Investigate Earth Conspiracy Podcast - SSRIs & Mass Shootings Conspiracy Podcast | Big Pharma's MK Ultra
Episode Date: July 21, 2023With mass shootings on the rise and an increasing number of people committing violent crimes like never before, we have to ask ourselves, what has changed? A newer study has been released that should ...make everyone wonder why we have been lied to about antidepressants and SSRIs for so long. Is this a major culprit for the string of mass shootings and violent behavior we see around the world, especially in the United States? RFK Jr. has had a lot to say about this topic, alongside many psychiatrists and experts in the field. Is this Big Pharma's version of the government program MK Ultra. We dive deep in this episode while also telling some of our own experiences with SSRIs
Transcript
Discussion (0)
And welcome to Investigator's podcast.
I'm your host, Chad, alongside my beautiful and gorgeous wife, Sherry.
Oh, thanks.
He's just saying that because I actually put makeup on today.
Okay.
But I'm sitting right next to my handsome husband that loves reggae music.
I do love reggae music.
The name of that song is Kings of Summer by Oakey featuring Quinn.
It's a great song, actually.
We just recently heard that.
And I was like, man, I'm going to play that on our podcast soon.
Anyways, guys, welcome to the show.
We did have a show this morning.
We actually released earlier on today.
We didn't really get to talk to you guys too much about where we've been and kind of, you know, what's been going on.
And we'll take a cut, like one or two minutes to tell you.
We've been on vacation.
We were on vacation to Hilton Head.
For those of you that follow our social media is on Twitter or Facebook or wherever, you would know that.
But for those of you do not follow us, then you would not know that.
But we've been in Hilton Head.
We post some pictures from Hilton Head.
And we had a great time.
We got out in the ocean, we hit some waves.
There was a time actually where there was pretty big waves.
High tide was coming in.
Beautiful sunset.
Perfect weather conditions.
Extremely windy, though, but it was making those waves massive.
Oh, and it was so much fun.
Yeah, it was.
It was great.
Because you can be in the waves like under your hips, but when the waves come through,
they're like coming over your shoulders.
Yeah.
And you just jump our buggy board or body swim them or whatever.
And it was just like we had so much fun.
We swam in the way so much that I was sore in the next day.
I was too because it's funny because I haven't been working out lately, but, you know, when you get up off the boogie board or whatever, you got to push yourself back up before you, before another wave hits you.
And then like the next day or the day after, I was so sore.
I was like, oh, my God, this is sad.
But anyways, it was fun.
Yeah, and we got to take our puppies with us because we always usually take them to Hilton Head.
And the one puppy we have, Maverick, that was his first or second time at the beach, but he really enjoyed.
it.
Yeah, this time he just went straight out there in the water.
He was chilling out in the water.
The first time, he was like scared of the water.
Every wave that would come up, he would not get near it.
It was like acid to him.
And then this time, he was just running right out there.
He was good.
I mean, it was weird how it was all, you know, a lot different now.
He was a lot more used to it this time.
Yeah, he liked it.
But we had a great time.
You know, a lot of you actually, when we said we were in Hilton had,
one thing we didn't really get a great chance to do was be out on the beach at night
as much we wanted to
because we definitely wanted to look
for those UFOs.
Although the past two weeks,
actually, there have been a couple
of reports of UFOs off the coast
of North and South Carolina
and we're going to be having a really
big UFO podcast coming up.
Of course, next week we got the UFO
hearings, all these whistleblowers coming forward.
It's going to be hopefully big.
Hopefully the disclosure
and what we've been wanting
from the UFO community
or from the officials
that are, you know, that have been in high-level positions that know a lot about this,
have seen these things.
Hopefully we're going to have a lot of information on that next week.
So for those of you that are interested in UFO thing, we're probably going to have an episode,
like a precursor episode before that.
And then we're going to also cover that next week.
So make sure you stay tuned to that.
And I hope that they're going to show us the videos that are kind of been linked out that
they're telling us about that it is or what it could be.
I'm really praying that we get to see these.
videos because that would be amazing. Yeah, there's some crazy videos out there that
is kind of mind-blowing and we're not going to talk about on here. But there is a little bit
of connection to what we're going to be talking about tonight in UFOs. And one of those things
is, is that we've all known, or at least over the past three years, we, if you have listened
to this podcast, you listen to us, you listen to people like Dr. Peter McCullough or you've listened to
some Joe Rogan episodes.
Or you listen to many other doctors out there.
Dr. Pierre Corey, you listen to Nathan Jones, Clear Founder.
He's been on here a couple of times.
A lot of these people have obviously openly discussed how the government and big pharma
and all of that has handled COVID, how they have pushed this vaccine on the public,
not just the United States, but across the world.
There were certain countries around the world that refused the vaccine.
There were certain countries that opted out of this.
And then also you had a lot of backlash from countries or presidents that decided not to push the vaccine to their people.
And one of those, and we've talked about it many times, and we're not going to get too deep in it on this particular episode, but was the president in Brazil.
And it wasn't long after.
He said, look, I don't believe we need to be pushing a vaccine that is untested and we don't know the long-term side effects or even short-term side effects.
I don't know if we should be pushing us on our people.
Brazil was actually doing really good with COVID
but what happened in Brazil was
you know since this this president
started to say look I don't think
our country needs this I'm not going to push this
I'm not going to mandate this
well it wasn't long after that that they started
charging him criminally and doing all this stuff
he ran the Florida
he was the most popular president
in Brazil and then of course not long
after that they in my opinion
installed a president which is a very
globalist president
much like I believe what we had seen in this country over the past, well, the 2020 election,
and then everything leading in and out of that, it's all very similar.
And so one of the questions we have to ask ourselves is how much does big pharma have influence over our world population?
