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Yale's Role in Drug Deaths (in the national news)

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Mort Zuckerman

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Oct 2, 2009, 4:25:31 AM10/2/09
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Subject: Yale's Role in Drug Deaths (in the national news)

Date: Oct 2, 2009 4:22 AM

ARTICLE BELOW ON THE EPIDEMIC OF DRUG DEATHS
==================================

Welp, because we have Yale, here, who
does nothing intelligent, their solution
to everything is DRUGS. DCF and Drugs,
http://www.actionlyme.org/BRAINDAMAGE.htm
Drugs and Children, Children and Psychotropics,...

Psychotropics is a way of life and people,
children, are introduced to it early here,
in this state.

The children see many, many adults who have
Lyme and are on pain meds for some other
(false) diagnosis. It is getting easier
and easier to get pain and brain candy.

Many of my adult neighbors are on Rx drugs
(totally and obviously hooked) for this-,
that-. and the-other-thing- to daily manage
their lives of Lyme and pain and the sleep
disorders, and the CHILDREN SEE THIS!!

It becomes an obsession. The drugs become an
obsession, because that's, physiologically,
what the drugs do, and why they create an
ADDICTION...
http://www.actionlyme.org/Psychiatric_MumboJumbo.wmv
Cops, Everybody!!


In fact, I have a neighbor who seems to be
getting an ex-DCF kidnappee (who is quite
traumatized out of his mind) hooked on
Rx brain candy, perhaps as a way to get
the kid unhooked from pot. Or, perhaps
because this kind of Rx high is LEGAL!!

It is an epidemic, no question.

This is Yale's fault, because they can't
actually *think* over there, and Yalies think
that if they are associated with some Pharmaceutical
company in some drug trial or another (DCF
provides the bodies, since this is half the
purpose of the kidnapping epidemic, to
provide Yale with some pediatric bodies for
the trials real patents would reject vehemently),
that that's the epitome of having "arrived"
academically, when nothing could be further
from the truth.

I strongly, strongly, strongly un-recommend
any mind-altering drugs at all times. Don't
let any medical tard invite you to participate.
Especially not young people, who become hooked
to psychotropics (especially DCF kidnappees),
and then don't know or want any other way of
life except with what these young adults
refer to as "pills."

Knowing next to nothing about anything,
especially not science, these children
refer to the meds as "pills."

You get the vagueness these kids suffer
about what they're doing.

"Pills."

"Pills." 'Like some old lady, you know, sitting
there with her collection of pill bottles, doing
blindly and ignorantly "what the 'good doctor' told
her to do..."

I blame Yale. Yale can't think. There is
no manufacturing left in this state, and
people have to have jobs, so the jobs are
State employment: Kidnapping and Jailing and
Institutionalizing and Medicating other humans.

For this, the former Governor went to jail
because they - DCF's Chief Whore and her
gang, "TREA" - intended to make a *national*
racket out of it:
http://www.actionlyme.org/BRAINLESS_BUREAUCRATS.htm

"Complicated man, big dreamer, at center of federal probe
January 5, 2004 , Associated Press

HARTFORD, Conn. -- Peter Ellef was a big dreamer.

"As Gov. John G. Rowland's co-chief of staff, Ellef spoke of
levitating trains, hydroponics gardening, building prisons in old
stone quarries and opening trade relations with China. His plans
after state service included ***developing a string of juvenile
detention facilities across the country,*** a chain of home
improvement stores and a high-end garden center.”


^^^Couldn't be done without duh DCF
"operation," providing the bodies...

- - -
Since Yale owns the State and the Medical
Board and duh DCF, and they bag all the
dissenters,... and the legislators are
part-time airheads who do the part-time
legislating as a way to make business connections:
http://www.actionlyme.org/MARTIN_NINDS_MS_CHRONIC_LYME.htm

"Amann's full time job is to be a fund-raiser for the Multiple
Sclerosis Society of America. He gets a percent of the money he
raises. Thus, he is so good at selling himself and his retarded
bullshit, he not only became a politician, he became the Connecticut
State Speaker of the House. The unions elect the democrats because
republicans have generally, in the past, been against big government
and unionized screw-driver-turners. The republicans in Connecticut
keep a low profile except for when they want to create the emergencies
of "bad parents and criminals" in order to defraud Uncle Sam over how
much "bad" goes on in this state, in order to not raise CT State
income taxes. It's a simple formulary where anyone who is not rich or
a State employee union member is fodder for this human hamburger
processor. The mere people have the same function they did in Machu
Picchu. The mere people are the materiél and maintenance of slaughter
needed to keep the political gods and the union gods happy so it will
rain dollars from China...."


