment in
which to sift through some ten years’ worth of information on Ritalin
and add and to
ask what, if anything, we have learned from the national experiment that
has made both
terms into household words.

Let’s put the question bluntly: How has it come to pass that in
fin-de-siècle America,
where every child from preschool onward can recite the "anti-drug"
catechism by heart,
millions of middle- and upper-middle class children are being legally
drugged with a
substance so similar to cocaine that, as one journalist accurately
summarized the
science, "it takes a chemist to tell the difference"?

What is methylphenidate?
The first thing that has made the Ritalin explosion possible is that
methylphenidate, to use the generic term, is perhaps the most widely
misunderstood drug in America today. Despite the fact that it is, as
Lawrence Diller observes in Running on Ritalin, "the most intensively
studied drug in pediatrics," most laymen remain under a misimpression
both about the nature of the drug itself and about its pharmacological
effects on children.

What most people believe about this drug is the same erroneous
characterization that appeared elsewhere in the Times piece quoted
earlier — that it is "a mild stimulant of the central nervous system
that, for reasons not fully understood, often helps children who are
chronically distractible, impulsive and hyperactive settle down and
concentrate." The word "stimulant" here is at least medically accurate.
"Mild," a more ambiguous judgment, depends partly on the dosage, and
partly on whether the reader can imagine describing as "mild" any dosage
of the drugs to which methylphenidate is closely related. These include
dextroamphetamine (street name: "dexies"), methamphetamine (street name:
"crystal meth"), and, of course, cocaine. But the chief substance of the
Times’ formulation here — that the reasons why Ritalin does what it does
to children remain a medical mystery — is, as informed writers from all
over the debate have long acknowledged, an enduring public myth.

"Methylphenidate," in the words of a 1995 dea background paper on the
drug, "is a
central nervous system (cns) stimulant and shares many of the
pharmacological effects
of amphetamine, methamphetamine, and cocaine." Further, it "produces
behavioral,
psychological, subjective, and reinforcing effects similar to those of
d-amphetamine
including increases in rating of euphoria, drug liking and activity, and
decreases in
sedation." For comparative purposes, that same dea report includes a
table listing the
potential adverse physiological effects of both methylphenidate and
dextroamphetamine;
they are, as the table shows, nearly identical (see below). To put the
point conversely,
as Richard DeGrandpre does in Ritalin Nation by quoting a 1995 report in
the
Archives of General Psychiatry, "Cocaine, which is one of the most
reinforcing and
addicting of the abused drugs, has pharmacological actions that are very
similar to those
of methylphenidate, which is now the most commonly prescribed
psychotropic medicine
for children in the U.S."

Such pharmacological similarities have been explored over the years in
numerous studies. DeGrandpre reports that "lab animals given the choice
to self-administer comparative doses of cocaine and Ritalin do not favor
one over another" and that "a similar study showed monkeys would work in
the same fashion for Ritalin as they would for cocaine." The dea reports
another finding — that methylphenidate is actually "chosen over cocaine
in preference studies" of non-human primates (emphasis added).  In
Driven to distraction, pro-Ritalin psychiatrists Hallowell and Ratey
underline the interchangeable nature of methylphenidate and cocaine when
they observe that "people with add feel focused when they take cocaine,
just as they do when they take Ritalin [emphasis added]." Moreover,
methylphenidate (like other stimulants) appears to increase tolerance
for related drugs. Recent evidence indicates, for example, that when
people accustomed to prescribed Ritalin turn to cocaine, they seek
higher doses of it than do others. To summarize, again from the dea
report, "it is clear that methylphenidate substitutes
for cocaine and d-amphetamine in a number of behavioral paradigms."

All of which is to say that Ritalin "works" on children in the same way
that related stimulants work on adults — sharpening the short-term
attention span when the drug kicks in and producing equally predictable
valleys ("coming down," in the old
street parlance; "rebounding," in Ritalinese) when the effect wears off.
Just as predictably, children are subject to the same adverse effects as
adults imbibing such drugs, with the two most common — appetite
suppression and insomnia — being of particular concern. That is why, for
example, handbooks on add will counsel parents to see their doctor if
they feel their child is losing too much weight, and why some children
who take methylphenidate are also prescribed sedatives to help them
sleep. It is also why one of the more Orwellian phrases in the
psychotropic universe, "drug holidays" — meaning scheduled times,
typically on weekends or school vacations, when the dosage of
methylphenidate is lowered or the drug temporarily withdrawn in order to
keep its adverse effects in check — is now so common in the literature
that it no longer even appears in quotations.