And not only that, how much does big pharma have influence over our governments, our decisions,
the mandates that are having, our freedoms, our constitution here in the United States,
but not just the United States, but in Canada.
Everywhere, yeah.
I mean, we saw the freedom truck rally that.
We saw what happened with that.
They froze people's bank accounts.
They took their crypto.
This is the power of Big Pharma.
And Big Pharma, we've talked about this on other episodes.
Big Pharma has essentially used the FBI, much like the Biden administration and some of the other politicians as their personal policing.
There were, we played it on an episode not long ago where this lady said we got a fight back against Big Pharma.
And guess who showed up at her house?
It was two FBI agents asking why she said that.
And what did she mean by this?
all this. And it was Pfizer, I believe, is who she was specifically talking about.
I remember that. And so, yeah, so we played that clip. And this is what we're dealing with,
guys. On this episode, though, we're specifically going to be talking about SSRIs. We're going to
dive a little bit into cancer cure cover-up and a little bit about that because there's a,
there's a whole series we could do about Big Pharma's cover-ups of actual cures of things. And we're
probably going to do a specific episode on not just big pharma cover up, but we're going to talk
about cancer. We're going to talk about the AIDS epidemic because I think that's something we have
not got to, but Faulty's heavily involved in that as well. This is a very important episode,
and I hope that you guys will share it especially. Now, Sherry, and by the way, here's a disclaimer.
Anybody that's on SSRIs, which is aka antidepressants, right? It is serotonin basically inhibitors.
Right. And there's, I'm going to probably.
say there's a lot of people on these things. I know in my profession, there's not anyone that I
don't know that are not on them because you have to be on them. Yeah. There's a lot of people on.
There's people in emergency work, you know, nurses, doctors, you name it. There's so many people
that get on these things and they feel like that it is the cure and it is the solution to their
problems. It is, you know, the big, the big ploy has always been that,
Depression is caused by serotonin or chemical imbalances in your brain.
And so therefore, the pharmaceutical company came forward and said, look, we're going to offer you a magic potion.
Here it is, guys.
This is what you have to take, and all you have to take it to get rid of your depression is just this.
And it's definitely not just a happy pill.
It doesn't make you like, oh, yay, I'm so happy.
My name is Sherry.
Nice to meet you.
It doesn't do that all.
All it does is it kind of like...
It takes your ups down and your downs up.
Exactly.
It kind of makes you neutral and calm, which I'm not a calm person anyway, so nothing's going to make me calm, unfortunately.
But these things, I mean, I guess in a way they do help, because they do help my personality.
I'm just going to say when I'm not on them, Chad and I don't get along as well as we do when I am on them.
but when I
well I should not even admit that
but that's what Chad says
if we ever get in a little argument or anything
did you take your medicine today
that's the first thing he asked me
no well I mean
and it's I guess unfair because
you know when we when you
kind of first got on it our relationship wasn't the greatest
we've told people in the past in the beginning
our relationship was not the greatest it was like
we've been married now what 12 13 years
and
Most people, when they get married, they have a honeymoon phase, which lasts two or three years, four years, sometimes five.
And then things start going downhill.
Or they realize, you know what, I don't actually love this mofo anyway, like or whatever.
And then they start realizing all the things that they got themselves into by getting married.
And then the more and more and more that happens, the more and more they want to digress from it.
They don't like it as much anymore.
They want to go back to the single life.
They want to go back to the, I want to be free.
I want to.
Or there's somebody better out there for me.
where I find someone else or whatever the case may be.
Cherry and I actually was opposite, right?
So we didn't really go through a honeymoon phase.
We kind of did the opposite.
Now I think we're in a honeymoon phase.
I think will last.
And I think we went through so much together that, you know,
I guess our bonds pretty much unbreakable now, I believe 100%.
So whether or not the SSRIs would, you know,
if you got off of them, got through,
because look, there is a long process of,
getting off of any of this.
Oh my gosh, you guys.
And it's very tough.
If you're not on them, you have no idea.
I'm talking about, okay, I'm just going to let you guys know what I'm on right now.
Because, yeah, it's okay.
I'm on wellbutrin in Subalta.
They both are SSRIs or whatever.
And I can tell if I have not took my medicine within one day.
Yeah, now, so Symbolta, though, it can cause hallucinations if you get off of even one or two days.
Yeah, and I've already been on.
Simbolda got off of it, but when I was getting off of it, it was cold turkey.
You should never, never, never, never do that.
But my doctor was not in town or something happened and I couldn't get it anymore.
And it was not my fault that I wasn't taking it.
I didn't have the prescription.
I didn't have any more.
And it was the worst, like five days of my life.
Yeah.
Because it did.
It started making me hallucinate.
I was seeing things that were not there, that were supposed to be there or whatever.
It was just awful.
That MFER is not there.
Maybe that's, do you know what I'm talking about?
It is this meme that's going around the internet.
And it's the girl that's on the airplane that she was sitting by this guy that was, he had a tattoo, I believe.
It was like a Illuminati tattoo or a pentagram or it was something.
And she started to ask him, because he actually come out on a video, he came out as the guy that she was sitting next to.
And so he kind of told how this whole thing went down.
And so then he started screwing with her because she was just asking these weird questions, which I would kind of ask the same questions.
He kind of was weird, but it started like effing with her mind.
And then she probably didn't like flying to begin with or something.
Right.
And then she was like, this MEP is not real.
There's been so many memes about this.
And it's just this girl that freaks out on an airplane and gets up.
She's like yelling on the airplane.
And so there's all these memes.
They got her in Wonder Woman costumes and bikinis.
And because everyone thinks she's hot.
And, you know, but yet she's kind of crazy potentially.
You know, it was like, or who knows?
And it could have been that she forgot to take her medicine that day.
