Reveille for Revolution: Bush signs act requiring newborn DNA to be kept by federal government!
Tests
could reveal facts 'making individual less useful to society'
WASHINGTON - May 1, 2008 - With
virtually no fanfare, President Bush signed into law a plan ordering the
government to take no more than six months to set up a "national
contingency plan" to screen newborns' DNA in case of a "public health
emergency."
The new law requires that the
results of the program - including "information … research, and data on
newborn screening" - shall be assembled by a "central
clearinghouse" and made available on the Internet.
According to congressional records,
S.1858, sponsored by Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., was approved in the Senate Dec.
13, in the House April 8 and signed by Bush April 24.
"Soon, under this bill, the
DNA of all citizens will be housed in government genomic biobanks and considered
governmental property for government research," said Twila Brase,
president of the
Citizens' Council on
Health Care. "The DNA taken at birth from every citizen is essentially
owned by the government, and every citizen becomes a potential subject of
government-sponsored genetic research."
Brase has objected extensively to
plans in Minnesota to provide state government the same option now handed to
the federal government by Congress.
The bill, she said, strips "citizens
of genetic privacy rights and DNA property rights. It also violates
research ethics and the Nuremberg Code.
"The public is clueless. S.
1858 imposes a federal agenda of DNA data banking and population-wide genetic
research," Brase continued. "It does not require consent and there
are no requirements to fully inform parents about the warehousing of their
child's DNA for the purpose of genetic research.
Ed. Note: Just
say “NO”! Just refuse to comply! That’s what American Patriots do.