Guest Episode
February 9, 2022
Episode 36:
Are we losing our Natural Health Freedom? with Shawn Buckley
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Today I welcome lawyer Shawn Buckley back to the show. We discuss Health Canada, its self-care framework, and what Canadians can expect to lose in the world of natural health.
Greetings,
hello,
good day wherever you are in this world.
Thank you very much for joining True Hope Cast,
the official podcast of True Hope Canada,
today I welcome lawyer Sean Buckley back to the
show.
We're going to be talking about Health Canada's
self-care framework and what Canadians can expect
when it comes to access to natural health products
in the future.
So,
morning,
Sean,
thanks for joining us.
How you doing well,
thanks for having me on,
Simon.
Of course,
how are you navigating this new world that we're
in?
Well,
it's funny you'd use that phrase; I automatically
think of Aldous Huxley and it truly is a brave
new world.
isn't it i think um i think it's fair to say
that i just and i imagine a lot of people
listening to this will agree there's just kind of
this added level of stress as we realize that the
world is not as we thought it was you know we've
had for just decades and decades at least in my
awareness a lot of people out there saying you
know our governments are not are you know take
orders from other places and things are not as it
seems and i think you know a lot of us are
finding it very stressful to live in a police
state now i think we've lived in a police state
for a long time it just wasn't as apparent but it
it's becoming a hard police state
Instead of a soft one,
so I think I'm doing quite poorly just because I'm
grieving loss of our freedoms.
Very well put,
and I think it's very interesting when we do live
in this high stress,
high anxiety,
isolated time that having the access to natural
health products and supplements to help get through
that type of thing is very important.
So,
that kind of really brings us around to what we're
going to talk about today in our last conversation,
which was episode 10 of this podcast,
where we discussed the insidious side of Health
Canada.
If you've not listened to the episode yet,
I suggest that you do; but what was really clear
To me,
was that Health Canada is simply not what they
appear to be.
On their own website,
they say this: I just want to quote,
quote,
'Health Canada.' Here's because I think this is an
interesting statement: 'Health Canada is responsible
for helping Canadians maintain and improve their
health while respecting individual choices and
circumstances.
It ensures that high-quality health services are
available and works to reduce health risks,'
Sean.
Now,
you did a better job of not smiling than I did,
because that is just so funny that it hurts,
and it's,
it's this individual choice thing because what's so
funny is I'll say we made a decision.
But we didn't make a decision because,
every Western nation around the same time at the
turn of the century when the chemical companies
pharmaceutical companies were dictating what the
policy should be to government as part of things
that have been going on for a long time that are
now becoming clear: the way to control health was
to say,
'make this philosophical decision well,
people don't have the right to decide how they're
going to treat their bodies.
Rather,
we're going to make every treatment illegal,
whether it's chemical or natural.
We pass this Food and Drug Act,
and it's illegal to use any treatment.' Unless it's
been approved of by the government,
and it's illegal to use any treatment unless it's
been approved of by the government.
Now they will approve more than one treatment.
So well,
no,
you have the freedom to choose among the options
that we allow you to have,
and the word 'allow' is very important because in
the area of health,
if you can't decide what you you can do with your
own body,
then you're a slave.
We might as well put cattle tanks in our ears,
and I think that's becoming apparent: that we're
not viewed as sovereign human beings right now,
that can make sense,
and that's why we're not allowed to do that,
we're not.
Allowed to do that meaningful choices,
but this goes back over a hundred years; these
decisions,
so we made it so that it was illegal to treat
people with anything that wasn't approved of by the
government.
Now,
what the law is and listen carefully,
you won't find found this find this written in the
Food and Drug Act or regulations,
but the law in Canada,
in the way it plays out on the ground,
is it is illegal it is illegal to treat any
serious condition with something that did not have
a patent when it went through the drug approval
process.
So really,
it's about protecting intellectual property rights;
let me explain how this works.
So let's pick any serious condition,
heart disease,
mental illness,
you know bipolar,
whatever.
You can't treat people with anything that wasn't
approved of by the government.
What as soon as you're in a serious condition,
you have to go through what's called the new drug
approval process.
Now I can't tell you today what that costs,
but I can tell you about 10 years ago there was
an expert on the stand that I'm asking questions
this expert's under oath and they said,
well,
you know the average cost is around a billion
dollars.
Let's say it's half that,
let's say it's $500 million.
Oh,
let's say it's $500 million.
Let's say it's a tenth of
That let's say,
it's a hundred million dollars.
Well,
you tell me what natural health product would ever
go through that process.
You don't have intellectual property rights if
you're a chemical with a patent.
I use Viagra as an example because when Viagra
first came out,
you know it it cost 40-50 dollars a pill,
and that's,
you know,
what 10-15-20 years ago when that was a meaningful
amount of money.
And it would be a news story; it was so expensive
well,
it was so expensive because A) it was in demand,
with their marketing,
and B) no one else could make it.
Now,
it's not expensive at all because anyone the patent
has expired,
and the you know Anyone can make sidenafil,
that's the drug name is actually sidenafil.
It's just that Pfizer marketed it under the Viagra
brand name.
But it's sidenafil so now Pfizer can get sidenafil
or Viagra through the new drug approval process
because they know if they succeed,
it doesn't matter how many billions and billions of
dollars it might have cost they're going to get
that back tenfold.
And in fact,
they know a certain number of drugs will not get
through the process and that's just the cost of
doing business because it's so lucrative.
But if you came up with a better natural health
alternative,
you could never.
Get through the process,
because you don't have intellectual property rights,
you can't get through the process.
So,
hey,
you're not going to spend your own money,
because as soon as you get it approved,
anyone can make the same thing and you'll never be
able to charge enough to get your money back; and
if you don't have the money,
you'll never raise the money from investors,
so we mean we'll go through this process and we'll
never get our money back,
because anyone can just do that.
That's the effect of our law.
Now,
what's so interesting about this self-care framework
that you had mentioned is what it's really about;
it's it's About extending this model,
where it's illegal to treat serious health
conditions with anything that didn't have
intellectual property rights,
and trying to impose that not as strictly but
trying to impose that for moderate health conditions
and minor health conditions.