And she was thinking maybe she was hallucinating.
Because I'm telling you, if you don't take it one day, it makes your brain have zaps.
It makes you feel lightheaded.
It makes you feel funny.
It gives you headaches.
Yeah.
Like, I cannot go one day without that medicine.
If I skip, I'm in big trouble.
For example, our dog was having seizures the other day.
I was so worried about the dog.
I forgot to take my medicine.
Next day, I slept all.
day.
And Chad's like, Sherry, are you ever going to get off the couch?
I'm like, I can't.
I have a massive headache.
It really de-abilitates you if you don't stay on it the way you're supposed to.
Yeah, and guys, we're just kind of telling you a little bit about some of our personal
experiences.
We're going to get into some of the facts about SSRIs.
And there are facts, by the way.
There are studies that are recently released that talk about not only clinical depression,
but SSRIs.
And also, we're going to correlate potentially the evidence.
SSRI push and mass shootings because this is something that no one wants to talk about.
They always want to blame it on guns, but they don't even think to even potentially look at
SSRIs.
Now, we have some great clips, some great audio for you guys tonight that is really going to push
some of this stuff through to your head to make you understand.
And we also want to disclaimer of this.
We are not doctors, obviously, and do not go and get off your SSRIs or your antidepressants
just because this podcast, because you.
You should not definitely do that.
No one should do that.
No, don't do it ever.
And I think, honestly, the SSRI thing, in my opinion anyway, is the most dangerous and detrimental
for younger people.
Now, I'm not saying that it's necessarily good or we don't 100% know potentially what
could be, or it could be doing to our body's long term, even as adults.
But what I do know is that this problem kind of really started back in the early 2000s,
actually mid-90s, early 90s, as these SSRIs were starting to be pushed.
And the reason I know this is because, you know, for those of you to don't know, I grew up in a
household that, you know, it wasn't the greatest household, I guess you can say.
I mean, my mom was great, right?
And so I want to make sure of that.
And my dad, me and my dad really developed a great relationship after he got out of the house,
basically, and I got out of the house as well.
And then my dad started having strokes, you know, about the time, I guess I was,
I don't know, 1920. I don't even remember what age it was. But, you know, my mom and dad definitely
did not get along. It was not a great household growing up as a younger age. So, you know,
depression is pretty obvious when you grow up in a household that, you know, the family or the
mom and dad are not happy, whatever the case is. And so my mom started taking me to a doctor where
I got on antidepressants as well. And I was young. I mean, I think I got on first antidepressants at
like 11 maybe or 10 somewhere around there and it made me like worse.
I mean, there were things that was, it was nightmare situations for me.
I went through so many different medications to, you know, well, this one isn't working
because it's making you this or this one isn't working because of this.
But there were times where I would be up at night feeling like I had butterflies in my
skin and like I was freaking the F out for multiple days.
I mean, it was just like I was not myself.
I was out of my body.
I was out of reality.
There were so many things that happened.
And then until one night, you know, which I don't ever really talk about this, but, you know, when I, as I got a little bit older, you know, I was actually, the medicine I was on at that point was Zoloft.
And there was like something that happened.
I don't know if it was with my dad or whatever the case was.
But, you know, it led me to not care about the repercussions of whether I killed myself or not.
And I remember to this day that I thought about that.
I actually thought about it, but I didn't even think about it in a way that was like, hey, you know, what are the ramifications of killing yourself?
And this is, you know, this is the end if you do this.
I didn't think about that.
I don't think about the end.
You just think about at that time, that moment in time.
Yes.
But in my 100% opinion, the medication I was on at that time, it blocked that ability.
for my mind to think of the ramifications or the repercussions of actually shooting yourself.
Right. Or even the feelings of it. Yeah. I mean, you don't even think about it. Because it does kind of numb you.
It does, but it also drives certain thought processes in your head. Right. And that's a really bad thing. Now, during this time, especially in the late 90s and early 2000s, there was a lot of people, a lot of younger people between 12 and 18 that were killing themselves. There was a mass suicide.
side uptake when Zoloft and these SSRIs really started to be pushed on younger kids,
18 and I guess 18 and younger.
And this is all over the news.
Of course, Big Pharma and the media companies, as soon as the media started actually
covered it, it quickly disappeared.
And it was because Big Pharma obviously had a lot of influence in the media, although at this
time in the late 90s, early 2000s, there was not as much control over the media by Big
pharma as there is today, but nonetheless, it still got silenced. And then when it got
silenced, I think there was some kind of banter a couple years later that kind of pretended
like they fixed the formula, even though apparently they did not, because there's been multiple
studies that show that Zoloff from 1999 or 2000, whenever it was, to today is pretty much the exact same
formula. It is tweaked a little bit, but the reality is that a lot of people were asking questions
of if you look at the mass shootings in America, you look at the mass shootings of these school shootings, and you look at mass shooters and look at, you know, are they on SSRIs and antidepressants and are they not? If you also look at other countries, there are a lot of other countries that are not heavily medicated in SSRIs like we are. So therefore, you don't have a lot of the similar circumstances that the United States has. And there's going to be a lot we're going to talk about tonight that proves this, kind of outlines this.
and everything else.
So there's an article that talks about
MK Ultra Nation, over 37 million
Americans.
That's over 13% are taking
dangerous psychotropic antidepressant
medications right now.
And did you know there is actually no such thing
as clinical depression?
It was made up.
It was fake. And recently,
the University College of London studied
clinical depression, and the
researchers concluded that there
remains no clear evidence that serotonin levels or serotonin activity are responsible for depression
at all. That means that up to 37 million Americans are not really suffering from a chemical
imbalance in the brain and may be getting dosed with dangerous payloads of prescription drug-induced
serotonin. One in every 10 prescripts, sorry, one and every 10 Americans, including teens and children,
are taking dangerous psychotropic drugs right now that are entirely based on a diagnosis that's bunk.
and that means the prescription drugs don't even work.
