Drug
A drug is a chemical with effects upon the mind and/or body. Many are used for both therapeutic and recreational purposes. Commercially-controlled media usually refers to the former as 'pharmaceuticals' and the latter as '(illegal) drugs'. They are the subject to drug treaties. "7 out of 10 Americans take at least one prescription drug".[1]
Contents
Drug trade
The drug trade offers potential for huge profits, especially the illegal part of it.
Legal drug trade
- Full article: Big pharma
- Full article: Big pharma
Big pharma has an obvious interest in the outlawing of drugs which are not controlled by their patents (such as the so-called "drugs of abuse" mentioned above).
Illegal drug trade
- Full article: Illegal drug trade
- Full article: Illegal drug trade
Of particular interest to this project is the illegal drug trade, since this allows huge profits to be accrued easily by those with few scruples and the means to evade or suborn law enforcement. Drugs for guns is a simple equation which goes back a long way before Iran Contra...
Recreational use
Popular recreational drugs include cannabis, LSD, amphetamines and opioid pain killers. Drug overdoses, especially opioids, are now the leading cause of death for Americans under the age of 50[2], and responsible for US life expectancy declining in 2015 and 2016.[3]
Drug overdose
- Full article: Drug overdose
- Full article: Drug overdose
Overdoses of many drugs can be fatal. This allows for drugs to be used for covert assassinations.
Social control
Policing drug use is a form of social control, though drugs themselves can be used for a range of social control purposes.
Mind control
Since 1948, various US groups have researched the use of drugs such as LSD to for mind control.
Drugging of prisoners
Drugs can be used to try to derange people, or to render them susceptible to control. The possibilities were examined by the CIA's MK-Ultra project. Susan Lindauer reports that during her illegal detention she was forcibly administered Haldol, Ativan and Prozac.[4] Dozens of other prisoners have alleged that the US forcibly administered them with unknown drugs. In 2012, Truthout cited a US Department of Defense report that these drugs "could impair an individual's ability to provide accurate information".[5]
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors are a class of psychoactive drugs which are given to millions of US citizens as "anti-depressants". Their use is correlated with rate of conviction of various offences from assault to murder[6][7] as well as with suicide.[8]
Examples
Page name | Invented | Description |
---|---|---|
Alcohol | A popular recreational drug, although since it is legal in most nation states, it is often not termed as such. | |
Alternative medicine | There are alternatives to the medical treatments promoted by Big Pharma. | |
Amphetamines | 1887 | Recreational drugs with potential for use in combat. |
Antibiotic | A type of drugs intended to kill bacterial infections. | |
Antidepressant | A type of drugs prescribed to sufferers of depression | |
Aphrodisiac | ||
Aspartame | 1965 | Widely used artificial sweetener with increasingly suspect looking health effects. |
Azidothymidine | 1987 | Drug that wiped out a generation of people diagnosed with HIV in the early 1990s, but not before making GlaxoSmithKline/Wellcome Trust billions in revenue. |
Barbiturate | 1864 | A class of sedative drugs, sometimes administered clandestinely as tools of covert assassination |
Benzodiazepine | Widely taken and strongly physically addictive drugs | |
Cannabis | Easily grown around the world, with a long history of medical and recreational use, 'weed' is the world's most popular recreational drug. | |
Captagon | 1961 | An amphetamine widely used by soldiers especially in the middle east. |
Cocaine | 1860 | A highly addictive drug which has been illegal worldwide since 1961. Its smuggling is a huge money earner for the CIA. |
Crack cocaine | A smokable form of cocaine which rose in popularity in the USA in the 1980s after the CIA upscaled the cocaine importation into the US. | |
Diazepam | 1959 | The highest selling drug in the US between 1968 and 1982, under the brand name Valium. |
Diethylstilbestrol | 1938 | Given to pregnant women in 1938-1970s. Causes high risk of cancer and genital deformations for several generations. |
Fentanyl | 1959 | An opioid of much greater potency than heroin, popular with big drug cartels. |
Fluvoxamine | An antidepressant of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) class. It may be of use in treating long Covid. | |
Gardasil | 2006 | Common vaccine tied to reduced birth rates |