Because you know right now,
even though it's a total train wreck compared to
what it was before the natural health product
regulations,
there's still a lot of products out there that are
effective,
like natural products.
Obviously,
there's no patents,
and a lot of companies have survived this
transition into this this licensing scheme where you
can Only sell a natural health product if Health
Canada has licensed you,
granted you permission.
You've gone through this process now.
The interesting thing is: when you look at our
natural health product regulations,
it just says you have to apply for a license and
go through this licensing process.
It doesn't limit the types of claims; it doesn't
say you couldn't apply for a license for heart
disease; it doesn't say you can't apply for
bipolar.
But Health Canada is applying it as only applying
to what we would call 'structure function'
claims.
For example,
you know True Hope Empowered Plus,
which I mean I've run several trials.
Involving that product,
you can't; you could not convince me that it's not
the best treatment you can for a parent.
But I've done several trials,
including in the world,
for bipolar disorder.
You know I've had psychiatrists and experts tell me
that,
and I'm even aware of one former head of the
Natural Product Directorate telling one of the
founders of True Hope: 'We know it works.' And I
mean I've had Health Canada experts change their
mind when they looked at the evidence.
So,
but the point I'm making is: is they can't apply
under the Natural Health Product Regulations to get
approval to treat bipolar disorder even.
Though Health Canada knows it works,
they have to go through this new drug approval
process,
so I think the claim they're licensed for is is
so milquetoast it's like 'support mental health and
well-being' or something like that.
Yeah,
we're super limited with the language for sure
that's a structure function claim,
so it's only legal to sell the product to support
mental health and well-being,
not bipolar.
This is how that I was going to say censorship,
but this is how the control has been imposed.
There was this huge citizen rebellion to get the
natural products regulations,
you would have missed this,
Simon,
but they were Basically,
going to impose the chemical drug regulations onto
natural products.
I just have to stop and smile and say,
'Well,
this self-care framework that the natural product
industry is not getting excited about and the
consumer is not getting excited about' - it's yet
another attempt to impose the chemical drug
regulations on the natural products.
But this was happening years and years ago in the
mid-90s.
Health Canada started taking product after product
after product off the market,
saying,
'You,
you,
you're not complying with the chemical drug
regulations.' Well,
I mean,
you couldn't,
you couldn't comply - even if You tried to comply,
by and large,
you couldn't,
so people rebelled.
I mean,
we're talking it was a huge consumer rebellion.
A lawsuit was started.
Health Canada backed down on the the eve of this
lawsuit and said,
fine,
we've listened.
You know,
Health Minister Alan Rock at the time says,
oh,
we've listened,
and so he refers the matter to the Standing
Committee of Health that you know had a really
good hard look at this and come out with 53
recommendations.
Now when you ask a parliamentary committee to come
up with a solution,
the solution is always more law and regulation not
more freedom.
But even,
you know,
bearing in mind you're asking The wrong people to
come up with a solution,
you know it wasn't that bad.
What some of the recommendations were pretty good,
you know,
and they definitely were supporting freedom of
choice and not imposing chem I mean they made it
really clear it is just not appropriate to impose
chemical drug regulations on natural products because
it's apples and oranges,
it's a different paradigm.
So then Health Canada comes out with these natural
product regulations which I'm sorry,
they are chemical drug regulations they're just
watered down.
That's absolutely the same: you need an
establishment license; you need a product license.
blah blah you you just changed the word natural
health product to chemical drug up the penalties
and the procedures and you tell me what the
difference is so we already have this model imposed
on us where now all of a sudden it's illegal to
treat people with chemicals and natural health
products in you know without getting health canada
approval so this self-care framework is a re
-engagement of that original plan basically yes it
is can i just interrupt and say is can you hear
the water running outside my wife just turned the
water on and i could go and ask her to turn it
off no i think you're good okay okay we're good
okay
Sorry about that,
no problem!
That interjection,
so um,
now where were we going?
So we're talking about structure function claims.
It's a really good question and I think it's a
very good question.
I think we're getting to that now what's happening
with this self-care framework is that Health Canada
is saying well,
we're going to phase in a new,
new set of regulations,
a new way of doing things for natural health
products.
In their original timetable,
it would have already happened; we'd already be
fully there,
but COVID forced them to push it back,
and you can just go on their website and find the
dates - I don't recall exactly.
What they are,
off the top of my head,
but this year,
all that was supposed to happen right now,
in the spring,
that didn't,
um,
was you know again,
involving labeling and stuff,
stuff that that isn't good,
but nobody's going to get totally excited about.
But the really fun bits,
and I hope especially if there are any
practitioners or manufacturers but out there to
listen,
is one of the fun bits.
It is right now,
if you are going to license a natural health
product,
you're going to ask Health Canada for permission to
help people.
Then you can use traditional use evidence.
So let's say scurvy was a problem.
Well,
we all know limes cure scurvy,
I mean oranges.
would too but basically vitamin c and we could
rely even on the british naval records as evidence
and then traditional use evidence flowing from that
once they figured out the problem and the solution
you know we could use that evidence or you know
in traditional chinese medicine well i mean their
knowledge base we're not measured in centuries we're
over a thousand years they can use that to get
licensed under the self-care framework that's going
to be gone that's crazy okay gone for proving
efficacy in a very narrow field it can be used to
support safety but you have to prove to health
canada that you're product does
what you say it does so here you know let's use
traditional chinese medicine an example you've got
you know 1200 years of you know use and effective
use i mean the only reason it continues to be
used is because it works yeah yeah i mean if it's
not working they would stop using it right so
people do what work especially when you're getting
paid to help somebody as a practitioner you want
them to come back the next time so you're going
to do what works and you know you're not going to
be able to do that anymore so what do i do just
listen yeah sorry i'm sorry i'm sorry to interrupt
but just let me you are now going to have to use
the exact
Same type of evidence as the chemical
over-the-counter drugs,
now that's not as strict as the prescription; this
new drug approval process for serious things,
but it's way stricter than we have now for natural
health products.
It doesn't mean that you know just because you you
have to run,
have some clinical evidence it doesn't mean that's
better evidence.
In fact,
experts will argue that's worse evidence.