This is Yale's fault.

This happened because no one at Yale
can think. None there is an intellectual.
They have no brains at Yale, and, of course,
they lost all their Lyme grants, too.

So, what is left for Yale to do?
They know nothing about brain diseases
or any other diseases, for that matter.

We (I) revealed Pam3Cys immunosuppression
and we (I) revealed the falsification
of the diagnostic standard for Lyme disease
to the FDA in person. (Pam Weintraub
drove me.)

No physician in this state or any other
state, for that matter, did either of those
things.

How could anyone trust a single thing
anyone at Yale had to say about anything
after all of that? After, now, and
epidemic of deaths among young people
that now surpasses motor vehicle deaths?


Kathleen M. Dickson
http://www.actionlyme.org
===============================
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090930/ap_on_he_me/us_med_drug_deaths/print

In 16 states, drug deaths overtake traffic fatals

By MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer Mike Stobbe, Ap Medical Writer Wed
Sep 30, 6:20 pm ET

ATLANTA – In 16 states and counting, drugs now kill more people than
auto accidents do, the government said Wednesday.

Experts said the startling shift reflects two opposite trends: Driving
is becoming safer, and the legal and illegal use of powerful
prescription painkillers is on the rise.

For decades, traffic accidents have been the biggest cause of injury-
related death in the U.S., and they are still No. 1. But drug
overdoses are pulling ahead in one state after another.

"People see a car accident as something that might happen to them,"
said Margaret Warner, an epidemiologist with the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. But as for death from a drug overdose, "maybe
they see it as something that's not going happen to them."

The drug-related death rate roughly doubled from the late 1990s to
2006, according to the most recent CDC data.

The number of states in which drug-related deaths have overtaken
traffic fatalities has gone from eight in 2003 to 12 in 2005, and 16
in 2006. They are: Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island,
Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio,
Michigan, Illinois, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Oregon and Washington.

It's not clear why those states have seen such a shift, but experts
said certain drugs may be more of a problem in some states than in
others.

While cocaine and heroin continue to be significant killers, most of
the increase is attributed to prescription opiates such as the
painkillers methadone, Oxycontin and Vicodin.

From 1999 to 2006, death rates for such medications climbed for every
age group. Deaths from methadone alone increased sevenfold, according
to the CDC.

It's not all black market stuff, either.

About half of the opiate medication deaths in King County, Wash.,
which includes Seattle, involved people who got their drugs through
legal prescriptions, said Caleb Banta-Green, a University of
Washington research scientist.

"There has been a dramatic change in how doctors prescribe opiates,"
Banta-Green said.

In the 1990s, he said, doctors began recognizing that chronic pain was
undertreated. The prescribing of painkillers escalated after that.
Today, about one in five U.S. adults and one in 10 adolescents are
prescribed an opiate each year, he said.

"The pendulum swung in the other direction," he said.

Using death certificate data, CDC researchers counted more than 45,000
U.S. deaths nationwide from traffic accidents in 2006, and about
39,000 from drug-induced causes.

About 90 percent of those drug fatalities are sudden deaths from
overdoses, but the count includes people who died from organ damage
from long-term drug use or abuse.

In Massachusetts, there were more than 1,000 drug-related deaths in
2006, double the number of traffic deaths, according to the CDC.
Michigan had about 500 more drug deaths than vehicle fatalities, and
New York had 350 more.

Nationally, the death rate from traffic accidents fell by about 6.5
percent from 1999 through 2006 — from 15.3 deaths per 100,000 people
to 14.3 per 100,000, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration.

The decline in road fatalities is "considered one of the great public
health triumphs" of the past few decades, the CDC's Warner said.

__

On the Net:

CDC report: http://www.cdc.gov/NCHS

"[Real] scientists are *fiercely* independent. That's the good
news."-- NIH's Top Fool, Anthony Fauci

Greegor

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Oct 3, 2009, 7:16:52 PM10/3/09
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