So the real question is, what will be the impact of extra serotonin in people's brains?
That's what we're really looking at.
If there is a fact that serotonin levels, and this study outlines this, if these things actually don't exist or what this drug is supposed to do, which is to regulate your serotonin levels, well, if that doesn't happen, then what does it do to your body?
How can it affect you?
Now, one of the things I want to play, before we get any further, is it is a Tucker Carlson intro that we have to play because he hits it on the head.
He mentioned this study as well, and then we will talk about it right after this.
Listen to this, guys.
And hopefully, wait, okay, sorry.
Okay, sorry, that was not supposed to have him.
Now we can do it.
Okay, here we go.
The opioid crisis.
Over the past 25 years, opioids have.
destroyed entire regions of the country, mostly rural areas, places populated by the people who
built and fed this country for generations. Hundreds of thousands of them have died from opioids,
and they're still dying. More than 100,000 drug odies just last year, mostly from fentanyl.
Fentanyl's imported from China, it smuggled through Mexico. If you live here, you probably know
someone who's died from fentanyl, probably someone's child. What you may have forgotten in the face
of all the sadness is that the opioid epidemic was not organic. It didn't just happen when
because people in sparsely populated zip codes in Kentucky and Vermont and West Virginia suddenly felt sad and started taking dangerous drugs.
No, this particular disaster was created by drug companies. That's true. Purdue Pharma kicked it off.
They did so by aggressively marketing a narcotic called OxyCon. They sold it to doctors and doctors sold us to their patients on the false claim. It was non-addictive. It was very addictive.
What happened next? Well, drive through upstate New York sometime. You can see the human carnage.
Ultimately, Purdue Pharma faced a barrage of lawsuits and then criminal charges.
In the end, however, not a single executive from that or any other drug company ever went to jail.
So no one was ever really punished for all those deaths, hundreds of thousands of deaths.
Well, for a brief moment, it seemed possible that somebody would be punished.
No one remembers this, but during the Democratic primaries in 2019, Kamala Harris, of all people,
described pharma executives as, quote, nothing more than some high-level
dope dealers who should, quote, be held accountable.
Then a few months later, she went further than that.
Harris suggested the drug companies were so evil they might produce a COVID vaccine that wound
up hurting people.
Quote, if Donald Trump tells us we should take it, I'm not taking it, Harris said.
And then other Democrats, including Andrew Cuomo, then the governor of New York, said the
very same thing.
But here's the amazing part.
The second Joe Biden took office, talk like that stopped immediately.
never has a tune changed faster.
Kamala Harris, who as months before,
had called drug companies dope dealers,
suddenly sounded like the chief marketing officer at Pfizer.
At one point, Harris announced
that volunteers would go, quote,
door to door to promote Pfizer's products.
Never in our history have federal officials
touted a publicly held company
more aggressively than the Biden administration touted Pfizer.
And as a result, Pfizer stock price exploded.
Its executives made billions.
Gone was any suggestion
that drug companies might be capable
of doing anything wrong ever.
Instead, the media and the Biden administration
lauded farmer executives
as moral heroes.
And some of their products are lifesaving.
That is true.
But the bigger truth we are now learning
is more complicated than that.
In just the past few weeks,
serious, very serious questions
have emerged about some of the most widely prescribed drugs
in America, very much including the COVID-
vaccines. But we want to begin
tonight with what in any normal period would be
front-page news around the world.
It turns out the entire
premise behind the most commonly
prescribed antidepressant drugs
appears to be completely wrong.
These drugs are known as SSRIs.
They're ubiquitous.
Between 1991 and
2018, total SSRI
prescriptions in the U.S. rose by more
than 3,000 percent.
The number of prescriptions
for the most common SSRI,
hit 224 million last year.
224 million prescriptions in a country of 330 million people.
In other words, you know dozens of people who are taking SSRIs.
You may be taking them right now.
And yet for decades, there have been strong indications
that there is a problem with these drugs.
And the most obvious is this.
Antidepressants are supposed to cure depression.
That's why they're prescribed.
And yet, over the same period that SSRI prescribes,
have risen 3,000 percent, the suicide rate, maybe the most reliable indicator of all of depression,
has not fallen in the United States. In fact, the suicide rate has jumped by 35 percent. That's a huge
increase. That's a lot of dead people. Now, drug makers admit that their products may be part of the
reason for the increase in suicide. The makers of Prozac, for example, concede that young people
who take that drug have an increased risk of suicide compared to those who took a placebo.
Think about that for a second.
A drug that's supposed to make you less sad
may make it more likely that you will kill yourself.
How is that allowed?
Well, it's been allowed because virtually no one has said a word about it.
One person who did say something about it a long time ago
was the actor Tom Cruise.
All the way back in 2005, he had a very famous appearance on the Today Show.
You may remember it. Here it is.
Here we are today where I talk out against drugs.
and psychiatric abuses of electric shocking people,
okay, against their will, of drugging children
with them not knowing the effects of these drugs.
Do you know what Adderall is?
Do you know Ritalin?
Do you know now that Ritalin is a street drug?
Do you understand that?
Aren't there examples and might not Brook Shields
be an example of someone who benefited from one of those drugs?
All it does is mask the problem, Matt.
And if you understand the history of it, it masks the problem.
That's what it does.
That's all it does.
you're not getting to the reason why.
There is no such thing as a chemical imbalance.
Drugs aren't the answer.
These drugs are very dangerous.
They're mind-altering antipsychotic drugs.
And there are ways of doing it without that
so that we don't end up in a brave new world.
So Cruz said a few things.