But we choose that type of evidence deliberately as
the government,
so that we can control what people have in this
paradigm; science in the area of health regulation
is the weapon to ensure that only chemical drugs
are Used to treat people,
so it's kind of funny because the scientific method
is meant to be freeing but it's the weapon to
keep people safe.
So I'm going to put that in the chat for now and
I've finished that thought.
I'm so sorry for interrupting; no,
of course that is an important point.
Okay,
Sean,
so in regards to now having a natural health
product,
so say I've got this pre-existing natural health
product and you know it's going out to the public
and people are using it,
you know it's popular.
But now these new frameworks come in and you can
no longer use traditional evidence to what to
warrant that product.
Do I with my pre-existing
Product do I have to now reprove it to be
effective or if I want to produce a brand new
product on the market,
I have to go through new hoops,
yes,
yes,
you do,
so I mean that's the whole point is is is what
they're saying is is you know it's it's unfair.
Let's ignore remember I told you the static
committee of health when they looked into this
issue one of the things they got right was saying
it's not appropriate to regulate a natural product
the same way as a novel chemical,
and so let's not impose that on it.
I mean let's just even take for for chemicals,
so you know white willow bark is used for pain
control,
so bear comes along and Okay,
so we know this works really well what is it?
Oh,
it's a molecule very similar to ASA,
well let's take that molecule and we're going to
take that molecule and we're going to take that
molecule and we're molecule and tweak it a little
bit.
Now it's a synthetic molecule called ASA and we
patent it and we go through this drug approval
process and we get it approved.
And now we can sell aspirin,
ASA for,
you know,
pain reduction.
Well,
it causes gastrointestinal bleeding and this and
that and all these other things.
And I'm not knocking ASA,
but White Willow Bark does the same thing as well
without those side effects.
Now,
any sane regulator would say,
well,
no,
actually you can't sell the chemical because yeah,
it works.
It reduces pain,
but look at the side effects.
But if we use the natural molecule bound up with
other things that are in the White Willow Bark,
we get the same effect,
but without the side effects.
So you can't use the chemical drug,
but no,
we actually do it opposite.
Yeah.
The chemical drug gets licensed.
You,
you,
nobody's going to run clinical trials on White
Willow Bark because there's no patent protection,
intellectual right protection.
And so now it becomes illegal to use White Willow
Bark.
And,
and then the regulatory body comes along with the
support of the chemical companies and say,
it's not fair for natural practitioners to use
things like White Willow Bark,
because there's just simply not the clinical
evidence.
Just ignoring that the only reason the isolated ASA
in the first place was it worked so well.
And so,
so the natural one doesn't,
and I,
you know,
I've picked White Willow Bark as an example.
It's kind of funny because the UK government had
done a big study on this gastro bleeding because
for people that have had heart disease,
you know,
that baby aspirin a day appears to really help.
I'm not an expert on that,
but I,
you know,
I've heard it; really helps,
but the UK government,
just a study and finds White Willow Bark has the
same beneficial effect,
but without the risks of the bleeding in your gut.
So,
you know,
why wouldn't every regulatory body just say,
you know,
go after the colleges of physicians and surgeons
and say,
no,
no,
you can tell your patients to use White Willow
Bark,
but not,
not maybe.
It sounds like they're looking for just evidence
that it works relatively well.
like it has to show some sort of effectiveness but
they don't look really or take into consideration
that there are side effects to it because yeah but
getting back to your question which actually was is
you know our manufacturer's gonna have to reapply
so let's use white willow bark as an example
whereas now under traditional use evidence you could
get white willow bark licensed for some structure
function claim that you know helps reduce pain or
something right you can and you can go in a
health food store right now and buy white willow
bark for that purpose but when the self-care
framework is in no no no you can't use traditional
use evidence so when you go to relicense you're
going to have to have some form of scientific
clinical evidence showing that white
Willow bark works now,
actually ironically,
in the case of white willow bark that evidence
likely is there,
even though it's not traditional use evidence,
so um,
I mean,
even just this UK study that I suggested.
But for a lot of products that evidence is not
going to be there and then you're hooped unless
you're going to pay for clinical trial evidence
that Health Canada wants and the levels of evidence
they want will vary depending on the type of
product and the type of use.
But it's becoming,
it will become more stricter.
And what's even more troubling,
if any practitioner or you know healthcare
practitioner,
so you know traditional Chinese medicine doctor,
naturopath,
herbalist,
nutritionist anyone that relies on natural health
products now in their practice,
pay attention to what I'm going to say.
These are in Health Canada's own documents,
so I'm part of a group called the Natural Health
Product Protection Association and if anyone wants
to find us,
our website is nhppa.org.
We have a discussion paper and we're going to talk
a little bit more about that,
and we're going to talk a little bit more about
the Health Canada framework,
if you want to get into more detail.
But one thing that's that's just incredible and
yet,
you know,
people aren't up in arms.
About it is,
they've made it clear in the Health Canada
documents that a self-care product is not a product
for which a person would seek the advice of a
healthcare practitioner licensed by a province; now,
that includes medical doctors but includes your
traditional Chinese practitioners,
your naturopathic doctors,
herbalists,
as I say,
you know,
the list goes on.
So if I'm a naturopathic doctor,
what am I going to use to treat my patients?
Because we're going to lose the natural health
product regulations; we may still call them the
natural product regulations,
we may not for political reasons.
Health Canada's trying
was trying to calm people down and succeeded when
really nhppa was the only one raising the alarm
saying wait a second this self-care framework is
going to be a train wreck for access to products
and oh by the way if you're a professional like a
naturopathic doctor they're saying well even though
we're imposing all these strict standards of
evidence a self-care product is not a product for
which someone would seek the advice of a health
care practitioner so that means you're in the more
strict area of drug approval so you see i said at
the beginning of the interview right now it is
basically illegal to treat a serious
Health condition with anything that didn't have
patent protection.
Now,
we're moving down to a moderate and you know
almost totally meaninglessly minor where we're
requiring likely patent protection because the
process is going to become so expensive to get
approval; but you're not getting approval under this
self-care framework,
so you're not getting approval under this self-care
framework,
which is still going to be dramatically worse than
what we have now for anything for which you would
seek the advice of a health care practitioner.
