|
The
Therapeutic Nanny State
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Last
week I wrote
about a presidential initiative called the New Freedom
Commission on Mental Health, which issued a report calling
for the mandatory mental health screening of American schoolchildren.
This new proposal threatens to force millions of kids to undergo
psychiatric screening, whether their parents consent or not. At
issue is the fundamental right of parents to decide what medical
treatment is appropriate for their children.
I
introduced an amendment to eliminate any funding for the proposal
in a Department of Education and Department of Health and Human
Services spending bill. Although the amendment failed, the response
to my office has been overwhelming and highly supportive. The notion
of federal bureaucrats ordering potentially millions of youngsters
to take psychotropic drugs like Ritalin strikes an emotional chord
with American parents, who are sick of relinquishing more and more
parental control to government.
Some
members of Congress objected to my amendment on the grounds that
the federal screening program does not yet exist, so its premature
to oppose it. But the whole point was to prevent the proposal from
being implemented in the first place. Once created, federal programs
are nearly impossible to eliminate. Congress had a rare opportunity
to stop a bad idea in its tracks, before it becomes entrenched.
Every member who opposes the idea of forcing kids to undergo mental
health screening should have sent a strong statement by voting for
my amendment. They will have another chance to kill the initiative
when I introduce a stand-alone bill later this year.
Furthermore,
its not true that no money has been allocated for the proposal.
The Appropriations committee, which distributes your tax dollars
to the various federal agencies, specifically allotted $20 million
in the HHS/Education bill for state programs in support of the New
Freedom commission report. These federally-funded state programs
will be the precursors of the broader federal program recommended
by the commission.
Anyone
who understands bureaucracies knows they assume more and more power
incrementally. A few scattered state programs over time will be
replaced by a federal program implemented in a few select cities.
Once the limited federal program is accepted, it will be expanded
nationwide. Once in place throughout the country, the screening
program will become mandatory. This is why we can never trust new
bureaucratic programs: no matter how benevolent their proponents
claim them to be, most programs morph into something much larger
than originally foreseen. Those who view my concerns as alarmism
fail to understand the inevitable nature of bureaucratic growth.
Soviet
communists attempted to paint all opposition to the state as mental
illness. It now seems our own federal government wants to create
a therapeutic nanny state, beginning with schoolchildren. Its
not hard to imagine a time 20 or 30 years from now when government
psychiatrists stigmatize children whose religious, social, or political
values do not comport with those of the politically correct, secular
state.
American
parents must do everything they can to remain responsible for their
childrens well-being. If we allow government to become intimately
involved with our childrens minds and bodies, we will have
lost the final vestiges of parental authority. Strong families are
the last line of defense against an overreaching bureaucratic state.
September
21, 2004
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
Ron
Paul Archives
|