Heroin | 1874 | An important component of the illegal drug trade. A highly addictive pain killing drug which which is widely used recreationally. |
Hydroxychloroquine | 1938 | A generic drug widely used to treat COVID-19, generally safe, with potential to significantly reduce the case fatality rate. In 2020 made the subject of legal restrictions and the hit pieces in the scientific literature. |
Hypnotic | Type of drug; induces unconsciousness. | |
Ivermectin | 1975 | An off-patent, very safe, drug which the Front-Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance termed "effectively a “miracle drug” against COVID-19." A third rail topic for the media/medical establishment. |
Ketamine | 1962 | A relatively safe anaesthetic |
LSD | 1938 | A synthetic psychedelic which is widely used as recreationally. |
MDMA | 1912 | A widely used recreational drug with therapeutic potential and unclear addictive potential. |
Mescaline | A naturally occurring psychedelic drug with thousands of years of use for religious purposes. | |
Methamphetamine | 1893 | A strongly addictive recreational drug |
Molnupiravir | 2020 | New drug produced by Merck; to be used against COVID 19. |
Morphine | 1804 | A pain killing drug which is widely used recreationally. Physically addictive. |
Opioid | Synthetic drugs which mimic the effects of opiates, widely used recreationally and as analgesics. | |
Peyote | A naturally occurring psychedelic drug | |
Psilocybin | A naturally occurring psychedelic with effects similar to LSD. | |
Remdesivir | The first FDA-approved drug for treatment of COVID, highly expensive, poor safety profile, promoted by Anthony Fauci. US hospitals were paid to use it on patients, although it did not improve recovery rates. | |
SSRI | 1985 | A class of drugs licensed to treat depression, increasingly used also for other health concerns. Proven to have very little effect based on rigged science, and increasingly linked to murders and mass shootings. |
Scopolamine | A naturally occurring drug. | |
Self-spreading vaccine | Allegedly only researched for use in animal populations, since use on humans would be against the medical principles established at the Nuremberg trials. But it would eliminate the need for a mass vaccination operation, making it very tempting for use during the 2020 plan to vaccinate the entire human world population. | |
Statin | 40 million US adults on this drug this every day - | |
Sugar | Sugar is rarely considered a drug, but it is classified here as such due to its addictive nature and negative impact on health. | |
Thalidomide | A drug that caused a very high number of birth defects and deaths. | |
Thimerosal | 1927 | Preservative for vaccines that was declared safe after a very fraudulent safety study. |
Tobacco | A widely used and addictive recreational drug. Use is legal although restricted for adults in most nation states. | |
Vaccine | 1700 | A vaccine is a biological preparation intended to provide active acquired immunity to a particular disease. |
Vioxx | Big Pharma painkiller that might have killed 500.000 people in the United States alone, after the manufacturer Merck withheld evidence of its dangers. |
Drug victims on Wikispooks
Title | Description |
---|---|
Troy Boner | A child victim of the Franklin child prostitution ring who testified to Gary Caridori. Found dead of a drugs overdose. |
Diana Churchill | Daughter of Winston Churchill, died of a drug overdose |
George Floyd | |
Corey Haim | Canadian actor who died of an "accidental drug overdose" after making accusations relating to Hollywood/VIPaedophile. |
Jimi Hendrix | A guitarist and singer who died of a drug overdose. |
Lisa Howard | Actress and journalist who worried the US deep state |
Bruce Ivins | A biodefense researcher at Fort Detrick, Maryland who, the FBI concluded, sent anthrax letters with crude anti-Zionist messages to the US politicians who were holding up the rollback of civil liberties in the wake of 9/11. After an investigation costing around $100,000,000 Ivins was declared to be a "lone nut" responsible for the crime shortly after he was found dead. |
Natacha Jaitt | Assassinated model who became a whistleblower for child sex abuse by Argentina's elite class |
Dorothy Kilgallen | A famous journalist who became interested in the JFK assassination and who died in highly suspicious circumstances of a drug overdose |
Adrian Lamo | American hacker who committed "suicide" in 2018. |
Marilyn Monroe | Popular US entertainer who reportedly died of an accidental drug overdose aged 36. |
Linda Thompson | An early compiler of the Clinton body count who herself died suddenly, reportedly of a drug overdose |
Related Quotations