That's that's now just your most minor things; even
for the most minor.
Things are a train wreck,
but I mean the number of professional products that
are going to survive are going to be few and
that's the plan.
They don't want people like me; I'm hoping now.
As of August 6,
2021,
if I said it a year ago,
you know I hope that people might understand that
our governments really are watching for interests
that necessarily aren't the interests of the
citizens.
Well,
maybe people might some people might believe me now
because it's it's pretty clear in today's world
that individual rights and freedoms really aren't
meaningless.
Well,
they've been meaningless for a long time.
And in the drug
Approval process they've been meaningless for over a
century,
yeah that's that's wild.
And I think,
and the primary difference between the conventional
medical model and and complementary alternative
medicine is is that,
because a naturopath is going to there are
obviously some naturopaths that can prescribe
pharmaceuticals but they're primarily going to be
going to the natural world in regards to using
organic care absolutely so in let's just use
British Columbia as an example because that's where
you're you are right now,
naturopathic doctors there's actually a list of um
drugs prescription Drugs that they can write
prescriptions for in their regulations,
so they have a specific set.
But you,
and I both know that the majority of their
practice is using natural remedies to treat
conditions.
And I have the highest respect for the naturopathic
doctor tradition,
so.
And I'm worried because I'm not sure if I'm going
to be able to do that because I use naturopathic
doctors; their ability to help me when I have a
problem it is going to be so circumscribed that
it's just crazy or they're just they're breaking
the law and yeah,
so.
It's just it's it's just not helpful at all what's
coming down the pipe do you see.
This type of um government overreach,
um,
across most nations?
Or do you see,
in other countries,
where you're looking at the evidence for natural
health products in the way that we we would expect
our regulatory bodies to,
to do so?
Do you have much experience with that?
I'm actually not sure that I understood your
question and I think the problem wasn't with your
question but you know when somebody's asking a
question you start thinking 'how'
to answer it and I didn't catch that so can you
just ask it again and oh certainly of course,
yeah.
So basically do you see other governments around
the world,
maybe specifically?
In the Western world,
doing similar things in regards to creating their
own self-care frameworks and do,
yeah,
so and do we see do we see some countries who
are you know looking towards natural health products
even first and you know not not um holding them
to the same clinical standards as chemical medicine
you know like it's there's a big difference between
the two of them and and and the governments know
this and Health Canada knows this,
but you know they're trying they're trying to put
one into the same box and it's there's only got
one purpose,
it's to squeeze one of them completely out of the
game,
you know,
we've just Watched in the last year and a half,
almost the entire world.
Every government,
almost every government,
is doing the exact same things in response to
COVID.
I was going to call it 'I,
I,
I' just,
I have to bite my tongue if that doesn't tell you
that our health practices are coordinated above the
government level.
I,
I just don't know what will,
and the self-care framework is totally part of this
harmonization as we move to towards this new world
order where we have one set of laws that apply to
everyone.
In fact,
someone did a an access to information request but
how did this self-care framework come about and it
really was just a handful.
A few bureaucrats with no expertise in the
regulation of natural health products at all,
who had just come back from an international
conference and you know,
I haven't,
we haven't spoken yet about you know the changes
coming to exports of drugs,
including natural health products.
But that comes straight out of our you know,
international trade obligations.
And there's been change after change in the Food
and Drug Act and regulations all in response to us
harmonizing and Canada's at the forefront,
like you want the new world order order poster boy
company,
that's Canada.
We're we're as locked into this as any country we.
Just any drug and trade agreement,
it doesn't matter whether it's good for Canadian
citizens.
We're on board full force.
You tell me when we haven't signed and you know
we're at the forefront of so this is this is yes
this is our drug policy isn't going to deviate
from what those creating the brave new world want.
In fact,
we're not going to deviate from what those creating
the brave new world want.
In fact,
we're at the forefront at it.
I would say we're the most aggressive so and most
of the western nations are similar.
And now have you know the USA they had their big
rebellion in the early 90s too.
And and it it so scared the politicians.
They passed what was called the Dietary Supplement
Health and Education Act of 1994,
and it classifies natural health products; they call
them dietary supplements as food,
you not as drugs.
So,
we're not even talking about the drug model now.
They have to have good manufacturing practices and
stuff like that,
and they submit their claim to the FDA,
and if there's no objection after I think it is
30 days,
then you can market your natural product.
And the FDA is supposed to have actual evidence of
harm before you know they start bugging you to
take it off the market or or make changes,
but we're the opposite; it's illegal,
basically.
do anything without health canada's approval and you
know if they're unhappy at all with you know even
the most minor transgression it's it's off the
market and and with a vengeance so but i mean
even but they're now planning on moving to our
model which is really the international chemical
drug regulation model because the whole object is
listen we are not we think we're human beings that
we're not human beings that we're sovereign then we
have control over our bodies well i i'm sorry we
don't and in the area of drug regulation we don't
and it's so clear to anyone who looks and if if
you don't have the right to choose how
you treat your body then you we might as well put
cattle takes in our ears because when you are
suffering from a serious mental or mental or
physical illness and you're really suffering and
none of the approved drugs work you can't even be
told of other options and other options aren't
available because they're taken off the market like
let's use em power plus as an example when you
know what was it 15 years ago 20 years ago when
health canada charges true hope criminally i don't
even remember it was so long ago they were having
a criminal trial health canada is trying to get
true hope convicted for selling em power plus
Because Health Canada told them you can't take it
off; you can't sell it; you don't have a license,
and this is before the NHP regulations right so
you couldn't get a license.
And psychiatrists after psychiatrists and doctor
after doctor,
and patient after patient was writing and calling
the Minister of Health saying,
'Do not take this off the market.' People rely on
it for their very lives.
At the trial,
the judge found that True Hope was selling without
a license,
but acquitted them; didn't convict them,
acquitted them because it was legally necessary for
them to continue to provide e-empower plus or there
would have been more Deaths there were deaths when
people couldn't access the product.
I called Ron Lash,
and s as a witness he was a witness; he had been
the president of the Canadian Mental Health
Association,
Alberta branch,
and he held press conferences every time there was
a death or suicide because people ran out.
There were deaths.
