The President's Committee on Dietary Supplement Labels (CDSL)
In the fall of 1996 a friend of mine had just gotten a computer
and connected to the Internet. While playing with it, I somehow
found the Federal Register and searched under "dietary
supplements." To my astonishment I discovered an announcement
about a meeting that the CDSL had scheduled in Washington,
D.C. that October. That was the first I had ever heard about
the committee. I phoned a lawyer at Center for Science in
the Public Interest, a Washington, D.C. based public interest
group, who had given me lots of free advice and asked why
he hadn't told me about the committee. He apologized and
said it had never occurred to him.
The majority of the appointed committee members where from
the supplement industry. People in public interest groups
and in public health had presented written and oral testimony,
but no one expected to be listened to.
I contacted the committee which was supervised by three
Ph.Ds., food scientists, from the federal agency of Health
and Human Services (HHS). When I said that I wanted to give
oral testimony, they said it was too late to do that. They
were still accepting written testimony, though. I sent a
very thick file documenting the colloidal silver scam and
informed them in no uncertain terms that I believed that
failing to let me give oral testimony was a violation of
my constitutional rights.
I also contacted the Vermont chapter of the ACLU. The woman
who took my call said I had a problem, but it wasn't their
problem. She sounded as if she thought I had a lot of nerve
asking for time from their volunteer attorneys.
Meanwhile, the nightly TV news was following a case in Burlington
in which the Union was representing a high school student
who had been told that he could not wear a dress to school.
Other students rallied round to demonstrate on his behalf.
Of course, he could wear his dress anywhere else that he
wanted to in Vermont and in the nation. It seemed to me like
a trivialization of my civil rights.
The ACLU would help someone who wanted to break a school
rule but not someone whose own government refused to let
her present testimony about a law affecting the health and
well-being of every man, woman and child in the nation, a
law that almost no one knew about because it had been passed
behind closed doors.
I told the CDSL that I was coming to their meeting and that
I wanted to speak. I had friends print a t-shirt for me with
Casper the Ghost on the front and the words, "Ask me
why I'm gray." The back had a skull and crossbones and
said, "Colloidal silver is a fraud."
I flew from Burlington to Washington, changing flights in
NY wearing my shirt and carrying sheets of paper containing
an article that I had written about DSHEA and the eighty
year old colloidal silver scam which I gave to everyone who
questioned me. I had reserved a room at the hotel where the
meeting was being held so that they could not throw me out.
The next morning as I was sitting in the hall wearing my
shirt waiting for the meeting to begin, Dr. Kenneth Fisher,
the moderator from HHS, came over and asked if he could speak
with me outside. I told him that I wanted the committee members
to look me in the face and realize that this was not business
as usual.
They were dealing with the health and well-being of every
man, woman and child in America. They were dealing with human
beings, real people. He said they had agreed to note my presence
at the meeting in the record and that they would convene
a subcommittee in the afternoon to meet with me and hear
what I had to say. I said that would be fine.
When I was in the elevator being escorted up to the room
that the subcommittee would meet in, I asked the committee
member and the doctor from HHS who accompanied me what had
gotten their attention, my face or my shirt. They asked what
my shirt said. They hadn't noticed it.
Annette Dickinson, Ph.D., from the Council for Responsible
Nutrition (CRN), a misnomer if ever there was one, was one
of the committee members who sat in to hear what I had to
say. In spite of this and all the written documentation I
presented showing that silver is at best useless and at worst
harmful, when FDA issued the proposed rule on silver drugs,
CRN, submitted a letter explicitly requesting that all regulations
regarding silver preparations exempt products sold as dietary
supplements and only apply to those sold as drugs. (see letter)
If CRN had presented evidence showing that the FDA and I
were wrong regarding silver, I would not object, but for
them to request the legal right to market it as a "dietary
supplement" without any proof whatsoever that it is
beneficial for anything other than making money for their
members and in spite of all the evidence indicating that
it is dangerous leads me to conclude that the dietary supplement
industry is as bad as the tobacco industry ever was.
And just like the tobacco industry in its heyday, it pretty
much has the license to do most anything that it wants to.
My greatest fear is that there may be a product sold as
a health aid in a store near you that will turn out to be
as lethal as cigarettes and that by the time we find out,
it will be too late to reverse the harm caused to a large
number of people.