American Judges rule in favor of FAITH-BASED MEDICINE with total disregard for SCIENCE facts or RELIGIOUS beliefs
Never mind about the science anymore when it comes to medicine, because the courts are now declaring that government officials can force Americans to take medical treatments based solely on what the officials “believe” might help. It’s faith-based medicine these days, but your religion, ironically, has nothing to do with your say in whether you have to take it or not.
In a deeply
controversial decision, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that government officials can mandate medical treatments based solely on what they believe will help public health — regardless of whether there is evidence the treatment actually works. The case arose from a lawsuit filed by Los Angeles school employees who lost their jobs for refusing to comply with the district’s COVID-19 shot mandate. These employees argued the shots did not prevent infection or transmission, making the mandate unjustifiable under public health law.
- Court Upholds Mandates Based on Belief, Not Proof – The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that government officials can impose medical treatments based on what they believe might help public health, even if there’s no evidence the treatments actually work. The case involved Los Angeles school employees fired for refusing COVID shots.
- Majority vs. Dissenting Views – Judge Bennett wrote that the constitutionality of mandates depends on what officials “could have rationally concluded” about a treatment’s benefits, not whether it actually works. Dissenting Judge Lee warned the ruling grants the government “carte blanche” to mandate treatments as long as they claim a public health purpose.
- Potential for Expansive Government Power – Critics argue this precedent could allow mandates for psychiatric drugs, diets, or other medical interventions without proof of effectiveness, as long as officials say they believe it promotes public health.
- Key Legal Distinction Ignored – Plaintiffs argued COVID shots act more like symptom-reducing treatments than traditional vaccines that stop transmission. The court dismissed this difference, effectively granting government broad power to define and mandate interventions under emergency powers.
Federal court rules government can mandate medical treatments based on beliefs, not scientific facts
The court, however, dismissed that argument entirely. Writing for the majority, Judge Bennett stated that according to the precedent set in
Jacobson v. Massachusetts, the
constitutionality of a vaccine mandate depends not on scientific proof of its effectiveness, but on whether lawmakers could have “rationally concluded” it would protect public health. In other words, the court ruled that government beliefs — not scientific facts — can justify mandatory medical interventions.
Dissenting judges issued strong warnings about the implications. Judge Lee cautioned that the decision “comes perilously close to giving the government carte blanche” to
impose medical treatments against people’s will, even if officials’ claims about public health benefits are wrong. This, critics argue, creates a slippery slope in which the government could mandate virtually any intervention — from psychiatric medication to dietary rules — so long as it asserts a public health rationale.
The employees’ legal strategy hinged on differentiating COVID shots from traditional vaccines. They argued that unlike vaccines which prevent transmission and create herd immunity, COVID shots primarily reduce symptoms for the individual and do not stop spread. This distinction, they said, was critical for assessing the legality of mandates. But the court brushed aside the argument, effectively granting the government the power to define and mandate any medical measure it labels as a “vaccine” under emergency powers.
This decision raises profound constitutional concerns. Historically, government power over citizens’ bodies has been tightly limited. The ruling, however, grants far-reaching authority, even in situations where treatments are known to be ineffective. Dissenting opinions stressed that the government’s track record during recent health crises — where officials made shifting and sometimes inaccurate claims — demonstrates the danger of such unchecked power.
While the courts debate government authority,
individuals still have personal choices for strengthening their immune systems naturally. Health experts emphasize the importance of high-quality sleep, effective stress management, gut microbiome support, adequate vitamin D, immune-boosting foods such as garlic and citrus, and balanced physical activity. These approaches help maintain strong natural defenses without reliance on controversial or mandated treatments.
Ultimately, the Ninth Circuit’s decision marks a significant shift in the balance between public health policy and individual medical freedom. It underscores the importance of personal responsibility for health decisions in an era where official mandates may rest more on belief than evidence. Many see
building and maintaining natural immunity not only as a matter of wellness, but also as an act of personal independence in the face of expanding governmental control over medical choices.
Tune your internet dial to
NaturalMedicine.news for more tips on how to use natural remedies for preventative medicine and for healing, instead of succumbing to Big Pharma products that cause, spread, and exacerbate disease and disorder, including clot shots for plandemics.
Sources for this article include:
NaturalNews.com
NaturalHealth365.com
Law.Justia.com