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Marcia Angell | “No one knows the total amount provided by drug companies to physicians, but I estimate from the annual reports of the top 9 U.S.-based drug companies that it comes to tens of billions of dollars a year in North America alone.By such means, the pharmaceutical industry has gained enormous control over how doctors evaluate and use its own products. Its extensive ties to physicians, particularly senior faculty at prestigious medical schools, affect the results of research, the way medicine is practiced, and even the definition of what constitutes a disease.” | Marcia Angell | 2009 |
John le Carré | “Big Pharma is also engaged in the deliberate seduction of the medical profession, country by country, worldwide. It is spending a fortune on influencing, hiring and purchasing academic judgement to a point where, in a few years' time, if Big Pharma continues unchecked on its present happy path, unbought medical opinion will be hard to find.” | John le Carré | |
Bill Hicks | “There are essentially only two drugs that Western civilization tolerates: caffeine from Monday to Friday to energize you enough to make you a productive member of society, and alcohol from Friday to Monday to keep you too stupid to figure out the prison that you are living in.” | Bill Hicks | |
Malcolm Kendrick | “One of the best games played to ensure that the status quo is disturbed as little as possible, is the use of peer review. In this system you ask acknowledged 'experts' in areas of medicine to review papers that are sent to you journals. Their job is then to decide if said papers are fit to publish. Of course, by definition, anyone who is an 'expert' in an are of medicine will be a supported of whatever dogma holds sway. Most likely, their entire career was built on developing and supporting it.” | Malcolm Kendrick | 2015 |
Brian Martin | “Science is normally presented to the public as an enterprise based on skepticism and openness to new ideas, in which evidence and argumentation are examined on their own merits. Trusting newcomers who present views that conflict with standard ideas may thus expect that their work will be given a prompt, fair, and incisive analysis, being accepted if it passes scrutiny and being given detailed reasons if not. When, instead, their work is ignored, ridiculed, or rejected without explanation, they assume that there has been some sort of mistake, and often begin a search to find the "right person"; someone who fits the stereotype of the open-minded scientist. This can be a long search! Certain sorts of innovation are welcome in science, when they fall within established frameworks and do not threaten vested interests. But aside from this sort of routine innovation, science has many similarities to systems of dogma. Dissenters are not welcome. They are ignored, rejected, and sometimes attacked. To have their ideas examined fairly, it is wishful thinking to rely on the normal operation of the scientific reception system. To have a decent chance, dissenters need to develop a strategy. They need to understand the way science actually operates, to work out their goals, and then to formulate a plan to move towards those goals, taking into account likely obstacles and sources of support.” | Brian Martin | 1998 |
Peer review | “The mistake, of course, is to have thought that peer review was any more than a crude means of discovering the acceptability — not the validity — of a new finding. Editors and scientists alike insist on the pivotal importance of peer review. We portray peer review to the public as a quasi-sacred process that helps to make science our most objective truth teller. But we know that the system of peer review is biased, unjust, unaccountable, incomplete, easily fixed, often insulting, usually ignorant, occasionally foolish, and frequently wrong.” | Richard Horton | |
Jon Rappoport | “Long term, the medical cartel is the most dangerous cartel in the world, because they fly under a politically neutral banner. They claim they are completely non-partisan, we are here to help, to heal, and that's it. Who could doubt that? This is the greatest cover operation anyone could conceive of, using medical science, the medical system, with its toxic drugs, its toxic vaccines, to destroy whole populations from within. And occasionally come out with some massive epidemic program to further suppress and destroy populations.” | Jon Rappoport | 29 September 2022 |
Jon Rappoport | “And that is preventing a hard look at...African nations where poverty and illness are staples of everyday life for the overwhelming number of people.
