Sunday, April 24, 2011

Using police to enforce a Big Pharma medication agenda is a violation of civil rights (and a waste of good cops)

Using police to enforce a Big Pharma medication agenda is a violation of civil rights (and a waste of good cops)

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Mike Adams,
Natural News
April 23, 2011

In a new video posted today (link below), I argue that using police officers to enforce a Big Pharma medication agenda is not merely a violation of civil rights, but a crime against human rights. It is a grave misuse of state power and a waste of law enforcement


resources that are already stretched thin across the country.
The full video is available at:

http://naturalnews.tv/v.asp?v=97774…

The video concerns the case of Maryanne Godboldo, the Detroit mom who was raided at gunpoint after refusing to allow Child Protective Services to kidnap her daughter. What was Maryanne’s supposed “failure” at parenting? She refused to give her daughter a psychiatric medication prescribed by her doctor — a medication that even the state now admits the daughter didn’t need.

After she refused, CPS called the police who brought guns onto the scene. Maryanne, in an effort to protect her daughter, warned the police to go away. When they broke in through her front door, she allegedly fired a warning shot to let them know she would protect her daughter against armed intruders. This resulted in the SWAT team being called in, and a 12-hour standoff ensued.
Maryanne is now facing multiple felony charges, including “obstruction of a law enforcement officer.”

It is the duty of honest citizens to obstruct cops who are committing crimes
And yet, I ask the question: Was it not Maryanne’s duty to obstruct those law enforcement officers when they are in the process of committing a crime?

Those who blindly believe in state power without understanding the principles of freedom mistakenly believe that cops have the right to do anything they want. The badge, they think, gives them the ultimate power to commit their own crimes in the name of the state. But this simply isn’t true: Cops are required to both uphold the law and exercise discretion in the enforcement of law.

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