There should be a investigation or study into the various mentally ill who performed mass shootings, or mass murder of any sort, (like the guy who drove into all the paraders), to see their vaccination status and any correlation. Seems like it's been an epidemic as of late.
There should be a investigation or study into the various mentally ill who performed mass shootings, or mass murder of any sort, (like the guy who drove into all the paraders), to see their vaccination status and any correlation. Seems like it's been an epidemic as of late.
Yes, we've been aware of this result of anti-depressants. The lengthy list of violence in this article is way more than what has been publicized. It's criminal negligence for these drugs to be on the market at all. Going back to the Covid vaccines, the landscape of deaths and injuries they caused is a wake up call that big pharma is not to be trusted, is not our friend, and investigations should commence right now. The truth is they went way too far this time with unsafe drugs.
"...a wake up call that big pharma is not to be trusted, is not our friend, and investigations should commence right now..."
All of that is true. What most folks have not yet realized is that investigations have been done and punishments imposed, but still the damage they do keeps snowballing.
I have posted this ( Do We Need a Census of Worthless Drugs? by John Lear
The Saturday Review, May 7, 1960, pp. 53-57 https://www.unz.com/print/SaturdayRev-1960may07-00053/Contents/) previously and do not mean to spam, but I urge everyone to read that brief article from `60 years ago. The point is that society has yet to find an effective cure for the crimes committed and for now people must learn to question authority, to stand up for themselves, and to spread the word.
"Authority" should never be handed either a blank check or a tabula rasa. I used that term because "tabula" is related to "table" and the word for "bank" in Greek is "trapezi" which is also the word for "table." A while back someone ran around with a switch upsetting tables full of money and there may be some good reasons for his behavior and some lessons there, I think.
However, none of us should think that such behavior will be either a panacea or permanent.
Unfortunately I can't read the article with that fine print. But I agree we need a census of worthless drugs. But even with all the worthless drugs and the deaths they cause, here and there are excellent drugs like Ivermectin, Hydroxychloroquine, Fenbendazole. The issue is to weed out the worthless and deadly drugs from the good ones.
The link should have an icon that you can click on to enlarge the print. All of Lear's articles are as fascinating as can be. The issues he raised 60 years ago are even worse today.
The icon you wnat is just to the left of the print button (icon). It is a square with arrows inside pointing to all 4 corners of the sqaure.
Clik that and you get to a PDF file which you can enlarge with the plus (+) symbol. It's a short but revealing article. Please pass it on and thanks! Lear also wrote several other articles that are very relevant to today.
you know that A Midwestern Doctor did an article about that very subject, right? I found it on the main page for this substack but the link won't bring up the article.
That's another one of my beefs. In almost every incidence, either the FBI, family, local police, family doctor, knew ahead of time that the perp was a bomb ready to explode.
The selective, sensationalist bias of news media explains a lot of that. To investigate, one would need reliable statistics, as well as detailed history of each perpetrator. Another complication is that, despite our perceptions to the contrary, such mass killings are very rare events, in terms of the entire population, or even the entire gun-owning population, or indeed even the entire SSRI-taking, gun-own population.
It's very risky to attempt to draw generalizations from very rare events. For example, one can accurately state that driving drunk dramatically increases the risk of injury or death to oneself or others. Yet it's a statistical fact that the vast majority of people who drove drunk yesterday got from Point A to B without incident. That's not an argument saying it's OK to drive when intixicoted, it's to note the difference between relative and absolute risk.
Ideally one should keep those factors in mind when considering, for example, reported cases of death or heart failure from Suddenly. I am by no means denying that something unusual is going on, rather to state that we shouldn't just jump to conclusions.
As our Midwestern doctor points out, there have been many violent acts by people on antidepressants also, so it's not a stretch to assume that drugs can alter behavior in a negative way. It would be interesting to say the least if we could find out what drugs or vaccines were used by these violent people. If any at all. I think you're correct also that the majority of impaired drivers do manage to arrive without any deadly accident, those statistics no one will ever know about.