This was life-and-death.
Now,
yeah,
let's say one of my kids has,
yes,
serious bipolar disorder,
and is in that cohort where you know your lifespan
you're lucky if you're here five years from now
because you're just going to suicide.
Like the numbers are atrocious for people in
certain cohorts,
and all of the approved drugs that Health Canada
says we have permission to to use this drug,
none of them work and and they don't for that
cohort which is why,
you know,
five years is a long lifespan once you're in it,
they don't or these people would be living for you
know normal lifespans.
And I go to a health food store looking for
answers and there's the Empower+ sitting on the
shelf and I pick up that bottle and I read:
'Supports mental health and well-being.'
I put that bottle back; that's not what I'm
looking for.
It doesn't say anything about people bipolar
disorder.
I mean,
you'll have to tell me how many published,
peer-reviewed studies involving Clinical trials are
there with the Empower Plus 40,
like I don't even know anymore.
36,
36,
36.
It's illegal for or for true hope to share that
with me,
the parent that's looking for an answer.
I could have literally been holding in my hand the
product that would save my child's life and I
can't be told about it.
And even if I knew,
it's illegal for me to use it to treat bipolar
disorder.
Now,
if that isn't a sick world then I don't know what
is.
And I mean,
it's not long before they're not going to use the
yellow stars because they used that during the
second world war for the Jewish people and they're
not going to use it to treat people.
So,
I just hope that the symbol that we have to wear
on our arms - people who are unvaccinated have to
wear on their arms,
a is you know an attractive color and a decent
shape,
but you know,
we're in such bad shape.
It's so obvious now that that uh,
we're viewed as animals and we're,
you know,
in the area of health,
we're here to be sick under an allopathic model,
and we're here to generate a lot of money,
and money is power.
So,
but,
but,
the drug rate is going to be really bad doesn't
influence people,
and we're,
we're really trying to find a effective way of
living system that we can work with uh,
with the drug right,
and so I think it's because you have this Russia
by way of education now that you're you've got a
threat in the family is going to let people get
home to this you know normal living middle class
people with conventional housing uh receive full
state assistance but have to go they don't even
need the second world order they're just glad they
got this now we can afford to live in whatever
the for a short period of time been in such
discomfort that i've had those thoughts you know if
this was going to go on for months or months or
years like i think i'd end it you know like i
think a lot of people have been you know that odd
time where it's just pain was too much um
That if it was going to be a permanent disability,
you know,
disability type thing,
yeah,
and do you mean I can't try anything I want,
like it's my body,
I'm the one suffering?
You mean the government,
some bureaucrat,
can tell me I can't try something to alleviate my
suffering?
Really,
that's the law in Canada.
I've got a question for you,
Sean.
So,
in regards to the self-care framework,
which was clearly when they came up with that
name,
they probably spent a lot of time trying to figure
that out what was trending.
But um,
you know,
effectively this is taking away from the self-care
framework,
which is clearly when they came up with that name.
They,
the choice,
and moving money from small and medium-sized natural
health companies to the pharmaceutical industry.
Do you think that there are people working for
Health Canada,
Canada,
who actually believe this type of framework is
beneficial to Canadians?
Um,
I-I want to address this in two ways: first of
all,
I want to address the self-care framework,
you know,
term okay.
And then whether or not there are Health Canada
believers.
I don't know how they came up with the term,
but you know,
how in George Orwell's 1984,
he made it so clear how language is important and
we're actually seeing,
you know,
in our world,
language becoming important.
And being used as as a weapon to actually limit
even the concepts that we we can think of,
so what's dangerous,
I don't know whether they they saw what was
trending or not,
but it is very dangerous to now refer to natural
health products as self-care products because what
Health Canada wants is,
let's stop calling them natural health products;
we'll call them self-care products,
which really just means anything over the counter
right that you don't need the advice of a doctor
or any other healthcare practitioner,
that you could just pick up the bottle.
So,
we're really talking about minor pain control,
sore throat,
fungus,
and so on.
On your like,
minor things right,
yeah.
But if we start thinking of natural health products
as self-care products the same as the chemicals
now; now we don't have natural products as a
separate group and so grouping them together as a
deliberate language attempt to get us to stop
thinking about natural health products differently
because they are different than chemicals and that's
a means of controlling us and controlling the
dialogue.
Because now we're talking about um,
just over-the-counter products self-care products
well,
certainly they should have the same standards of
evidence,
shouldn't they?
Do you see what
I just did,
sure we have this group of products.
Why would one one product in there have a
different standard?
I mean you don't have a lower standard of evidence
for that product.
Let's go back to scurvy as an example and let's
say scurvy somehow became a problem again.
Well,
a pharmaceutical company could do that,
and they could do that,
and they could do that,
and they could do that,
and they could come out with some you know pill
that's high in vitamin C,
but it's got a couple of other things maybe some
tweaked chemical that really is meaningless,
but they've got the clinical trial evidence and now
it's licensed to treat scurvy um,
but it's safe.
Enough,
it can be over the counter.
Well,
you and I could never bottle lime juice and sell
it for scurvy,
because we're not going to get through that
process,
and we have to go to the same place.
They're both self-care products; what,
why would we be subject to a lower standard of
evidence than that?
And so,
we're not going to let that person answer that
question.
So how could that be better,
you know?
And I don't at the point in the investigation,
you know,
we don't know what the answer is.
This product can be agreed upon; you know,
we don't even know that.
That's what we need to do,
you know,
that there's no chance we're going to be able to
because you have ups of products.
what we can't do we can't unfortunately speaking ag
applause and what we're going to get back to that
point is it's it's it's hard to Porachtu want to
that's what we're doing and um we're doing a good
job of it in it's in fact i don't be my goal um
but it's going to be slightly different really
certainly it's strong boom it's was good thank
youShould have highly ? unpeare to answer those uh
comments that burning it to others and then we got
to over time people just you know they're not
going to go and get a self-care product to fix
something well by creating this umbrella term they
have now they have now created the dialogue now
We're talking about the standards of evidence for
self-care products,
we're not we're not talking about no,
you can call the chemicals this,
but natural products are are completely different
and,
and we're not having the same dialogue for things
that are completely different,
and but the the language is part of the control,
and people have to start understanding the language
is part of the control,
as we're upending all of our cultural norms and
all of our language,
you know,
to be inclusive,
and all of this well,
you know,
those thoughts might be important,
but understand the ramifications of undermining a
culture that Is the basis of our society and do
that carefully but this is part of the control
mechanism; this self-care framework term.