Just as, contrary to folklore, the adult and child physiologies respond
in the same way to such drugs, so too do the physiologies of all people,
regardless of whether they are
diagnosed with add or hyperactivity. As Diller puts it, in a point
echoed by many other
sources, methylphenidate "potentially improves the performance of anyone
— child or
not, add-diagnosed or not." Writing in the Public Interest last year,
psychologist Ken
Livingston provided a similar summary of the research, citing "studies
conducted during
the mid seventies to early eighties by Judith Rapaport of the National
Institute of Mental
Health" which "clearly showed that stimulant drugs improve the
performance of most
people, regardless of whether they have a diagnosis of add, on tasks
requiring good
attention." ("Indeed," he comments further in an obvious comparison,
"this probably
explains the high levels of ‘self-medicating’ around the world" in the
form of "stimulants
like caffeine and nicotine.")

A third myth about methylphenidate is that it, alone among drugs of its
kind, is immune
to being abused. To the contrary: Abuse statistics have flourished
alongside the boom in
Ritalin prescription-writing. Though it is quite true that elementary
schoolchildren are
unlikely to ingest extra doses of the drug, which is presumably kept
away from little
hands, a very different pattern has emerged among teenagers and adults
who have the
manual dexterity to open prescription bottles and the wherewithal to
chop up and snort
their contents (a method that puts the drug into the bloodstream far
faster than oral
ingestion). For this group, statistics on the proliferating abuse of
methylphenidate in
schoolyards and on the street are dramatic.

According to the dea, for example, as early as 1994 Ritalin was the
fastest-growing
amphetamine being used "non-medically" by high school seniors in Texas.
In 1991,
reports DeGrandpre in Ritalin Nation, "children between the ages of 10
and 14 years
old were involved in only about 25 emergency room visits connected with
Ritalin abuse.
In 1995, just four years later, that number had climbed to more than 400
visits, which
for this group was about the same number of visits as for cocaine." Not
surprisingly,
given these and other measures of methylphenidate’s recreational appeal,
criminal
entrepreneurs have responded with interest to the drug’s increased
circulation. From
1990 to 1995, the dea reports, there were about 2,000 thefts of
methylphenidate, most
of them night break-ins at pharmacies — meaning that the drug "ranks in
the top 10
most frequently reported pharmaceutical drugs diverted from licensed
handlers."

Because so many teenagers and college students have access to it,
methylphenidate is particularly likely to be abused on school grounds.
"The prescription drug Ritalin," reported Newsweek in 1995, "is now a
popular high on campus — with some serious side effects." DeGrandpre
notes that at his own college in Vermont, Ritalin was cited as the
third-favorite drug to snort in a campus survey. He also runs, without
comment, scores of individual abuse stories from newspapers across the
country over several pages of his book. In Running on Ritalin, Diller
cites several undercover narcotics agents who confirm that "Ritalin is
cheaper and easier to purchase at playgrounds than on the street." He
further reports one particularly hazardous fact about Ritalin abuse,
namely that teenagers, especially, do not consider the drug to be
anywhere near as dangerous as heroin or cocaine. To the contrary: "they
think that since their younger brother takes it under a doctor’s
prescription, it must be safe."

In short, methylphenidate looks like an amphetamine, acts like an
amphetamine, and is
abused like an amphetamine. Perhaps not surprisingly, those who value
its medicinal
effects tend to explain the drug differently. To some, Ritalin is to
children what Prozac
and other psychotropic "mood brightening" drugs are to adults — a
short-term fix for
enhancing personality and performance. But the analogy is misleading.
Prozac and its sisters are not stimulants with stimulant side effects;
there is, ipso facto, no black market for drugs like these. Even more
peculiar is the analogy favored by the advocates in chadd: that "Just as
a pair of glasses help the nearsighted person focus," as Hallowell and
Ratey explain, "so can medication help the person with add see the world
more clearly." But there is no black market for eyeglasses, either — nor
loss of appetite, insomnia, "dysphoria" (an unexplained feeling of
sadness that sometimes accompanies pediatric Ritalin-taking), nor even
the faintest risk of toxic psychosis, to cite one of Ritalin’s rare but
dramatically chilling possible effects.