One, maybe you shouldn't trust the pharma companies
and just hand your children whatever they're producing
and hope for the best.
Two, there's no such thing as a chemical imbalance in your brain that causes depression.
He said that.
And three, these drugs mask the real problems.
You're suffering for a real reason that drugs can't fix.
Provocative statements.
How did the country respond to this?
Well, everyone in the media agreed.
Tom Cruise is crazy.
He's an occult.
Shut up!
A lot of people thought that.
We may even have thought that.
But then more information.
kept coming out that made Tom Cruise look a little less crazy.
In 2015, researchers from the scientific journal BMJ found that, quote,
some birth defects occur two to three and a half times more frequently, a lot more frequently,
among the infants of women treated with SSRIs early in pregnancy.
Wow, that's a huge problem, ignored.
In the same journal in 2020, researchers found that, quote,
post-SSRI sexual dysfunction is underrecognized and can be debilitating both psychologically and physically.
Well, that's kind of a problem, too.
If it steals your sex drive, maybe it's stealing your soul.
No, ignore it. Only cult members care.
Then last year, researchers in Sweden found that, quote,
there may be an increased hazard of violent crime during SSRI medication
in a small group of patients.
It may exist across age groups and throughout treatment periods,
and it possibly persists for up to 12 weeks after treatment discontinuation.
So even after you stop taking the drugs,
you may be impotent, infertile, violent.
But at least the drugs cure the chemical imbalance in your brain
that causes your depression.
That was the selling point.
What a great piece of marketing.
You've got a chemical imbalance in your brain.
You need these drugs.
And so hundreds of millions of prescriptions every year for these drugs.
Well, in what seemed like news to us,
last week we learned that actually SSRIs don't.
cure a chemical imbalance in your brain. So the acronym SSRI stands for selective
serotonin re-uptake inhibitor. The theory was, has been for 30 years, that depressed
people have an imbalance of serotonin in their brains. They have a chemical imbalance.
If you give them more serotonin, then they become less depressed and happy. They're less
likely to kill themselves, right? But it turns out that serotonin deficiencies are not
the reason people get depressed. That's not just
guess, it's now officially science.
This new finding comes from University
College London. Just completed a
long and huge study on the relationship
between depression and serotonin.
It was published in the journal molecular psychiatry.
Here's what the lead author
of that study, Joanna Moncrief, said about
the findings. Quote, I think we can
safely say, after a vast amount
of research conducted over several decades,
there is no convincing
evidence that depression is caused by
serotonin abnormalities, particularly
by lower levels or reduced
activity of serotonin.
What?
That was the whole premise
of the drug which virtually
the entire American population
was taking on
their doctor's advice.
And by the drug companies made billions
off those drugs.
So first we were told that SSRIs would
save lives. Now we
learn they don't actually work as
intended. In fact, the whole idea behind
the drug was completely wrong.
And yet, and here's the best part,
People are ignoring this news and the drugs are still being prescribed.
How can that happen in a country based on science?
Well, as it turns out, and this is the real point, that happens all the time.
On this channel, just the other day, Tony Fauci, no less than,
Tony Fauci admitted in public that actually we have no idea what effect the COVID vaccines
might have on women's fertility, on their menstrual cycles.
Wait a second.
Remember one suggesting that could get you back?
bounced off of Twitter and Facebook
as a conspiracy theorist?
Well, it turns out it's true.
Here's Tony Fauci.
There's been a number of studies.
New York Times just did one about
menstruating cycles
and how that is affected by vaccines.
Yeah.
Well, the menstrual thing
is something that seems to be quite
transient and temporary.
That's the point. That's one of the points.
We need to study it more.
Oh, we need to study it more.
We need to study more.
It's just like human fertility,
reproducing the species,
the most important event in most people's lives.
We need to study it more.
Oh, but it's too late.
We just forced millions of women to take that drug.
Sorry.
So how did they release a vaccine
and then make it mandatory
when they didn't understand
the long-term effects of the drug?
And there we go.
So that was Tucker Carl.
And by the way, you see why Tiger Carlson is no longer on mainstream media because he doesn't give a damn.
He calls out like it is.
But I feel like as he was talking, he was talking about me because at early adult age, I was diagnosed with ADHD.
And for all of you that know me, you know that I have ADDD.
It's hard for me to come out with words.
Well, and I'm also dyslexic too, which is why I, you know, cannot perform like normal people.
It's hard for me to come out with words, blah, blah, blah, but I used to be on Adderall.
Yep.
It helped tremendously, but it made me very agitated.
And it is a street drug now, by the way.
Yeah.
I mean, it is.
There's so many of these kids nowadays that want to get their hands on Adderall.
They call them Zaps.
And, you know, even a lot of the mainstream YouTubers, they talk about Adderall or Zaps.
What's his name?
Well, the Nelk Boys guy that used to be on the Nelk Boys.
And a lot of these people talk about these.
Like it's a cool thing to do.
It'll hype you up.
Adderall is nothing more than cocaine basically or meth in a prescribed manner.
But while I was on it, I had the extended release Adderall.
And then like about 3 o'clock, I did a little salt thing to bump it up or whatever
because it would like fall and then I would be sleepy.
It did not make you very nice, though.
Yeah, Chad hated when I was on Adderall, but I was able to focus on one thing at one time.
Now that I'm not on it, I'm still like all over the place, which does cause anxiety and depression.
Therefore, that's why I went to the doctor.
It got so hard for me to even function in my daily life because I cannot put my brain on one thing at a time.
I felt suicidal, honestly.
And that's why I got back on Simbolta and Willeytron.
Yeah.
Now, there's one thing I want to say, and I'll make it very clear.
I mean, I think the medications that you're on has helped you.
as far as your ability to, I don't know.