There should be a investigation or study into the various mentally ill who performed mass shootings, or mass murder of any sort, (like the guy who drove into all the paraders), to see their vaccination status and any correlation. Seems like it's been an epidemic as of late.
https://amidwesterndoctor.substack.com/p/the-evidence-for-antidepressants
Yes, we've been aware of this result of anti-depressants. The lengthy list of violence in this article is way more than what has been publicized. It's criminal negligence for these drugs to be on the market at all. Going back to the Covid vaccines, the landscape of deaths and injuries they caused is a wake up call that big pharma is not to be trusted, is not our friend, and investigations should commence right now. The truth is they went way too far this time with unsafe drugs.
"...a wake up call that big pharma is not to be trusted, is not our friend, and investigations should commence right now..."
All of that is true. What most folks have not yet realized is that investigations have been done and punishments imposed, but still the damage they do keeps snowballing.
I have posted this ( Do We Need a Census of Worthless Drugs? by John Lear
The Saturday Review, May 7, 1960, pp. 53-57 https://www.unz.com/print/SaturdayRev-1960may07-00053/Contents/) previously and do not mean to spam, but I urge everyone to read that brief article from `60 years ago. The point is that society has yet to find an effective cure for the crimes committed and for now people must learn to question authority, to stand up for themselves, and to spread the word.
"Authority" should never be handed either a blank check or a tabula rasa. I used that term because "tabula" is related to "table" and the word for "bank" in Greek is "trapezi" which is also the word for "table." A while back someone ran around with a switch upsetting tables full of money and there may be some good reasons for his behavior and some lessons there, I think.
However, none of us should think that such behavior will be either a panacea or permanent.
Unfortunately I can't read the article with that fine print. But I agree we need a census of worthless drugs. But even with all the worthless drugs and the deaths they cause, here and there are excellent drugs like Ivermectin, Hydroxychloroquine, Fenbendazole. The issue is to weed out the worthless and deadly drugs from the good ones.
The link should have an icon that you can click on to enlarge the print. All of Lear's articles are as fascinating as can be. The issues he raised 60 years ago are even worse today.
I agree with the points you made.
We need a physician for our society!
Looked for that icon but wasn't there for me. Agree fully with you
The icon you wnat is just to the left of the print button (icon). It is a square with arrows inside pointing to all 4 corners of the sqaure.
Clik that and you get to a PDF file which you can enlarge with the plus (+) symbol. It's a short but revealing article. Please pass it on and thanks! Lear also wrote several other articles that are very relevant to today.
you know that A Midwestern Doctor did an article about that very subject, right? I found it on the main page for this substack but the link won't bring up the article.
Yes, and I mentioned about it in the comments section. I thought I'd mention it again since I didn't see other similar comments.
Yes! Or what other Pharmaceutical тАЬ curesтАЭ they are on.
Also, why does the FBI always say. They knew! Hmmmmm
That's another one of my beefs. In almost every incidence, either the FBI, family, local police, family doctor, knew ahead of time that the perp was a bomb ready to explode.
Right!
We always hear.
FBI watch list.
What, FBI you watch him commit crimes!
Or FBI, do you drug, mess with the minds of the unstable, provide expensive weapons and push a narrative!?
MK all the way.
A lot of SSRIтАЩs. With weed mixed in.
The selective, sensationalist bias of news media explains a lot of that. To investigate, one would need reliable statistics, as well as detailed history of each perpetrator. Another complication is that, despite our perceptions to the contrary, such mass killings are very rare events, in terms of the entire population, or even the entire gun-owning population, or indeed even the entire SSRI-taking, gun-own population.
It's very risky to attempt to draw generalizations from very rare events. For example, one can accurately state that driving drunk dramatically increases the risk of injury or death to oneself or others. Yet it's a statistical fact that the vast majority of people who drove drunk yesterday got from Point A to B without incident. That's not an argument saying it's OK to drive when intixicoted, it's to note the difference between relative and absolute risk.
Ideally one should keep those factors in mind when considering, for example, reported cases of death or heart failure from Suddenly. I am by no means denying that something unusual is going on, rather to state that we shouldn't just jump to conclusions.
As our Midwestern doctor points out, there have been many violent acts by people on antidepressants also, so it's not a stretch to assume that drugs can alter behavior in a negative way. It would be interesting to say the least if we could find out what drugs or vaccines were used by these violent people. If any at all. I think you're correct also that the majority of impaired drivers do manage to arrive without any deadly accident, those statistics no one will ever know about.