What is methylphenidate "really" like? Thomas Armstrong, writing in The
Myth of the ADD Child four years ago, probably summarized the drug’s
appeal best. "Many middle and upper-middle class parents," he observed
then, "see Ritalin and related drugs almost as ‘cognitive steroids’ that
can be used to help their kids focus on their schoolwork better than the
next kid." Put this way, the attraction to Ritalin makes considerable
sense. In some ways, one can argue, that after-lunch hit of low-dose
methylphenidate is much like the big cup from Starbucks that millions of
adults swig to get them through the day — but only in some ways. There
is no dramatic upswing in hospital emergency room visits and pharmacy
break-ins due to caffeine abuse; the brain being jolted awake in one
case is that of an adult, and in the other that of a developing child;
and, of course, the substance doing the jolting on all those children is
not legally available and ubiquitous caffeine, but a substance that the
dea insists on calling a Schedule II drug, meaning that it is subject to
the same controls, and for the same reasons of abuse potential, as
related stimulants and other powerful drugs like morphine.

What is CHADD?
This mention of Schedule II drugs brings us to a second reason for the
Ritalin explosion in this decade. That is the extraordinary political
and medical clout of chadd, by far the largest of the add support groups
and a lobbying organization of demonstrated prowess. Founded in 1987,
chadd had, according to Diller, grown by 1993 to include 35,000 families
and 600 chapters nationally. Its professional advisory board, he notes,
"includes most of the most prominent academicians in the add world, a
veritable who’s who in research."

Like most support groups in self-help America, chadd functions partly as
clearing-house
and information center for its burgeoning membership — organizing
speaking events, issuing a monthly newsletter (Chadderbox), putting out
a glossy magazine (named, naturally enough, Attention!), and operating
an exceedingly active website stocked with on-line fact sheets and items
for sale. Particular scrutiny is given to every legal and political
development offering new benefits for those diagnosed with add. On these
and other fronts of interest, chadd leads the add world. "No matter how
many sources of information are out there," as a slogan on its website
promises, "chadd is the one you can trust."

One of chadd’s particular strengths is that it is exquisitely
media-sensitive, and has a track record of delivering speedy responses
to any reports on Ritalin or add that the group deems inaccurate. Diller
quotes as representative one fundraising letter from 1997, where the
organization listed its chief goals and objectives as "conduct[ing] a
proactive media campaign" and "challeng[ing] negative, inaccurate
reports that demean or undermine people with add." Citing "savage
attacks" in the Wall Street Journal and Forbes, the letter also went on
to exhort readers into "fighting these battles of misinformation,
innuendo, ignorance and outright hostility toward chadd and adults who
have a neurobiological disorder." The circle-the-wagons rhetoric here
appears to be typical of the group, as is the zeal.

Certainly it was with missionary fervor that chadd, in 1995, mounted an
extraordinary campaign to make Ritalin easier to obtain.
Methylphenidate, as mentioned, is a Schedule II drug.  That means, among
other things, that the dea must approve an annual production quota for
the substance — a fact that irritates those who rely on it, since it
raises the specter, if only in theory, of a Ritalin "shortage." It also
means that some states require that prescriptions for Ritalin be written
in triplicate for the purpose of monitoring its use, and that refills
cannot simply be called into the pharmacy as they can for Schedule III
drugs (for example, low-dosage opiates like Tylenol with codeine, and
various compounds used to treat migraine). Doctors, particularly those
who prescribe Ritalin in quantity, are inconvenienced by this
requirement. So too are many parents, who dislike having to stop by the
doctor’s office every time the Ritalin runs out.  Moreover, many parents
and doctors alike object to methylphenidate’s Schedule II classification
in principle, on the grounds that it makes children feel stigmatized;
the authors of Driven to Distraction, for example, claim that one of the
most common problems in treating add is that "some pharmacists, in their
attempt to comply with federal regulations, make consumers [of Ritalin]
feel as though they are obtaining illicit drugs."

For all of these reasons, chadd petitioned the dea to reclassify Ritalin
as a Schedule III drug. This petition was co-signed by the American
Academy of Neurology, and it was also supported by other distinguished
medical bodies, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, the
American Psychological Association, and the American Academy of Child
and Adolescent Psychiatry. Diller’s account of this episode in Running
on Ritalin is particularly credible, for he is a doctor who has himself
written many prescriptions for Ritalin in cases where he has judged it
to be indicated. Nevertheless, he found himself dissenting strongly from
the effort to decontrol it — an effort that, as he writes, was
"unprecedented in the history of Schedule II substances" and "could have
had a profound impact on the availability of the drug."

What happened next, while chadd awaited the dea’s verdict, was in
Diller’s words "a bombshell." For before the dea had officially
responded, a television documentary revealed that Ciba-Geigy (now called
Novartis), the pharmaceuticals giant that manufactures Ritalin, had
contributed nearly $900,000 to chadd over five years, and that chadd had
failed to disclose the contributions to all but a few selected members.