I mean, there's been things, I guess, that, you know,
some of your ups or some of your higher ups
or your really low downs, it has kind of leveled those off.
But, and I do think, though, and, you know,
this is actually also what the paper says and the study says,
is like there's a lot of people out there,
tons of people that get sad.
I mean, and by the way, being sad and getting depressed
is a normal thing.
I mean, it is, it is sad. It's okay to be depressed.
Temporary.
Yeah.
But if you have certain, probably certain things that you jump off the handle too fast, or you have these very like almost like manic things that happen.
Well, it's almost like impulsive.
You know, people that are impulsive like me, you know, you just jump and you don't think.
I'm very impulsive.
Yeah.
And I used to be a lot more impulsive.
I am, I still am, by the way.
I mean, I still have those moments.
So I still have those times.
You know that and whatever.
But yes, I think there's something there.
But the problem that I believe we're having is we are way over prescribing these SSRIs to people that do not need them.
I think there is a fine line of who needs them and who does not.
But.
And we're not.
I don't even know if I do need them.
But all I know is when I don't have them, I am so depressed.
All I want to do is cry.
Well.
Because of the underlying.
issues going on within me.
You know, just the ability to concentrate on one thing.
And, you know, not to be so impulsive.
And then when I get so impulsive, I focus on this thing only.
And this is the end of the world.
And I can't focus on anything else.
This is, you know, a lot of people feel these way, this way.
Yeah.
Well, and I think the big problem here is, and this is what we need to talk about.
And that's why I tell you guys, by the way, that if you're on SSRIs,
do not just go and get off of them tomorrow because that's not necessarily what we're saying.
The problem here is that I do believe 100%, and especially according to the study,
which you guys can find it, the BMJ Journal of Medicine, the SSRI study.
And if you look on Google and you look at articles, these are opinionated or opinion pieces articles
that these journalists that write these articles that try to debunk this study.
I mean, this is a major psychiatric study by psychiatrist, by biochemist.
I mean, it was a very well done, well thought out, and well regulated and organized study.
This is something that they all agreed on.
It showed it based on placebo, non-plicebo, all of this stuff.
It had all the peer review that you want to have.
It had all of the control groups that you wanted to have as far as the amount of people that were in this study.
These are all the things that we always heard about in COVID when they tried to deny anything that went against the vaccine, although the vaccine itself never had any of the things that they always held a standard to anything else, right?
So, for example, vitamin D that could actually stop you from having inflammation in lungs or it could actually prevent you from getting COVID or even the whole deal as we talked to Peter McCola about hydroxychloroquine, zinc, all of it.
Yeah, all of this stuff.
You know, you saw how Joe Rogan got canceled because they said he was taking horse paste, right?
And, you know, these are all the things that Big Pharma want to do.
They want to cloud the actual information and the facts, and they want to cloud it with whatever they say and the media runs with and the government stands behind because there's a reason why Kamala Harris, as Tucker Carlson was saying in this, Kamala Harris, before the vaccine was out,
was saying, oh, yeah, there's no way I trust Big Pharma and all this. They're drug dealers.
They're legalized drug dealers or this or that. Andrew Cuomo, same thing. As soon as Biden got
in the White House, they change your tone. Well, you've got to ask yourself, well, why did they change
your tone? It's because do you know how much money is going into the pockets of these people
from these pharmaceutical companies? Oh, absolutely. And also, do you know how much money these
pharmaceutical companies are funding in their presidential campaigns? There are all of these things,
and it's one of the very similar things we talked about
on the Biden-Crime family on the earlier episode.
It is, and also, by the way, to be fair,
we talked about that with DeSantis,
and that's some questionable things
as far as some of where DeSantis' money is coming from.
You have to look at where the money's coming from,
and you have to know if the money's coming from here, here,
then they're more than likely going to side on that side,
whether it's big pharma, whether it's a military-industrial complex,
if you have someone that's heavily funding a president or a presidential campaign, say from Lockheed Martin or say from Raytheon or say from any of these military industrial complex companies,
well, you're probably going to be more war than you would be if that they were not controlling whatever president you had in office.
This is just the way things go. Money controls all. And money is the root of all evil. There's a reason why that saying is out there. We've heard this our entire lives.
money is the root of all evil. And it is because there's something that the Bible talks about,
that God talks about, that talks about greed. And greed is one of the things that is almost one of the
heinous and one of the worst things someone, a character trait that someone can have is greed.
And the reason for that is because when you have greed, your soul, it's like you lose your soul
for the money.
It doesn't matter what you would normally do if you never had access to this money.
If you were poor or broke or whatever, you might think a completely different way.
But as soon as you have millions and millions and millions of dollars coming at you, somehow so many people's souls just vanish.
And they don't give a damn about...
And by the way, a lot of people don't care about the truth either.
No, a lot of people will tell themselves whatever they've got to tell themselves to make themselves feel better as long as they're getting that money.
And it doesn't matter what the case is.
This is how the world works is money.
And Big Pharma and military industrial complex and all these other ones, this is who is
controlling our world.
This is the control in our country.
And this is who is controlling our health.
And that is a major issue.
If no one saw that during the COVID pandemic, I don't know where it's going to be seen.
But just Tucker mentioning, I think, out of 3 million people, 2 million people are on
SSRIs. That's like over...
300 million people and 200-something million prescriptions, yeah.
But it was over like two-thirds of the population are on these things.
Sounds like it. Yeah.
You know, everyone I know are on antidepressants. I'm just saying that.
