Public health the American way
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The Bureau is convinced that compulsory medication, often backed by propaganda and political or other pressure, controverts the American idea of personal liberty, and has within it the power of more harm than good. It believes, too, that certain medical …
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The Bureau is convinced that compulsory medication, often backed by propaganda and political or other pressure, controverts the American idea of personal liberty, and has within it the power of more harm than good. It believes, too, that certain medical legislation compulsory in nature and in effect has been either proposed or enacted insidiously without bearing the compulsory label. In the pages which follow, Mr. Harry Bernhardt Anderson, Secretary of the Citizens Medical Reference Bureau, Inc., directs attention to these and other significant facts which are matters of record in medical and public health literature. Because of its objective approach and of the authoritative nature of the evidence cited, the book merits careful study. - Foreword.
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"The Bureau is convinced that compulsory medication, often backed by propaganda and political or other pressure, controverts the American idea of personal liberty, and has within it the power of …"
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