Jimson Weed Home Video
July 17th, 2007A home video of three young men on the very powerful and even dangerous Datura Inoxia aka Jimson Weed.
Datura Inoxia Home Video Part 1
Datura Inoxia Home Video Part 2
Datura Inoxia Home Video Part 3
A home video of three young men on the very powerful and even dangerous Datura Inoxia aka Jimson Weed.
Datura Inoxia Home Video Part 1
Datura Inoxia Home Video Part 2
Datura Inoxia Home Video Part 3
RBG
This video was shot in New York City by a CNN reporter. This was aired on television.
Cats love Catnip. It’s like cocaine for cats. If you like strange cat noises and abnormal movements from drugged up animals, this video is for you.
Isoniazid was the first chemical compound established as an antidepressant, in 1952, by Jean-Francois Buisson in France and Max Lurie in the United States, after it had come in to use for the treatment of tuberculosis. Izoniazid, and a derivative iproniazid, were observed to have a “psychostimulant” effect and to inhibit the enzyme Monoamine Oxidase. Nathan Kline and colleagues conducted the first trial to show a significant effect of iproniazid on depression in psychiatric patients. Kline approached Roche with what he called a “psychic energizer” and the first MonoAmine Oxidase Inhibitor (MAOI) was introduced as Marsilid. Sales grew massively in the following years, and others of the class were introduced by several drug companies, but adverse effects such as hypertension crisis related to food amines, and acute hepatic necrosis, curtailed their use.
The discovery that a tricyclic (”three ringed”) compound had a significant antidepressant effect was also first made in the early 1950s, by Roland Kuhn in a Swiss psychiatric hospital. By that time antihistamine derivatives were coming in to use to treat surgical shock and then as psychiatric neuroleptics. Although, in 1955, in the first parallel-group randomized control trial in psychiatry, reserpine was demonstrated to be more effective than placebo in alleviating anxious depression, neuroleptics were developing for use as sedatives and antipsychotics. In attempting to improve the effectiveness of one of them, chlorpromazine, in conjunction with the Geigy pharmaceutical company, Kuhn discovered that compound “G 22355″ (manufactured and patented in the US in 1951 by Häfliger and Schinder) had a beneficial effect in patients with depression with mental and motor retardation He first reported his findings on what he called a “thymoleptic” in 1955/56 and they gradually became established, resulting in the marketing of the first tricyclic antidepressant, imipramine, soon followed by variants.
These new drug therapies became prescription-only medications (POM) in the 1950s. It was estimated that no more than 50 to 100 people per million suffered from the kind of depression that these new drugs would treat and pharmaceutical companies were not enthusiastic.
source:Wiki Dictionary Link
“Getting High : A History of LSD,” is a History Channel documentary outlining the history of d-lysergic acid diethylamide. This documentary includes such topics as Ph.D Albert Hoffman, Aldous Huxley, the CIA, Ralph Metzner, Military biological warfare’s Dr. Olson, the MK-ULTRA project, one flew over the coo-coo’s nest, the cold war, Dr. Timothy Leary, Politics, as well as secret human testings and more.
ABC7 in Denver, Colorado brought media attention to the potential side effects of Zicam when it reported on a station employee who lost her sense of smell after using Zicam to treat a cold. The employee was diagnosed with anosmia, a condition that likely will result in the permanent loss of her sense of smell.
The station received an outpouring of user feedback following its report. ABC7 reported that within a week of running the story, they already had received 80 reports from people injured by zinc nasal spray. Most of those experiencing serious side effects had used Zicam. The others had used Cold Eeze.
Below is a copy of an email being forwarded around the net:
Read this and avoid this medicine! It would be better to endure the cold.
Well, the cold season is drawing near, and we should be careful in selecting cold medicine products. Also, I did go the “Zicam” website, and the health side effects are for real.
This is true go to the website at the end……
I need to warn you about a product on the market and
hopefully you will pass it on to as many people as possible. I felt like I was coming down with a cold last Friday and because I’m around sick family members so much I wanted to possibly head it off. I used Zicam, which is a gel nose spray which claims to keep a cold from becoming “full blown.” Immediately I had an intense, horrible burning in my nasal/sinus passages. The skin on my face hurt to touch and I had pain and burning so that it hurt to move my head. My husband was there and kept asking if I wanted to go to the ER but the thought of getting in a car was overwhelming. My face was burning hot and my nasal passages were so swollen that I couldn’t breathe through my nose and I could see the swelling when I looked in the mirror. It lasted for about three hours and it was Labor Day weekend and I couldn’t see a Dr. until Tuesday. I have seen two ENT specialists in the last two days because I have lost, totally lost all ability to taste or smell. They both told me the same thing and suggested an immediate course of action. This is called “chemical trauma ” and most times is permanent. I’m going to have a CT scan on Monday and am on a high dose of the steroid, Prednisone for two weeks. If there is even a thread of the olfactory nerve left, it will help to rejuvenate what is left. I have been on the Internet (just put in Zicam) and there are hundreds of people who have had this happen. I am so angry and devastated and saddened right now that I don’t know how to get through this. I cannot handle the thought of never tasting food again or trying a new recipe or smelling a Thanksgiving turkey. Cooking has been an absolute passion of mine for as long as I can remember and at the moment I don’t see the point of even putting dressing on a salad. I keep thinking that this cannot be happening to me. I suck on a lemon, bite down on a clove of garlic, smell a bottle of ammonia, nail polish remover, anything. I’m starting by telling people I love. PLEASE don’t use Zicam, tell your friends.
Source:
http://www.illuminatiarchives.org/?p=119
Related links:
http://www.zicam-cold-eeze-lawyers.com
http://www.tasteandsmell.com/apr04.htm
http://www.thedenverchannel.com/7newsinvestigates/2898272/detail.html
http://www.lawyersandsettlements.com/case/zicam