Yeah, now, the reason why we talked about MK. Ultra, by the way,
and because, you know, when you talk about the amount of Americans that are on these prescriptions,
now this article says 37 million Americans, but, you know, if you actually look at the amount of
prescriptions. Now it could be double prescriptions. It could be whatever. So it may not be actually
200 million. But regardless of the fact, we have a lot of people on this. The reason why we talked about
MK Ultra was M.K. Ultra was a, and we've talked a lot about M.K. Ultra on our podcast,
on our previous podcast. But M.K. Ultra was a clandestine CIA project that was conducted on
unwitting U.S. citizens and military, and military guys, that basically assessed the use of
dangerous drugs for mind control and psychological torture.
And so the U.S. has evil pharmacists and insidious psychiatrist who tests illegal drugs on unwitting
citizens.
It happened in the past.
It's happening now.
This is what we're seeing now.
This is what we're seeing now with SSRIs.
I believe it's what we're seeing with opioids.
One of the main points that Tucker just made as far as the opioid pandemic, you know,
you had these, these pharma companies that were saying that there was, oh, there was no addiction.
you're not going to get addicted to this.
You're not.
And yet oxycontin, obviously they know how addicting the drug that they made was.
Oxycontin is one of the most addictive opioids on the market.
And it's still being prescribed to this day.
But it's really hard to get it.
It's hard to get it.
But what they're going to do is when they lose money here, they're going to put money somewhere else, right?
I mean, you know, and we'll talk about the dog in a minute because that pisses me off really bad too.
Our dog in particular.
But the only difference now from the past is that we have over, well, I don't know, according to Tucker, over 200 million potential people, 150 million people, mental patients trying to function in the real world.
Instead of just as captive guinea pigs in a straightjacket and a hidden laboratories, which is what M.K. Ultra was.
Now, you see, M.K. Ultra was top secret because it involved abusive, torturous methods of prescribing experimental psychotropic drugs, including,
including LSD to see how patient behaviors would change and try to control their thoughts,
memories, and actions.
Now, some people say that the Aurora Batman theater mass shooter James Holmes, which we
remember from Colorado.
Yeah.
He actually was in the movie theater that I used to go to all my life growing up.
So this is crazy, close to me.
Yeah.
Well, a lot of people say he was a product of M.K.
Ultra as he was high on an antipsychotic drugs and may have just been.
shoved into the theater during the mayhem to believe he was the shooter.
How many Americans feel that every day of their lives right now because they're prescribed
anti-psychotic, anti-depression, anti-exiety drugs that alter their brain chemistry and
overload them with artificially induced serotonin?
How many people feel like they are not themselves?
How many people feel like the reality is different than maybe what it was once?
I think a lot of people are feeling that way for many different reasons.
But all of these millions of people,
could possibly be feeling that way.
Mind control experiments are going on right now
on 37 plus million Americans, according to this article,
because the entire premise of the diagnosis
and the effectiveness of the drugs
is based on a conspiracy theory
that all these people have chemical imbalances in their brains.
MK Ultra experiments lasted 20 years
from 1953 to 1973,
and the details of the entire illicit program
became public two years later,
thanks to a congressional investigation and to the highly corrupt CIA.
Now, talk about a war on drugs.
This is unbelievably horrid.
This is something obviously that M.K. Ultra was a mind control psychotropic experiment,
regardless of at that time it was LSD and some other things.
God knows what else they tried.
But in many ways, many people believe this SSRI push is another government experiment on the population.
And think about what Tucker says.
And if you want to talk about mind or not mind control, but population control, you lose your ability to want to have sex.
It does affect your menstrual cycles and what it appears to be your fertility.
Think about the COVID vaccine and how it affects fertility.
We know that Bill Gates and others have talked about they want to control population.
And then you have people like Elon Musk that says, like, this world is not nearly as populated as it should be.
So is this a giant conspiracy?
Well, I think it is.
There are a reason that people meet at the World Economic Forum all the time to discuss this.
And I think like Tucker had a very good point about the SSRIs is there's an underlining condition going on to cause this depression.
In my story, I feel like it's that, you know, ADHD where I have trouble focusing on one thing.
And if I can't do that, it's just, you know, you're all over the place and it's really hard to live like that.
No, I agree.
So, you know, you either do something about it or you don't.
You know, to me, I feel like what I'm on, it does help me kind of be even kill.
I'm not, yeah, I'm more balanced.
I'm not up and down all over the place.
I'm calm.
I don't think it's really turned my personality into something.
somebody I'm not.
No.
But it has affected my sex drive.
And I told you that before I even got on it.
But thank God, our sex drives are even now.
Okay.
Anyways.
So it works out for you and I.
No.
But no, I mean, it is something that I believe that it, I think it has helped you.
But I also remember back to the time that I was going to kill myself.
And I remember my zero lack of.
of giving a damn about what the outcome of after I potentially did that was.
And it was a very tough time of my life.
I suffered more on antidepressants than the SSRIs than without them, by far.
And the underlining issue with you was your family life, basically.
That was what you were trying to treat.
With me, I think I'm trying to treat the lack of focus that I have.
And that lack of focus causes me extreme anxiety and depression.
Yeah. No, you're right. So I want to play another clip for you guys, and we're going to talk about this. It's a pretty short clip, but I want you to hear this. This is Alex Jones and RFK Jr. both agree the SSRI drugs are the real cause of a lot of the stuff that's going on in this world right now. Now, this is from a clip from a little while back from Alex Jones and RFK Jr. And then we'll also play a recent clip of RFK Jr. Now, obviously, RFK Jr. is running for president. He has a day.
nephew of JFK, and he is the son of Robert F. Kennedy, I believe. And so he's been very outspoken as far as the
vaccine. He was actually at a committee hearing recently about the vaccine and how the mandates
and how we don't know anything about the vaccine and what the long-term side effects are going to be.
Of course, liberals on the left during this hearing, which I wish we could play you some of this,
but they flipped out because they gave them a little more time to talk.
