See
also: Palmer may evict WCA
from campus
Decoy
by Gene Cretsinger, D.C., ICA Chair of the
Assembly
Note: the following
memo was sent May 6, 2004,
and is reprinted here with permission of the author.
To: ICA
Representative Assembly, ICA Board of Directors and SICA Officers Copied to
Dr. Don Kern, Interim President PCC, and all interested parties
From: Gene
Cretsinger, D.C., ICA Chair of the Assembly
To appreciate the need
for immediate action, it is vital that we understand Palmer's primary
objective in excluding Dr Rondberg from Homecoming and the forced
resignation of Dr. Riekeman. These are not separate events. They are
inextricably tied to Palmer hiding their actions regarding the lawsuit with
CCE, hiring a Past CCE president, Dr. Peter Martin, for Palmer West,
permitting legislation for FSU to proceed with a chiropractic medicine
college, and claiming that The WCA is counterproductive to unity. In
addition to all of these events and actions, Palmer has initiated a lawsuit
against Dr. Riekeman to prevent his attendance at his daughter and
son‑in‑law's graduation, done for the sole purpose of mudding the waters and
to complicate the struggle.
Palmer's action against
Dr. Rondberg, like their action against Dr. Riekeman, is an attempt to
eliminate the discussions pertaining to the philosophical concepts that
promote chiropractic as a separate and distinct profession, and to undercut
the growing student and field appreciation for the WCA and Dr. Rondberg. If
the students are not allowed to participate in discussions on
non‑therapeutic chiropractic, and the rational for objecting to chiropractic
medicine, then they will most likely re‑present the information provided.
This is the way education and training works, and it is the method Palmer
and all the other colleges use to regulate the profession. It is about the
politics of the CCE and Palmer's repositioning to support chiropractic
medicine while claiming to adhere to the Palmer tenets. To advance
chiropractic medicine, Palmer had to put an end to that segment of
philosophical discussions differentiating chiropractic from chiropractic
medicine. They had to get rid of Riekeman and they had to get rid of
Rondberg.
Rumors had been
circulating that Dr. Rondberg was no longer a part of the Homecoming
program. In the first flyer announcing Homecoming 2004, the inside first
page reads "Get Involved," " Learn more about professional organizations and
why it is critical to get involved. A reception will be held with
representatives from the ACA, ICA and WCA in attendance." On April 22nd Dr.
Rondberg e‑mailed Dr. Kern and asked if he was taken off the program and if
so why. Dr. Kern responded on April 27th and said that Palmer
College has not invited Dr. Ronberg
to speak and went on to say that Dr. Rondberg and the WCA may be
counterproductive to unity. Dr. Kern further stated that in his opinion, the
WCA did not "represent a significant element of our profession."
Since I have copied
this to Dr. Kern, I hereby ask you, Dr. Kern, if I may copy the one page
letter you wrote to Dr. Rondberg, and forward it in its entirety, to the
readers of this letter?
Abolishing the
detractors to chiropractic medicine is Palmer's objective, and the reason
given for excluding Dr. Rondberg was that the WCA did not "represent a
significant element of the profession." Apparently, Dr. Kern and his
leadership group are discounting the magnitude of the Chiropractic
Coalition. The Coalition was formed over a year ago and is made up by the
WCA, FSCO and the ICA. The significance of the Coalition is unquestioned. As
an example, the Coalition just held on April 29th, the largest legislative
summit in the history of the profession, with the largest gathering of
chiropractors ever to lobby in Washington,
D.C. If that is not considered
significant, those claiming such are terribly prejudiced.
For Palmer to exclude
Dr. Rondberg and the WCA from campus, they demonstrate their rejection of
the Chiropractic Coalition and challenging the Coalition's very existence.
Palmer has drawn a very clear line in the sand and has taken an action that
we cannot ignore. For the Coalition to allow one of its partners to be
excluded from Palmer, or anywhere else for that matter, and not take
decisive action, we will by default, destroy the very purpose for the
Coalition. If we do not stand together now, we will individually not stand
for long. If we do not stand for the WCA, who will stand for the ICA?
I am requesting of the
ICA, that unless Dr. Rondberg is again allowed to speak on campus and
welcomed at Palmer, and the WCA, FSCO and ICA student organizations given
equal opportunity to thrive like the ACA student organizations, we as the
International Chiropractors Association, and strong members of the
Chiropractic Coalition, withdraw Palmer's status as an affiliate college of
ICA and remove the Palmer seat on the ICA Board of Directors. In addition,
we take action to remove as soon as feasible, the ICA diplomate programs
offered at Palmer and any other support programs currently provided Palmer.
It is troublesome to
take action of this nature against the College that we all have loved. The
old adage; if it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck and walks like a
duck...it must be a duck... is no longer true. Ethics deterioration,
political pressures, misinformation and disguise techniques have complicated
our ability to discern a real duck from a decoy. Palmer proclaims to serve
the same tenets that Dr. Riekeman advanced. The fact is however, Palmer has
changed. The tenets have not changed, but the political machinery running
the college has changed. The Duck is not real, it is a decoy. It is set to
lure us into a trap, and to kill us...to kill the organizations of the
coalition so that chiropractic can be used for the nourishment of
chiropractic medicine. It may already be too late. Too many have hesitated.
Too many are confused. Too many are afraid. Too many are still in shock.
The Chiropractic
Coalition either takes a stand at this line Palmer has drawn, or we are
done, and we will fall one by one over time. It is that critical and that
important and that urgent.
The members of the
Chiropractic Coalition must act as one, and act now. Either Dr. Rondberg is
welcomed to speak on campus, or I am asking the board take official action
to terminate Palmer's ICA affiliation and ICA support programs.