If a drug is a best-seller, it has nothing to do with safety and efficacy. It just means that a million people have been lied to courtesy of Big Pharma, the FDA and Wall Street.
This is the Holy Trinity for amping up drug sales.
Aspirin, cholesterol-lowering meds and blood pressure drugs have been proving this for decades.
Sure, they're a lifesaver in times of emergency. But outside of that, they're poison. Doctors and media want you to think otherwise. But, chemistry is telling you the truth.
Aspirin shreds your insides, causing excessive bleeding. In clinical trials, more people die from internal bleeding than are saved from stroke or heart attack.
Cholesterol-lowering drugs damage everything from your mitochondria (energy production) to your hormones. As if lowering testosterone wasn't bad enough, they also swipe your memory banks.
Blood pressure meds lead to belly fat, diabetes and cancer.
This stuff is all over the news. On any given day, there's a headline about another pharmaceutical scam and it's subsequent destruction.
Commenting on the broader use for cholesterol lowering drugs, The New York Times wrote, "This may sound like good news for patients, and it would be — if statins actually offered meaningful protection from our No. 1 killer, heart disease; if they helped people live longer or better; and if they had minimal adverse side effects. However, none of these are the case."
Why is the use of dangerous drugs the norm? How do major institutions convince the masses to bludgeon themselves with meds?
Ghostwriting.
From California State University, Dr. Leemon McHenry wrote that, "Pharmaceutical companies commonly employ ghostwriters, or uncredited authors, to write or draft manuscripts that subsequently appear in peer-reviewed medical journals under the name of one or more academic researchers."
"This practice, however, goes beyond simple drafting of a manuscript; it provides an academic façade for research that has been designed, conducted and analyzed by industry and for review articles that similarly obscure the contributions of industry. Such camouflaged authorship undermines scientific integrity and jeopardizes public health."
So ruthless and deadly, one single ghostwritten article killed 800,000 patients over a 5 year period in Europe alone!
And you were afraid of Ebola?
...Forbes tells us that the guilty paper, published by The New England Journal of Medicine, touted the so-called benefits of beta-blockers for use outside of emergency surgery. Meant only for emergency, the medical journal insisted that patients should take daily, like it was a vitamin.
Naturally, doctors and pharmaceutically compliant media got a profit erection and started "prescribing to death."
For those who can't extrapolate, this means you or someone you know is being killed right now by a heart medication - beta blocker or otherwise.
Yawn...
I know. Not nearly as exciting as The Voice or sitting like a vegetable on the couch and letting CNN scare the hell out of you with a viral hoax.
800,000 deaths in 5 years using a drug as prescribed!
Like my plane sailing over the busy streets of LA, I can hear this passing over heads now.
Let me sum it up: the New England Journal of Medicine published false results to get people hooked on drugs. As a result, 800,000 people lost the chance to see their kid graduate high school or hold their grandchild.
There's a better way…
Shane Ellison, MS
The People's Chemist
www.thepeopleschemist.com
This is the real war on drugs.
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