The response from the dea, which appeared in the background report cited
earlier, was harsh and uncompromising. Backed by scores of footnotes and
well over a 100 sources in the medical literature, this report amounted
to a public excoriation of chadd’s efforts and a meticulous description,
alarming for those who have read it, of the realities of Ritalin use and
abuse. "Most of the add literature prepared for public consumption and
available to parents," the dea charged, "does not address the abuse
liability or actual abuse of methylphenidate. Instead, methylphenidate
is routinely portrayed as a benign, mild
stimulant that is not associated with abuse or serious effects. In
reality, however, there is an abundance of scientific literature which
indicates that methylphenidate shares the same abuse potential as other
Schedule II stimulants."

The dea went on to note its "concerns" over "the depth of the financial
relationship between chadd and Ciba-Geigy." Ciba-Geigy, the dea
observed, "stands to benefit from
a change in scheduling of methylphenidate." It further observed that the
United Nations
International Narcotics Control Board (incb) had "expressed concern
about non-governmental organizations and parental associations in the
United States that are actively lobbying for the medical use of
methylphenidate for children with add." (The
rest of the world, it should be noted, has yet to acquire the American
taste for Ritalin.  Sweden, for example, had methylphenidate withdrawn
from the market in 1968 following a spate of abuse cases. Today, 90
percent of Ritalin production is consumed in the United States.) The
report concluded with the documented observations that "abuse data
indicate a growing problem among school-age children," that "adhd adults
have a high incidence of substance disorders," and that "with three to
five percent of today’s youth being administered methylphenidate on a
chronic basis, these issues are of great concern."

Yet whatever public embarrassment chadd and its supporters may have
suffered on account of this setback turned out to be short-lived. Though
it failed in the attempt to decontrol Ritalin (in the end, the group
withdrew its petition), on other legislative fronts
chadd was garnering one victory after another. By the end of the 1990s,
thanks largely
to chadd and its allies, an add diagnosis could lead to an impressive
array of educational,
financial, and social service benefits.

In elementary and high school classrooms, a turning point came in 1991
with a letter from the U.S. Department of Education to state school
superintendents outlining "three ways in which children labeled add
could qualify for special education services in public school under
existing laws," as Diller puts it. This directive was based on the
landmark 1990 Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (idea), which
"mandates that eligible children receive access to special education
and/or related services, and that this education be designed to meet
each child’s unique educational needs" through an individualized
program. As a result, add-diagnosed children are now entitled by law to
a long list of services, including separate special-education
classrooms, learning specialists, special equipment, tailored homework
assignments, and more. The idea also means that public school districts
unable to accommodate such children may be forced to pick up the tab for
private education.

In the field of higher education, where the first wave of Ritalin-taking
students has recently landed, an add diagnosis can be parlayed into
other sorts of special treatment. Diller reports that add-based requests
for extra time on sats, lsats, and mcats have risen sharply in the
course of the 1990s. Yet the example of such high-profile tests is only
one particularly measurable way of assessing add’s impact on education;
in many classrooms, including college classrooms, similar
"accommodations" are made informally at a student’s demand. A professor
in the Ivy League tells me that students with an add diagnosis now come
to him "waving doctor’s letters and pills" and requesting extra time for
routine assignments. To refuse "accommodation" is to risk a hornet’s
nest of liabilities, as a growing caseload shows. A 1996 article in
Forbes cites the example of Whittier Law School, which was sued by an
add-diagnosed student for giving only 20 extra minutes per hour long
exam instead of a full hour. The school, fearing an expensive legal
battle, settled the suit. It further undertook a preventive measure:
banning pop quizzes "because add students need separate rooms and extra
time."

Concessions have also been won by advocates in the area of college
athletics. The National College Athletic Association (ncaa) once
prohibited Ritalin usage (as do the U.S. and International Olympic
Committees today) because of what Diller calls its "possible acute
performance-enhancing benefits." In 1993, citing legal jeopardy as a
reason for changing course, the ncaa capitulated. Today a letter from
the team physician will suffice to allow an athlete to ingest Ritalin,
even though that same athlete would be disqualified from participating
in the Olympics if he were to test positive for stimulants.



