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SUBOXONE: The Psych Drug Behind The Charleston Church Shooting?

Discussion in 'News & Current Events' started by poncho, Jun 21, 2015.

  1. poncho

    poncho Well-Known Member

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    Suboxone is a powerful psychoactive drug which is utilized in breaking heroin and narcotic pain reliever addictions. Just like methadone*, suboxone has it downside risks and adverse side effects. It is a medication which contains two primary ingredients — buprenorphine and naloxone. Buprenorphine is a synthetic opiate; naloxone is drug that blocks feelings of euphoria.

    *Methodone is such a dangerous drug that dedicated clinics were set up around the country because patients could not be trusted with more than one day’s dose at a time; hence, the daily visit to the methadone clinic.

    Methadone is actually more dangerous than all prescribed narcotic painkillers and can threaten a patient’s life with each dose. As a matter of fact, a methadone user doesn’t have to be addicted to methadone to die from it—the very first dose can kill, unlike both heroin and morphine.

    These two ingredients — buprenorphine and naloxone –work in tandem assisting the addicted drug user in their intention to break a very strong habit. Like any drug that can successfully replace heroin, it is quite powerful and has some serious side effects. Just how does it work?

    Continue . . . http://www.prisonplanet.com/suboxone-the-psych-drug-behind-the-charleston-church-shooting.html

    "Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof was a known drug user who was caught with the powerful mind-altering narcotic Suboxone when apprehended by police during an incident on Feb. 28.[2]"

    Every Mass Shooting Shares One Thing In Common & It’s NOT Weapons

    Manasquan, NJ –-(Ammoland.com)- Nearly every mass shooting incident in the last twenty years, and multiple other instances of suicide and isolated shootings all share one thing in common, and it’s not the weapons used.

    The overwhelming evidence points to the signal largest common factor in all of these incidents is the fact that all of the perpetrators were either actively taking powerful psychotropic drugs or had been at some point in the immediate past before they committed their crimes.

    Multiple credible scientific studies going back more than a decade, as well as internal documents from certain pharmaceutical companies that suppressed the information show that SSRI drugs ( Selective Serotonin Re-Uptake Inhibitors ) have well known, but unreported side effects, including but not limited to suicide and other violent behavior. One need only Google relevant key words or phrases to see for themselves. www.ssristories.com is one popular site that has documented over 4500 “ Mainstream Media “ reported cases from around the World of aberrant or violent behavior by those taking these powerful drugs.

    The following list of mass shooting perpetrators and the drugs they were taking or had been taking shortly before their horrific actions was compiled and published to Facebook by John Noveske, founder and owner of Noveske Rifleworks just days before he was mysteriously killed in a single car accident. Is there a link between Noveske’s death and his “outting” of information numerous disparate parties would prefer to suppress, for a variety of reasons?

    I leave that to the individual readers to decide. But there is most certainly a documented history of people who “knew to much” or were considered a “threat” dying under extraordinarily suspicious circumstances.

    Continue . . . https://www.lewrockwell.com/2015/06/no_author/every-mass-shooting-has-one-thing-in-common/
     
    #1 poncho, Jun 21, 2015
    Last edited by a moderator: Jun 21, 2015
  2. matt wade

    matt wade Well-Known Member

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    First, the list that they show, which is supposed to be a "list of mass shooting perpetrators", goes on to list many circumstances which were not mass shootings. They have included suicides, killing only 1 single individual, and incidents with no shootings or deaths.

    Second, what this article doesn't touch on is the underlying reason many of these people were on the drugs (like Zoloft and Ritalin) to begin with. They were on them because they had something wrong with them. The article would have you believe that all these people were perfectly sane and normal people before they were just randomly put on these drugs.
     
  3. poncho

    poncho Well-Known Member

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    According to a report released yesterday by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), the rate of antidepressant use in this country among teens and adults (people ages 12 and older) increased by almost 400% between 1988–1994 and 2005–2008.

    The federal government’s health statisticians figure that about one in every 10 Americans takes an antidepressant. And by their reckoning, antidepressants were the third most common prescription medication taken by Americans in 2005–2008, the latest period during which the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) collected data on prescription drug use.

    http://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/astounding-increase-in-antidepressant-use-by-americans-201110203624

    Over the past two decades, the use of antidepressants has skyrocketed. One in 10 Americans now takes an antidepressant medication; among women in their 40s and 50s, the figure is one in four.

    Experts have offered numerous reasons. Depression is common, and economic struggles have added to our stress and anxiety. Television ads promote antidepressants, and insurance plans usually cover them, even while limiting talk therapy. But a recent study suggests another explanation: that the condition is being overdiagnosed on a remarkable scale.

    http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/08/12/a-glut-of-antidepressants/?_r=0

    So either there are more people with "something wrong with them" then ever before or it could just be there's a lot of money to be made peddling these drugs on a massive scale.
     
  4. matt wade

    matt wade Well-Known Member

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    I agree that use of these drugs is mostly unnecessary.
     
  5. Bro. Curtis

    Bro. Curtis <img src =/curtis.gif>
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    I appreciate you posting this.
     
  6. poncho

    poncho Well-Known Member

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    Blame the left. Blame the right. Blame the gun. Blame the flag. Blame blacks. Blame whites . . .

    In the meantime no one wants to talk about the drugs. I suspect there to many adverting dollars at stake to "blame" the drugs.
     
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