Now let me get back to the second your real
question or your second question was basically,
'Do are the Health Canada people believers?' And a
thought just jumped into my head that you know
some will be and some won't be,
and it'll depend on the context.
I can tell you that in my life I've been in the
health care framework for a long time; I've been
in the health care framework for a long time; I've
been in the health care framework for a long time;
and I've been practicing.
I run a lot of interference for companies.
That Health Canada is attacking primarily natural
health product companies,
and the inspectors that I deal with are true
believers.
It's scary; it is scary,
like I mean.
I think Canadians would be better off if every
employee of Health Canada was in jail,
and you know we're just arguing about for how
long.
Well,
it's a criminal organization right that is based
upon us being farm animals,
and we're just arguing about for how long.
Well,
it's a criminal organization right that is based
upon us being farm animals with no sovereignty over
our own bodies,
and it's enforced religiously.
I mean,
I had it was actually in the True Hope trial.
I won't name her,
but there's a Health Canada inspector on the stand
and I'm cross-examining her and I'm trying to set
her up to get to a specific point,
and so I'm asking her questions,
I'm just expecting yeses from all these questions,
and now I've circled around and I can I can get
her into this you know this box that she wouldn't
be able to get into,
and so I'm asking her questions,
I'm just expecting yeses from all these questions
and so I'm asking her questions,
I'm just expecting yeses from all these questions,
wanting to go to even though she'll be answering
truthfully when she agrees with me,
and one of want to go to even though.
She'll be answering truthfully when she agrees with
me,
and one of the questions was something like,
'Well,
you know,
your Health Canada inspector,
and Health Canada is there to protect our health.'
I didn't get a yes,
and the explanation that I eventually got was,
'Well,
no,
we're there to enforce the law,
the Food and Drug Act,
and regulations.
Well,
when you think about that,
and you look at the Food and Drug Act and
regulations,
Health Canada is not the Food and Drug Act.
You show me in there where it says Health Canada
is to promote health or protect health; they're
there to enforce the Food and Drug Act and
regulations,
and the food and drug Act and regulations are
there to protect intellectual property rights,
and ensure that nobody; no serious health conditions
are treated with anything that didn't have patent
protection when it went through the drug approval
process,
that's the effect.
And so the effect isn't an accident; they can't
write that into the law.
But you know,
when you're challenging the laws for being
unconstitutional,
the courts were smart enough to figure out: like a
law can violate charter rights without expressly
saying so.
So let's say,
you know,
like right now I think it's Ontario is about to
pass a law saying you have to be vaccinated to
vote.
Can I'm not making this up right,
I think it's Ontario,
wow,
so yeah,
so but let's say the law said well,
you have to uh your skin hue has to have a
certain radiance,
i.e.,
you're white or you can't vote,
or you have to be mailed a vote.
I mean we've had laws like this in the past.
Well,
a court can look at that and go yeah,
on the face of the law,
that's discriminatory and therefore violates you know
our equality rights.
But sometimes laws don't come out and say that,
and yet the effect is that.
So let's say we're living in a milieu where really
only white people are wealthy,
well if you pass the law saying well you have to
have a certain amount of property To be able to
vote,
oh that's interesting.
You have to have real property to be a senator.
Interesting,
but let's say we had a law you had to have a
certain amount of property to vote and it was
written that way and it was written that way so
that primarily only white people could vote.
Well,
the law when the court looks at it it doesn't say
that,
but the effect is that and so,
the court will strike it down because you'll show
what the the effect is that right?
So,
the effect of a law is usually not by accident;
when we've been regulating this way for over 100
years,
in the area of food and drug,
and the effect is,
it is illegal to treat a Sears'
health condition with something that didn't have a
patent when it went through the process that's
intended,
that's our law; the law is how it works out on
the ground and that's how it works out on the
ground.
The law in Canada is it's illegal to use natural
treatments to treat serious health conditions,
full stop.
And that's a policy decision imposed on the
government by those who are revealing themselves
now,
but Health Canada - the inspectors I deal with
almost to a T - are true believers and they go
after these companies with a vengeance; they believe
they're helping people,
it's scary.
They believe they're.
Helping people,
but when you say our health Canada true believers
I don't know,
but I would be so surprised,
I would be so surprised if the drug approval
scientists in Health Canada are vaccinated for
COVID.
Sure,
oh my gosh!
If anyone wants to bet on that one,
I'm in,
yeah wow...
Um,
do you see any correlation between this proposed
self-care framework and how it's clearly going to
shift a lot of money towards pharmaceutical
companies just by getting rid of natural health
products and the businesses that produce them,
and how obsessed Canada is with pushing vaccines
and not promoting alternative well-researched safer
preventative Treatments that money shifts,
yeah those are those are different questions,
so let me,
I'm not sure I can act answer the second
meaningfully but the first,
I'm sure I can.
So,
and I think this is about more than money,
but it's certainly about money,
like if you want to talk about money,
you talk about drugs for serious health conditions
that don't treat cure the condition but just treat
the symptoms for life.
I mean the money involved is just so scary,
it's it is crazy and so it's so it's so much and
so so crazy that it would make people do and say
crazy things.
Well,
money can money can influence a lot of things and
a lot of money can influence a lot of things and
and we we all know that yeah but what's
interesting about the area of natural health
products is so you know when we have our consumer
rebellion in the early 90s and and the government's
forced to you know to to to to to to to to to
to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to
to to to to to regulate natural health products
with a soft version of the chemical drug
regulations which we call the nhp regs but they
they truly are just a mirror of the drug regs and
an imposition of that model when we had that
consumer rebellion we had a lot of small companies
we had a lot of small natural product companies
because the regulatory
Burden wasn't so onerous,
and,
you know,
I can back up and say I've never heard anyone say
that I've never heard anyone say that I've never
heard anyone in the natural health product industry
say there shouldn't be,
you know,
appropriate good manufacturing practices and and
stuff like that,
but,
like,
not overkill for the small guys,
right?