Nor are children and college students the only ones to claim benefits in
the name of add. With adults now accounting for the fastest-growing
subset of add diagnoses, services and accommodations are also
proliferating in the workplace. The enabling regulations here are 1997
guidelines from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (eeoc) which
linked traits like chronic lateness, poor judgment, and hostility to
coworkers — in other words, the sorts of traits people get fired for —
to "psychiatric impairments," meaning traits that are protected under
the law. As one management analyst for the Wall Street Journal recently
observed (and as chadd regularly reminds its readers), these eeoc
guidelines have already generated a list of accommodations for
add-diagnosed employees, including special office furniture, special
equipment such as tape recorders and laptops, and byzantine
organizational schemes (color coding, buddy systems, alarm clocks, and
other "reminders") designed to keep such employees on track.
"Employers," this writer warned, "could find themselves facing civil
suits and forced to restore the discharged people to their old
positions, or even give them promotions as well as back pay or
reasonable accommodation."

An add diagnosis can also be helpful in acquiring Supplemental Security
Income (ssi) benefits. ssi takes income into account in providing
benefits to the add diagnosed; in that, it is an exception to the trend.
Most of the benefits now available, as even this brief review indicates,
have come to be provided in principle, on account of the diagnosis per
se. Seen this way, and taking the class composition of the add-diagnosed
into account, it is no wonder that more and more people, as Diller and
many other doctors report, are now marching into medical offices
demanding a letter, a diagnosis, and a prescription. The pharmacological
charms of Ritalin quite apart, add can operate, in effect, as
affirmative action for affluent white people.

What is Attention Deficit Disorder?
Another factor that has put Ritalin into millions of medicine cabinets
has to do with the protean nature of the disorder for which it is
prescribed — a disorder that was officially so designated by the
American Psychiatric Association in 1980, and one that, to cite Thomas
Armstrong, "has gone through at least 25 different name changes in the
past century."

Despite the successful efforts to have add construed as a disability
like blindness, the question of what add is remains passionately
disputed. To chadd, of course, it is a "neurobiological disorder," and
not only to chadd; "the belief that add is a neurological disease," as
Diller writes, also "prevails today among medical researchers and
university teaching faculty" and "is reflected in the leading journals
of psychiatry." What the critics observe is something else — that
"despite highly successful efforts to define add as a well-established
disorder of the brain," as DeGrandpre puts it in a formulation echoed by
many, "three decades of medical science have yet to produce any
substantive evidence to support such a claim."

Nonetheless, the effort to produce such evidence has been prodigious.
Research on the neurological side of add has come to resemble a Holy
Grail-like quest for something, anything, that can be said to set the
add brain apart — genes, imbalances of brain chemicals like dopamine and
serotonin, neurological damage, lead poisoning, thyroid problems, and
more. The most famous of these studies, and the chief grounds on which
add has come to be categorized as a neurobiological disability, was
reported in The New England Journal of Medicine in 1990 by Alan Zametkin
and colleagues at the National Institute of Mental Health (nimh). These
researchers used then-new positron emission tomography (pet) scanning to
measure differences in glucose metabolizing between hyperactive adults
and a control group. According to the study’s results, what emerged was
a statistically significant difference in the rates of glucose
metabolism — a difference hailed by many observers as the first medical
"proof" of a biological basis for add.

Diller and DeGrandpre are only the latest to argue, at length, that the
Zametkin study established no such thing. For starters — and from the
scientific point of view, most
important — a series of follow-up studies, as Diller documents, "failed
to confirm" the original result.  DeGrandpre, for his part, details the
methodological problems with the study itself — that the participants
were adults rather than children, meaning that the implications for the
majority of the Ritalin-taking population were unclear at best; that
there was "no evidence" that the reported difference in metabolism bore
any relationship to behavioral activity; that the study was further
plagued by "a confounding variable that had nothing to do with add,"
namely that the control group included far fewer male subjects than the
add group; and that, even if there had been a valid difference in
metabolism between the two groups, "this study tells us nothing about
the cause of these differences."

Numerous other attempts to locate the missing link between add and brain
activity are likewise dissected by Diller and DeGrandpre in their books.
So too is the causal fallacy prevalent in add literature — that if a
child responds positively to Ritalin, that response "proves" that he has
an underlying biological disorder. This piece of illogic is easily
dismissed. As these and other authors emphasize, drugs like Ritalin have
the same effect on just about everybody. Give it to almost any child,
and the child will become more focused and less aggressive — one might
say, easier to manage — whether or not there were "symptoms" of add in
the first place.

