Essentially we have
gone from one over the top incident per decade to one per year minimum and
there is actually a whole lot more lower level events that fly below the radar. However you fudge the numbers this is called
a trend.
Worse, it is clearly
been deliberately ignored to protect a pretty obvious financial protocol.
In fact the linkage needs
to be deeply studied and understood.
These meds may have plenty of remaining therapeutic value, but
uninhibited mass murder is a nasty side effect that needs to be addressed. Unfortunately industry prefers to hide their
heads in the sand.
Perhaps a massive class
action suit and a large bill from law enforcement might focus their attention. It would be pretty easy to gen up a
compelling statistical argument.
Media Buries
Psychiatric Drug Connection to Navy Shooter
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Networks don’t want to risk losing $2.4 billion in ad revenue from
pharmaceutical giants
Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
September 18, 2013
Despite every indication that Navy Yard shooter Aaron Alexis was
on SSRI drugs that have been linked to dozens of previous mass shootings, the
mainstream media has once again avoided all discussion of the issue, preferring
instead to blame the tragedy on a non-existent AR-15 that the gunman didn’t
even use.
We now know that Alexis “had been treated
since August by the Veterans Administration for his mental problems.”
As Mike Adams points out, “This is proof that
Aaron Alexis was on psychiatric drugs, because that’s the only treatment
currently being offered by the Veterans Administration for mental problems.
Alexis’ family members also confirmed to the press that he was being “treated”
for his mental health problems. Across the medical industry, “treatment” is the
code word for psychiatric drugging.”
Alexis also suffered
from PTSD, blackouts and anger issues – all of which are treated with SSRI
drugs. The most common form of treatment for PTSD is
Paroxetine, which is listed as the number 3 top violence-causing drug by the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP).
The Navy Yard shooter was clearly on some form of psychiatric
drug, but the media has shown no interest in discovering its identity.
Despite it being
reported that prescription drugs were found in the apartment of ‘Batman’
shooter James Holmes days after the Aurora massacre, it took nine months to
find out exactly what those drugs were. Like Columbine killer Eric
Harris, Holmes had been taking Zoloft, another SSRI
drug linked with violent outbursts.
The length of time it took to find out that Holmes was on Zoloft
was partly because the media habitually shows zero interest in pursuing the
link between anti-depressants and violence.
As the website SSRI
Stories profusely documents, there are literally hundreds of
examples of mass shootings, murders and other violent episodes that have been
committed by individuals on psychiatric drugs over the past three decades. The
number of cases is staggering.
Why is the corporate media so disinterested in pursuing this clear
connection?
Perhaps it has something
to do with the fact that the pharmaceutical giants who produce drugs like
Zoloft, Prozac and Paxil spend around $2.4 billion dollars a year on
direct-to-consumer television advertising every year. By running negative
stories about prescription drugs, networks risk losing tens of millions of
dollars in ad revenue.
While failing to ask questions about what SSRI drugs Aaron Alexis
was taking prior to his rampage, the media instead blamed the shooting on
assault rifles, even after it had been confirmed that no AR-15 was used by
Alexis during the massacre.
FBI assistant director Victoria Parlave stated at a press
conference on Tuesday that authorities, “do not have any information at this
time that [Alexis] had an AR-15 in his possession.”
Despite there being no
evidence that an AR-15 was used, the New York Daily News ran a front page headline yesterday
morning entitled, “Same Gun Different Slay,” next to a picture of an assault
rifle.
Hours after the FBI
stated that no AR-15 had been used, MSNBC’s Alex Wagner, who previously blamed the Boston bombings on Alex Jones, continued to use an animated graphic depicting
Alexis carrying an assault rifle during the massacre.
Anti-second amendment crusader Piers Morgan also erroneously
blamed the shooting on “a man with a legally purchased AR-15, who just
committed the same kind of atrocity as we saw at Sandy Hook, and Aurora,”
during his CNN show on Monday.
CNN’s live news coverage also reported
that Alexis had “recently purchased (an) AR-15 shotgun,” when in fact that
purchase had been denied.
Both the New York Times and the Washington Post also falsely reported
that an AR-15 had been found on Alexis after the massacre.
D.C. gun grabbers Dianne Feinstein and Dick Durbin also
regurgitated the false claim that Alexis used an AR-15 during the rampage.
The U.S. press has once again behaved like state media in the
aftermath of the Navy Yard shooting by pursuing the assault rifle angle –
despite the fact that it was patently false – in order to bolster the White
House’s gun control agenda.
In doing so, they have concurrently buried an integral aspect of
mass shootings that needs to be highlighted as part of a national conversation
– the clear connection between violent outbursts and SSRI drugs.
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