Like,
you know,
you're a national brand that ships to every
province,
and you know,
you're dealing with 1,500 or 2,500 stores,
and you know,
you had an adulterated product; yeah,
your safety recall procedure better be complicated
because you've got to somehow,
you've got to already know you've got to already
know you've got to already know you've got to
already know who you're dealing with and what your
shipments are and so we're doing this this this
but you know you're the little herb shop and oh i
might have a problem with this product your recall
your recall policy is is to get a cardboard box
from the back go to the shelf and take the
product off and and put it in the back you you
don't need a five page you know standard operating
procedure for that and you don't need to kill
companies by you know bringing in consultants and
charging 100 grand to write you know a book and
you know you're not going to be able to do that
you're not going to be able to do that,
you're not going to be able to write these like
that's overkill.
So but nobody,
nobody is worried about reasonable regulations.
But what's happened so we've had these regulations
imposed and you know we had said this is even
before the NHPPA formed um but definitely once we
formed we've been saying it and I've been saying
it before the NHPPA formed and I even I remember
uh it was the Fraser Institute,
I think her name was Cynthia Ramsey,
did a um a piece called 'A Cure'.
We're going to talk about that in a little bit,
but we're going to talk about that in a little.
bit but we're going to talk about that in a
little bit just on the economic impacts of these
new regulations just saying you're going to drive
the small and and the smaller medium companies out
of business and do you know what's happened we
drove the small and medium-sized companies out of
business and then as we got you know a
consolidation then a bigger companies do you know
what's happened to many of them they were purchased
do you want to guess by who you tell me
pharmaceutical companies and so now we had this
industry with a whole lot of little companies and
mid-sized companies that you know when changes were
coming
down the pipe my gosh they um they would be up
in arms and get their customers up in arms and
and things would happen but the bigger companies
supported these changes in fact um i think it was
the university of calgary i'll have it somewhere in
my documents and like likely a copy of my computer
where before the nhp regulations came into force
they were surveying different manufacturers and they
grouped them into small medium and large and well
what are your thoughts on these new regs and the
small and medium we hate them and the big the big
ones were and they even quoted one it was
something like well stop taking so long to
implement this it's going to drive our competition
out of business just do it now well think about
your big company and especially if you're
incorporated you now actually have an ethical
obligation to increase the value and ethical and
ethical you have a fiduciary duty to your
shareholders to do what's good for their pocketbook
and if that means supporting regulations that
they're going to lead to deaths they're going to
do it every day of the week and they have but
our our company is going to survive this and then
grow and be worth more you're actually obligated to
support it well that's now the norm in our
industry
Yeah,
so the big players they hate people like me who
actually are concerned about people's health and
people's rights to treat themselves having
sovereignty over their bodies.
I'm their enemy,
and you know it.
So take the Natural Health Product Association for
example nobody funds us anymore.
The big companies aren't going to fund us because
we want people to have health rights.
Yeah,
and the average person,
I mean,
we have you know the average person sends us you
know twenty dollars,
fifty dollars,
and stuff like that,
but really not many.
And you know how do you function and get the
message out?
We can keep finding ourselves.
Because I'm sorry,
you have to have staff doing stuff,
yeah,
or nothing gets done,
you know.
And so I'm sorry,
you have to have staff doing stuff; it's done.
We have periods of time where we just have to go
into almost pure hibernation because we're starved
of resources,
and that's because the culture has changed as these
regulations came in,
and the industry's now consolidated into larger
ones.
So,
the irony is,
is that a large part of the natural health product
community,
the companies will support this; these changes,
yeah,
they're awful for the consumer,
they're awful for your personal sovereignty,
and they're awful for your health.
So it's um yeah it's it's it's really shocking
it's one of the things that just grieves me to no
end is is how the natural health community has
transitioned from small to large and the loss of
culture there and and I'll just say you know when
I first started um practicing in the area of
natural health and I never planned to get into it
just ironically I acted for Health Canada against a
herbalist named Jim Strauss I think it was back in
1994 he was a little herbalist in Kamloops he's
deceased now but Strauss Herb Company still makes
these heart drops he um he was an electrical
engineer working for BC Hydro and he had a heart
attack
and he's rushed to the hospital and he's told he
needs a double or triple bypass and he's he showed
me a couple of times and i'm like oh my god i'm
going to copy of his angiogram i mean he had one
totally blocked and others almost totally blocked
and and he just he that idea just frightened him
and his family had been traditional herbalists in
europe for 400 years and his grandparents had
taught him like so he'd be dragged out in the
forest tasting the herbs and and so he knew he
knew right so um so he developed the heart drops
just for himself he didn't and he never did have
the bypass and he i he probably lived that would
have been
I don't even remember when,
but I mean he probably lived 30 years after that
and very healthy.
And then he decided,
'Well,
I better,
I better start selling these.' So he quit his job
with BC Hydro,
he starts You Know A Small Little Herb Shop,
Natural Way Herbs,
in Kamloops,
I remember still on Tranquille Street.
You'd go in there and you couldn't get out of
there with him giving you a cup of tea and,
uh,
and you would smell of herbs because he'd just
have all these bulk raw herbs around.
But back to my story: He's basically importing
herbs from the United States that are perfectly
legal; not a single one of them is illegal to
import,
but health canada so hates this guy because he's
saying i treat heart disease right that they seize
the herbs at the border and he's suing them to
get his herbs back and i end up being the guy
acting for health canada against him have his thing
thrown out of court because he was in the wrong
court i and and he just was he wasn't gonna go
anywhere anyway but i'm ashamed today um truly
ashamed because i i basically was the front person
to allow the government to get away with theft and
i'm now of the opinion that you know and i deal
primarily with health canada's bureaucracies but um
they do not respect the law at all they they will
repeatedly
Violate the law,
as they're telling you that you have to comply
with the law to the letter or or they'll destroy
you.
Now I'm just getting back to where I want to go
because I'm talking about how it was the natural
health community was little people,
so here at the Star Surf Company,
health problem solution.