In sum, and as Thomas Armstrong noted four years ago in The Myth of the
ADD Child, add remains an elusive disorder that "cannot be
authoritatively identified in the same way as polio, heart disease, or
other legitimate illnesses." Instead, doctors depend on a series of
tests designed to measure the panoply of add symptoms. To cite Armstrong
again: "there is no prime mover in this chain of tests; no First Test
for add that has been declared self-referential and infallible." Some
researchers, for example, use "continuous performance tasks" (cpts) that
require the person being tested to pay attention throughout a series of
repetitive actions. A popular cpt is the Gordon Diagnostic System, a box
that flashes numbers, whose lever is supposed to be pressed every time a
particular combination appears. Yet as numerous critics have suggested,
although the score that results is supposed to tell us about a given
child’s ability to attend, its actual significance is rather ambiguous;
perhaps, as Armstrong analyzes, "it only tells how a child will perform
when attending to a repetitive series of meaningless numbers on a
soulless task."

In the absence of any positive medical or scientific test, the diagnosis
of add in both children and adults depends, today as a decade ago,
almost exclusively on behavioral criteria. The diagnostic criteria for
children, according to the latest Diagnostic and Statistics Manual
(dsm-iv), include six or more months’ worth of some 14 activities such
as fidgeting, squirming, distraction by extraneous stimuli, difficulty
waiting turns, blurting out answers, losing things, interrupting,
ignoring adults, and so on. (To read the list is to understand why boys
are diagnosed with add three to five times as often as girls.) The
diagnostic latitude offered by this list is obvious; as Diller
understates the point, "what often strikes those encountering dsm
criteria for the first time is how common these symptoms are among
children" generally.

The dsm criteria for adults are if anything even more expansive, and
include such ambiguous phenomena as a sense of underachievement,
difficulty getting organized, chronic procrastination, a search for high
stimulation, impatience, impulsivity, and mood swings. Hallowell and
Ratey’s 100-question test for add in Driven to Distraction, an
elaborately extrapolated version of the dsm checklist, illustrates this
profound elasticity.  Their questions range from the straightforward
("Are you impulsive?" "Are you easily distracted?" "Do you fidget a
lot?") to more elusive ways of eliciting the disorder ("Do you change
the radio station in your car frequently?" "Are you always on the go,
even when you don’t really want to be?" "Do you have a hard time reading
a book all the way through?"). Throughout, the distinction between what
is pathological and what is not remains unclear — because, in the
authors’ words, "There is no clear line of demarcation between add and
normal behavior."

Thus the business of diagnosing add remains, as Diller puts it, "very
much in the eye of the beholder." In 1998, partly for that reason, the
National Institutes of Health convened a  conference on add with
hundreds of participants and a panel of 13 doctors and educators. This
conference, as newspapers reported at the time, broke no new ground, and
indeed could not reach agreement on several important points — for
instance, how long children should take drugs for add, or whether and
when drug treatment might become risky. Even more interesting,
conference members could not agree on what is arguably the rather
fundamental question of how to diagnose the disorder in the first place.
As one panelist, a pediatrician, put it succinctly, "The diagnosis is a
mess."

Who has ADD?
To test this hypothesis, I gave copies of Hallowell and Ratey’s
questionnaire to 20 people (let’s call them subjects) and asked them to
complete it and total up the number of times they checked "yes." The
full questionnaire appears at the conclusion of this piece so that
interested readers can take it themselves. "These questions," as
Hallowell and Ratey note, "reflect those an experienced diagnostician
would ask." Although, as they observe, "this quiz cannot confirm the
diagnosis" (as we have seen already, nothing can), it does "offer a
rough assessment as to whether professional help should be sought." In
short, "the more questions that are answered ‘yes,’ the more likely it
is that add may be present."

In a stab at methodological soundness, I had equal numbers of males and
females take the test. All would be dubbed middle- or upper-middle
class, all but one are or have been professionals of one sort or
another, all are white, and the group was politically diverse — which is
to say, the sample accurately reflects the socioeconomic pool from which
most of the current Ritalin-taking population is drawn. As to the matter
of observer interference, although some subjects may have guessed what
the questionnaire was looking for, all of them (myself excepted, of
course) took the test "blind," that is, without any accompanying
material to prejudice their responses.

We begin with results at the lower end of the scale. Of the 18 subjects
who completed the test, two delivered "yes" scores of 8 and 10 (a
professor of English and his wife, an at-home mother active in
philanthropy). These "yes" results, as it turned out, were at least
threefold lower than anyone else’s. In "real" social science, according
to some expert sources, we would simply call these low scores "outliers"
and throw them out for the same reason. We, however, shall include them,
if only on the amateur grounds of scrupulousness.