The command structure in those areas has a single dictum: don’t solve the human problem. Don’t clean up the contaminated water supplies, don’t return stolen land to the people so they can thrive and grow food and finally achieve nutritional health, don’t solve overcrowding, don’t install basic sanitation, don’t strengthen immune systems, don’t let the people have power—because then they would throw off the local and global corporate juggernauts that are sucking the land of all its resources. In order not to solve the problems of the people, a cover story is necessary. A cover story that exonerates the power structure. A cover story like a virus. It’s all about the virus. The demon. The strange attacker. Forget everything else. The virus is the single enemy.” | Jon Rappoport | 12 January 2022 |
SSRI | “When we stop at the pharmacy to pick up our Prozac®, are we simply buying a drug? Or are we buying into a disease as well? The first complete account of the phenomenon of antidepressants, this authoritative, highly readable book relates how depression, a disease only recently deemed too rare to merit study, has become one of the most common disorders of our day—and a booming business to boot.
The Antidepressant Era chronicles the history of psychopharmacology from its inception with the discovery of chlorpromazine in 1951 to current battles over whether these powerful chemical compounds should replace psychotherapy. An expert in both the history and the science of neurochemistry and psychopharmacology, David Healy offers a close-up perspective on early research and clinical trials, the stumbling and successes that have made Prozac® and Zoloft® household names. The complex story he tells, against a backdrop of changing ideas about medicine, details the origins of the pharmaceutical industry, the pressures for regulation of drug companies, and the emergence of the idea of a depressive disease. This historical and neurochemical analysis leads to a clear look at what antidepressants reveal about both the workings of the brain and the sociology of drug marketing. Most arresting is Healy’s insight into the marketing of antidepressants and the medicalization of the neuroses. Demonstrating that pharmaceutical companies are as much in the business of selling psychiatric diagnoses as of selling psychotropic drugs, he raises disturbing questions about how much of medical science is governed by financial interest.” | David Healy | 1999 |
Related Documents
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Document:CIA Experiments on Children | article | 12 August 2010 | H.P. Albarelli Jr. Jeffrey Kaye | |
Document:ISIS Mayhem Being Fueled by Drugs and Arms – Supplied by Saudi Arabia and the CIA | Wikispooks Page | 30 October 2015 | 21st Century Wire 'Burning Blogger of Bedlam' | |
Document:The CIA - long-range planning for a drugged and debilitated society | webpage | 4 July 2015 | Jon Rappoport | A re-examination of an obscure appendix from a CIA document that was exposed by the 1977 Senate hearings into MKULTRA. Is a secret CIA unit directing and expanding drug use in a pre-meditated effort to weaken society? |
References
- ↑ https://www.thedrswolfson.com/governments-food-companies-big-pharma-media-healthcare-operators-keep-us-fat-sick/
- ↑ https://www.democracynow.org/2017/6/7/worst_epidemic_in_us_history_opioid
- ↑ https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/12/28/opioid-abuse-in-america-is-so-bad-its-lowering-our-life-expectancy-why-hasnt-the-epidemic-hit-other-countries/
- ↑ http://www.digitaljournal.com/blog/14311
- ↑ http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/10248-exclusive-department-of-defense-declassifies-report-on-alleged-drugging-of-detainees
- ↑ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-3235530/Could-Prozac-make-violent-People-antidepressants-50-likely-convicted-assault-murder.html
- ↑ http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/09/15/us-health-antidepressants-crime-idUSKCN0RF2BB20150915
- ↑ https://beyondmeds.com/2013/09/25/no-better-than-placebo/