NO DRUGS pixabayFor several years, druggies have known that MDMA —  ecstasy or molly —  is normally contaminated with bath salts and other poisons, and users can suffer horrific results. Now that the FDA in its stupidity has approved a test of MDMA for PTSD, a clean source of MDMA will be needed, which is most likely part of the plan to get BigPharma producing street drugs to take over the illicit drug trade.

Actually, most street drugs were already invented by pharmaceutical companies, so they already hold most patents, and should have an easy time crowding out the illegal producers once everyone is hooked and all this stuff is legal or at least decriminalized.

BigPharma created heroin (Bayer) and LSD (Sandoz). Merck pioneered the commercial manufacture of morphine, distributed cocaine, and invented MDMA. OxyCodone, which started the recent “opioid crisis” was created by German scientists and pushed into society by Purdue Pharma, marketed as a “slow release” opioid, which, according to the company, meant you wouldn’t get hooked, so doctors could freely prescribe as much of it as they wanted. Crystal meth was first created in Japan, and after WWII, Abbott Labs won FDA approval for meth as a prescription remedy for alcoholism weight gain, etc. Fentanyl, responsible for the majority of opioid deaths in “the opioid crisis” was invented by Janssen Pharmaceutica

And for those addicts who want off, there’s “Medication Assisted Treatment” (MAT) to swap the user to opioids covered by insurance. And for overdoses, there’s a $4500 dose of naloxone.

In the background, you have the shrinks inventing disorders as fast as they can brainstorm them, so their pharma buddies can invent a drug to “maintain” it. Cures are impossible, they say, and drug addicts and mental health patients need maintenance drugs for the rest of their lives.

Once you know the destination, it’s easy to follow the trail, and the trail leads to a country run by the psychs and BigPharma, full of drug-addicted slaves — that’s the “off-label” application of these drugs. And for side-effects?  BigPharma rakes in about $1 trillion a year currently, with huge expansion on the horizon.