The next lowest "yes" tallies — 29 in each case — were achieved by an
editorial assistant and a school nurse. That is to say, even these "low
scorers" managed to answer yes almost a third of the time (remember,
"the more questions that are answered ‘yes,’ the more likely it is that
add may be present"). After them, we find a single "yes" score of 33 (an
assistant editor). Following that, fully six subjects, or a third of the
test-finishers, produced scores in the 40s. These include this
magazine’s editor, two at-home mothers (one a graphic designer, the
other a poet), a writer for Time and other distinguished publications,
Policy Review’s business manager, and — scoring an estimable 49 — the
headmaster of a private school in Washington.

Proceeding into the upper echelons, a novelist who is also an at-home
mother reported her score as 55, and a renowned demographic expert with
ties to Harvard and Washington think tanks scored a 57. A male British
journalist and at-home father achieved a 60, and a female American
journalist and at-home mother (me) got a 62. Still
another at-home mother, this one with a former career in public
relations, garnered a 65.

In the lead, at least of the test-finishers, was a best selling satirist
whom we shall call, for purposes of anonymity, Patrick O’Rourke; he
produced an estimable score of 75.  "Mr. O’Rourke" further advanced the
cause of science by answering the questions on behalf of his
16-month-old daughter; according to his proud report, 65 was the
result.  Then there were the two subjects who, for whatever reason, were
unable to complete the test in the first place.  One of these subjects
called to say that he’d failed to finish the test because he’d "gotten
bored checking off so many yes answers." When I pressed him for some,
any, final tally for me to include, he got irritated and refused, saying
he was "too lazy" to count them up. Finally he said "50 would be about
right," take it or leave it. He is a Wall Street investment banker
specializing in the creation of derivative securities. Our last subject,
perhaps the most pathological of all, failed to deliver any score
despite repeated reminding phone calls from the research team. He is the
professor mentioned earlier, the one who reported that add is now being
used as a blanket for procrastination and shirking on campus.

Now on to interpreting the results. Apart from the exceedingly anomalous
two scores of ten and under, all the rest of the subjects reported
answering "yes" to at least a quarter of the questions — surely enough
to trigger the possibility of an add diagnosis, at least in those
medical offices Diller dubs "Ritalin mills." (As for the one subject who
reported no result whatsoever, he is obviously entitled to untold add
bonus points for that reason alone.) Fully 15 of the finishers, or
80-plus percent, answered yes to one-third of the questions or more.
Eight of the finishers, or 40-plus percent of the sample, answered yes
more than half of the time, with a number of scores in the high 40s
right behind them. In other words, roughly half of the sample answered
yes roughly half of the time.

My favorite comment on the exercise came from the school nurse (who
scored, one recalls, a relatively low 29). She has a background in
psychiatry, and therefore realized what kind of diagnosis the
questionnaire was designed to elicit. When she called to report her
result, she said that taking the test had made her think hard about the
whole add issue. "My goodness," she concluded, "it looks like the kind
of thing almost anybody could have." This brings us to the fourth reason
for the explosion of add and its prescribed corollary, Ritalin: The
nurse is right.

What is childhood?
The fourth and most obvious reason millions of Americans, most of them
children, are now taking Ritalin can be summarized in a single word that
crops up everywhere in the dry-bones literature on add and its drug of
choice: compliance. One day at a time, the drug continues to make
children do what their parents and teachers either will not or cannot
get them to do without it: Sit down, shut up, keep still, pay attention.
That some children are born with or develop behavioral problems so
severe that drugs like Ritalin are a godsend is true and sad (I totally
disagree; most of the problems mentioned here are caused, and are not
“born with” or developed, and this goes back to a lack of nutrition and
the eating of poor, additive “foods.” – David). It is also irrelevant to
the explosion in psychostimulant prescriptions. For most, the drug is
serving a more nuanced purpose — that of "help[ing] your child to be
more agreeable and less argumentative," as Barbara Ingersoll put it over
a decade ago in Your Hyperactive Child.

There are, as was mentioned, millions of stories in the Ritalin
universe, and the literature
of advocates and critics alike all illustrates this point. There is no
denying that millions of
people benefit from having children take Ritalin — the many, many
parents who will attest that the drug has improved their child’s school
performance, their home lives, often even their own marriages; the
teachers who have been relieved by its effects in their classrooms, and
have gone on to proselytize other parents of other unruly children
(frequently, it is teachers who first suggest that a child be checked
for the disorder); and the doctors who, when faced with all these
grateful parents and teachers, find, as Diller finds, that "at times the
pressure for me to medicate a child is intense."

