----- Original Message -----
From: Paul, Rep.
Sent: Monday, July 18, 2005 11:12 PM
Subject: Congressman Ron Paul's weekly column 7/18/05

July 18, 2005: CAFTA and Dietary Supplements
Pharmaceutical companies have spent billions of dollars trying to get
Washington to regulate your dietary supplements like European governments
do. So far, that effort has failed in America, in part because of a 1994 law
called the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act. Big Pharma and the
medical establishment hate this Act, because it allows consumers some
measure of freedom to buy the supplements they want. Americans like this
freedom, however-- especially the health conscious Baby Boomers. This is why
the drug companies support WTO and CAFTA. They see international trade
agreements as a way to do an end run around American law and restrict
supplements through international regulations.


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http://www.house.gov/paul/tst/tst2005/tst071805.htm
CAFTA and Dietary Supplements

July 18,  2005
The House of Representatives is scheduled to vote on the Central American
Free Trade Agreement in the next two weeks, and one little-known provision
of the agreement desperately needs to be exposed to public view.  CAFTA,
like the World Trade Organization, may serve as a forum for restricting or
even banning dietary supplements in the U.S.

The Codex Alimentarius Commission, organized by the United Nations in the
1960s, is charged with "harmonizing" food and supplement rules between all
nations of the world.  Under Codex rules, even basic vitamins and minerals
require a doctor's prescription.  The European Union already has adopted
Codex-type regulations, regulations that will be in effect across Europe
later this year.  This raises concerns that the Europeans will challenge our
relatively open market for health supplements in a WTO forum.  This is
hardly far-fetched, as Congress already has cravenly changed our tax laws to
comply with a WTO order.

Like WTO, CAFTA increases the possibility that Codex regulations will be
imposed on the American public.  Section 6 of CAFTA discusses Codex as a
regulatory standard for nations that join the agreement.  If CAFTA has
nothing to do with dietary supplements, as CAFTA supporters claim, why in
the world does it specifically mention Codex?

Unquestionably there has been a slow but sustained effort to regulate
dietary supplements on an international level.  WTO and CAFTA are part of
this effort. Passage of CAFTA does not mean your supplements will be
outlawed immediately, but it will mean that another international trade body
will have a say over whether American supplement regulations meet
international standards.  And make no mistake about it, those international
standards are moving steadily toward the Codex regime and its draconian
restrictions on health freedom.  So the question is this: Does CAFTA, with
its link to Codex, make it more likely or less likely that someday you will
need a doctor's prescription to buy even simple supplements like Vitamin C?
The answer is clear.  CAFTA means less freedom for you, and more control for
bureaucrats who do not answer to American voters.

Pharmaceutical companies have spent billions of dollars trying to get
Washington to regulate your dietary supplements like European governments
do.  So far, that effort has failed in America, in part because of a 1994
law called the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act.  Big Pharma and
the medical establishment hate this Act, because it allows consumers some
measure of freedom to buy the supplements they want.  Americans like this
freedom, however-- especially the health conscious Baby Boomers.

This is why the drug companies support WTO and CAFTA.  They see
international trade agreements as a way to do an end run around American law
and restrict supplements through international regulations.

The largely government-run health care establishment, including the
nominally private pharmaceutical companies, want government to control the
dietary supplement industry-- so that only they can manufacture and
distribute supplements.  If that happens, as it already is happening in
Europe, the supplements you now take will be available only by prescription
and at a much higher cost-- if they are available at all.  This alone is
sufficient reason for Congress to oppose the unconstitutional,
sovereignty-destroying CAFTA bill.




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