© The Rooster Crows February 24, 2023
All of the activities in Indiana SB4 (full summary below) appear to be innocent without agenda emphasizing state and local health departments working together and delegating. But, these changes in law might be related to bigger health and security issues around the globe.
Over the past few weeks, changes have been made to treaties with the World Health Organization (WHO).
The resulting treaty affecting the United States is the “zero draft” (pdf found @ https://apps.who.int/gb/inb/pdf_files/inb4/A_INB4_3-en.pdf) for pandemic authority.
This authority, given to WHO by the Biden administration, allows the WHO supreme authority during a health emergency. The United States and all other signatories would submit to the authority of the WHO regarding treatments, government regulations such as lockdowns and vaccine mandates, global supply chains, and monitoring and surveillance of populations.
David Bell, a public health physician and former WHO staffer specializing in epidemic policy, told The Epoch Times. “They get to decide what is a health emergency, and they are putting in place a surveillance mechanism that will ensure that there are potential emergencies to declare.”
World Health Organization (WHO) is a Geneva-based UN subsidiary. UN Undersecretary-General Melissa Fleming stated at a 2022 World Economic Forum (WEF) panel on “Tackling Disinformation” in Davos, “We own the science and we think that the world should know it.”
Several articles have been written in the recent past about the WHO’s close connections to the Chinese Communist party (ccp), another concern when thinking about our governance in health emergencies.
The signing of this treaty automatically places the United States under WHO authority during health emergencies bypassing the need for citizen and Congressional approval.
Full summary of Indiana SB4:
Indiana Senate Bill 4
“Adds members to the executive board of the Indiana department of health (state department). Provides that the state department may provide district or regional services to local health departments. Require each local board of health to establish a local public health services fund to receive state funding. Provides a method of allocation of state funding to local boards of health, subject to state appropriations. Allows the state department to issue guidance to local health departments. Requires the state department to make annual local health department reports available to the public. Changes the qualification requirements for a local health officer and requires certain training. Requires the state department to identify state level metrics and county level metrics and requires certain local health departments to report to the state department activities and metrics on the delivery of core public health services.”
Progress of the bill: S02/23/2023 Third reading: passed; Roll Call 152: yeas 41, nays 7
Link to the bill: https://iga.in.gov/legislative/2023/bills/senate/4#digest-heading