Some other stories seep through the literature too, but only if one goes
looking for them.  These are the stories standing behind the clinical
accounts of teenagers who lie and say they’ve taken the day’s dose when
they haven’t, or of the children who cry in doctor’s offices and "cheek"
the pill (hide it rather than swallow, another linguistic innovation of
Ritalinese) at home. These are the stories standing behind such
statements as the following, culled from case studies throughout the
literature: "It takes over of me [sic]; it takes control." "It numbed
me." "Taking it meant I was dumb." "I feel rotten about taking pills;
why me?" "It makes me feel like a baby." And, perhaps most evocative of
all, "I don’t know how to explain. I just don’t want to take it any
more."

But these quotes, as any reader will recognize, appeal only to
sentiment; science, for its part, has long since declared its loyalties.
In the end, what has made the Ritalin outbreak not only possible but
inevitable is the ongoing blessing of the American medical
establishment — and not only that establishment. In a particularly
enthusiastic account of the drug in a recent issue of the New Yorker,
writer Malcolm Gladwell exults in the idea that "we are now extending to
the young cognitive aids of a kind that used to be reserved exclusively
for the old." He further suggests that, given expert estimates of the
prevalence of add (up to 10 percent of the population, depending on the
expert), if anything "too few" children are taking the drug. Surely all
these experts have a point. Surely this country can do more, much more,
to reduce fidgeting, squirming, talking excessively, interrupting,
losing things, ignoring adults, and all those other pathologies of what
used to be called childhood.           END

As more and more people begin to starve to death around the world,
because of actions directly related to Washington, DC, perhaps more
Americans will begin to understand why judgement will come against
them.   This is another example of abuse of people, and the United
States is exporting it to other countries, for which America will be
blamed.

I urge you to pass this post on to others, as they may need to
understand what is going on.  We all have a moral obligation to help
understanding and knowledge spread across America.   "But if the
watchman sees the sword coming and does not blow the trumpet to warn the
people and the sword comes and takes the life of one of them, that man
will be taken away because of his sin, but I will hold the  watchman
accountable for his blood."  Ezekiel 33:6 (NIV)

The cost of liberty is eternal vigilance

I am now selling copies of the book “Strategic Withdrawal; the Peaceful
Solutions Manual.”  If you would like a copy of the paper “Strategic
Withdrawal in a Nutshell,” please E-mail me and request it at
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  In addition, various people around the country
are arranging Seminars for the author of this book.  If you are
interested in seeing a schedule of upcoming events, please let me know
and I will supply the information.  We will be holding a large Symposium
on Sovereignty and tax issues in June in Mexico.  Please ask for more
details if you are interested.

Is information in this post for real?  I assure you it is.  If you do
not understand, I suggest you begin reading the papers that I have
prepared for people just like you (no cost; no obligation).  There are
currently 18 papers in all and they cover health, cancer, nutrition, the
Constitution, citizenship, law, case law, nature, and many other
subjects.  Currently, there are at least 5 doctors, 2 lawyers, 1 judge
(that I know of), 3  college/university professors and many others
reading the information.  They read because they are learning; maybe you
should as well.  Your first paper will be about United States
citizenship, and what case law says about it. Case law from the Supreme
Court, for instance.  The second paper is on the Constitution.

To understand the world around you it is necessary to understand
Scripture, and one piece of information from Scripture is particularly
telling; “the LOVE of money is the root of ALL evil.”  Not some evil;
not most evil; ALL evil.  Private courts the IRS uses are simply another
way to prey on the uninformed; please, do not stay uninformed.  Learn
what is really going on in America.  Learn why the United States
government (a corporation [in bankruptcy]) allows abuse of people like
the fraudulent IRS.  I will be sending other Posts I consider important;
please pass them on to those you consider in need of information.
Please pass them on unedited.  Please watch for them.  David

If you are interested, please E-mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> and let’s
get started!  And for those of you who have been reading and stopped for
some reason, any reason, please continue.  Believe me, the real
information begins after Part X!  There will be a total of 20 parts, and
those who are finishing are learning much more, and this learning is
changing how they look at the world around them, in some ways,
drastically.  God Bless, David

"Most people, sometime in their lives, stumble across truth. Most jump
up, brush themselves off, and hurry on about their business as if
nothing had happened." - Sir Winston Churchill

When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit
being mistaken or cease to be honest.

Lawyers: 99.9 percent of them give the rest of the profession a bad
name.

I don't think you can make a lawyer honest by an act of legislation.
You've got to work on his conscience.  And his lack of conscience is
what makes him a lawyer -- Will Rogers (1879-1935)

It can be said better: When do you know a lawyer is lying?  When his
mouth is open.






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