I have to sell this to people after after the Jim
Strauss thing,
I start my own firm; he gets charged criminally
with practicing medicine without a license as
another attempt to try and shut him down,
and he hires me,
and and he he's not convicted.
And then my phone starts ringing,
and back then,
I don't think I had a single client that Their
business wasn't started because either them or a
close family member had a serious health condition
that could not be solved by the approved
treatments,
so they just suffered for years.
You know,
facing death,
they came across a natural solution that so
revolutionized their life or their family's life,
that well,
we have to provide this to others like they're
literally there to help people.
And then,
with Health Canada was shutting them down because
they weren't in compliance and couldn't be in
compliance.
I would have people crying on the phone and I
actually couldn't get them to understand Health
Canada's
Position because they'd be crying and saying,
'like',
but we're helping people to them the letter of the
law didn't matter; we're helping people.
You mean people have to die and suffer,
and it was heartbreaking,
yeah.
And like,
take true hope in power plus that was started
because one of the founders' child was needing to
be institutionalized for a mental health condition,
yeah,
and they wanted an answer.
It's just phenomenal that that uh these institutions
go after such such small businesses,
usually just like one or two individuals; it's like
you know,
it's like it's like it's such a crazy big threat
that they have.
To spend this money,
these resources,
and taxpayers' monies to uh,
to do all these things,
but but what's even worse is before the NHP
regulations,
we had products like Empower Plus developed,
like Strauss Heart Drops developed,
like Recovery developed.
None of those products are being developed now
under our new regulations.
You know,
what big blockbuster has come out to save lives
and change the world since the NHP regulations?
Yeah,
that's a very good point,
and so how many lives are being lost because
people are no longer free to try things?
You know what you're trying,
a bunch a combination of vitamins or minerals or
some...
you know?
Plants that are in our food supply because there's
suggestions from traditional use that might be good
for this,
but let's say we we combine and experiment well,
you know what used to be the TOC,
der das ist der Troende als die ich hole David.
But if you had lots of requests to do interviews
on the news or on other channels or anything to
talk about this really,
really important topic that's going to affect
everybody.
You mean the self-care framework?
Yeah,
the self-care framework and the darker side of
Health Canada.
You know,
like I think that 99% of people would assume that
Health Canada is just protecting us and wants to
make us as healthy as possible.
Well,
you know,
arguably we're sicker than we've ever been.
But,
you know,
it's wild that you're not on the news every day,
buddy.
Yeah,
I wonder if there's any cross ownership between the
major news and the pharmaceutical companies.
You'd almost think so by the absence of calls,
wouldn't you?
Yes,
I would.
Good answer.
But no,
my phone is not ringing.
That's for sure.
Okay.
What are you hopeful?
What can what can we do?
Like,
how can I get involved?
I mean,
I get I get your guys' newsletter on the NHPPA.
So I'm certainly signed up for that whenever you
post anything.
But as you said before,
like you need you need a team of people to be
able to do that on a on a consistent basis.
And there's not always news to put out there.
So how can I how can I get involved and stay
informed?
Good,
good question,
because we are in an informational war and
truthfully,
information is being censored big time and things
are heating up in a way that I've never
experienced in my life.
And I think everyone listening will will have the
same experience.
I have been terrible for supporting groups,
and that's changed over the past two years.
So even just independent news outlets,
and that I will.
Now donate to where I wouldn't before,
but I realize I need them now.
And I think the NHPPA is is the only kind of NHP
watchdog left standing,
and we may not be left standing for long because
we're not being funded.
So if you actually just want the world to continue
going the direction it is without anyone to help
educate you and equip you,
great.
We'll see how that works out for you.
I think you already know what's working.
Now,
great.
Probably our money is going to be worthless in
what,
two months,
six months,
a year.
Like,
so why don't you help groups now?
So we need your support.
We're actually going to just be starting some video
calls where it might be next.
By the time this is out,
that one will be passed,
but we're going to be starting weekly calls and
bringing in where I'll be.
Interviewing basically doing what you're doing,
but with with different guests around the natural
product and kind of what's going on in the world
in connection to that.
And so if you want to get on our mailing list so
that you can participate in that,
our website is www.nhppa.org.
And you can please help support us financially and
and join this and become part of the organization.
What what we're very good at is when changes are
coming down the pipe,
we'll let you know what's happening and and equip
you to take action.
And,
you know,
in today's times,
that's more important than anything else.
And,
you know,
it might be that we need as a community to start
supporting different groups that are being segregated
from other groups and need support that might
become really important really fast.
And.
And so it's,
it's something that we'll be wanting to dialogue
with those that are connecting with us on because
I don't think any of us can afford to be sitting
still any longer.
And we actually need to start helping people.
Yeah,
I totally agree with you,
Sean.
That's fantastic.
And I'll make sure that your website is available
for people to to get on; I put it in the show
notes,
and you know I'm signed up for that newsletter -
it's more like once every few months you get some
information.
It's not; that's because of our resources.
Yeah,
if we had more resources,
we'd be doing this weekly.
Yeah,
absolutely.
Well,
I'm hoping that that this inspires some people to
get involved and to donate,
and to get involved.
But I want to say thank you so much for taking
the time with me today,
Sean; I really appreciate it's always a pleasure to
chat with you.
Final question actually though I think,
do you have any other lawyers within Canada that
you're collaborating with in regards to
communicating?
How.
You know,
obviously so many things in regards to mandates and
laws and,
you know,
and regulations.
Are you a part of any type of group that's that's
communicating about what you guys can do in the
area of natural health products.
There's a,
there's one other lawyer that I,
I collaborate with; there really aren't many of us
that truly understand the Food and Drug Act and
regulations as it interacts,
they interact with natural health products.
Right.
And also understand the natural health community and
what the real issues are.
So,
yeah,
so there's one other lawyer I know who is quite a
niche area within law.
Right.
Yeah.
Okay,
well I'm glad there's two of you.
It's better than zero.
Yes,
agreed,
but we need more.
You do need more that's for sure.
Well Sean,
thank you very much for joining us today; I really
appreciate your time and thanks so much for joining
us.
Thank you very much,
everybody,
for listening this is True Hope Cast,
the official podcast of True Hope Canada.
We'll see you next week.
Thanks,
Simon.