They couldn't stand here in another word he had to say because these people are all funded
and all just in this mass mind control of the big pharma companies.
They cannot stand to hear truth.
They hate to hear this.
We have a little bit of pushback for the American people.
And when I say, and not just American people, this affects the world.
We have to make some type of pushback against this because if we don't, eventually,
These mandates that we saw during COVID are going to be mandates, period.
We're moving faster and faster towards a world ID.
I've actually saw articles on this today.
I know the World Economic Forum has been talking about this.
They want a world ID system.
They want a systems where if you do not have this world ID or if you do not have this,
even the CBDCs they want to say, I mean, they're literally saying, this is not a conspiracy theory.
The CBDCs, they want to implant into hands to where you just scan it in your hand.
And that's how you are able to pay for any of your goods.
These are all things that are currently underway and happening.
This is happening in and around the World Economic Forum.
The World Health Organization is behind a lot of this as well.
United Nations.
There's a lot of these organizations that are really behind this.
But I want to play you what Alex Jones and RFK Jr. both had to say.
It's about three or four minutes, but check this out.
How about Prozac?
You know the number one.
Oh, that's the big sponsor, isn't it?
or that whole class of drugs.
Let me ask you quick.
Oh, whoa, got to cut that off, don't you?
Don't want to talk about the U.S. number one cause of death is suicide now
because they give people suicide, mass murder pills.
Your answer is get more money of a psychiatrist and psychologist
to put more crazy people on drugs that make them kill people, Pierce.
Let's try and have a debate here.
My policy is going to be to figure out ways to protect these children.
We cannot have any more school shootings.
And, you know, one of the things, you know,
Even if that means protecting schools the same way to protect airlines.
You don't get shootings on airlines anymore.
If we have to do that, we have to protect our children.
The other thing we need to look at is the other reasons why this may be happening in our country.
And, you know, I've gotten ridiculed for saying that we need to look at the issue of the SSRIs.
But it's one of the issues we need to look at.
We need to look at video games.
We need to look at the way that social media,
affecting people's behaviors, and do the scientific studies that are required for that.
There has never been a time in human history when the strangers would walk into a room of children
and begin shooting people. What happened? We had guns when I was a kid. I went to the school
where we had a gun club in the school, and kids would come with their rifles to school.
and nobody was
nobody even imagined
that somebody would go in that school
and start their shooting children
there's other countries
that have almost as many guns as we do
like Switzerland
that don't have school shootings
so what is going on here
the last school shooting in Switzerland
was 21 years ago
we have school shootings every 21 hours
one of the things we need to look at
our SSRIs
there is one study that shows that at least
23%
of school shootings
have involved
that the shooter was at the time or prior or before was on SSRIs.
And if you look at the label, the manufacturing, the insert,
were these drugs, they say on them,
homicidal and suicidal ideation and action.
So it's not insane to say we should look at this.
Something changed in our country that started this.
and it's not the guns.
Because we've always had the guns.
Something else happened and we need to be looking
and that's the function of NIH.
This is the biggest health threat
in our country these shootings.
NIH is supposed to be doing
science and actually looks
at the cause. The problem is it doesn't
want to do anything that will
offend the pharmaceutical industry.
So they will not even
do a genuine study and it's hard
for the public or the press to figure it out.
because of the HIPAA laws, you can't get that information on these shooters.
But NIH can get the information, but it won't do it because it does not want to offend the pharmaceutical companies.
And we ought to at least be looking at that.
Yeah, so that's the RFK Jr. and Alex Jones talked about specifically.
Now, Alex Jones, on the beginning of that clip, he was on Pierce Morgan to where that was a gun debate.
Pierce Morgan has always been huge against guns in America.
Alex Jones went on there some years back and really pretty much laid it to Pierce Morgan.
And then RFK Jr. is just simply saying that, you know, when he was growing up, they had gun clubs.
They brought their guns to school.
Yes, I remember not me personally, but like I know family members of mine that had went to school, they had gun racks in the back of your trucks.
You know, you're from the mountains.
This is what you did.
You can bring guns on campus in your truck.
They'd be racked right there on your truck window.
But yes, there is something that changed from when kids wanted to go in and kill other kids to now.
Obviously, that is a huge thing and it has to do something mentally.
I mean, it's the same reason.
And this is not the same debate, but it's the same reason why so many people are asking the question about autism.
And where did autism come from?
How did it start? When did it start?
You know, it's the same thing as when we talked about, you know, back in the 90s and or really not even 90s, but 80s and 70s, I think there was, you know, 8 to 10 vaccinations for your kid.
And earlier on, there was even less.
And now, you know, if you got every available 30 to 60 available vaccinations, right?
And now there's a autism rates are higher than ever been.
Yeah. And now I see on my own Facebook page, like every time I get.
on Facebook, which is rarely, because I don't like Facebook, but always what's coming up now
is supposedly mothers that took Tylenol while they were pregnant has caused autism.
Another way of, you know, saying drugs alter things.
Yeah, you're right.
You know, drugs do alter things. Food alters things. You know, I don't know. It's just all,
it's just crazy to me. What's going on in our world? Because I'm going to tell you.
you 20 years ago, we didn't even know what autism was.
Today, it's like one in five people have autism at some part of the spectrum.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, and yeah, autism is a different thing because I remember, you know, growing up in school and we had specialized classes for a handicap or what they would call, uh, well, that's the bad word.
Well, they said mentally retarded.
That's what they used to call kids.
retarded.
Yeah.
And so you would see the kids coming down the hall sometimes.
You would have these people guiding them or whatever.
But that was different.
These were not autistic kids.
These were retarded based on whatever.
It could be in genetic.
It could have been whatever.
Whatever the case may have been for that particular instance.
But, you know, if you look back, but if you look back, I mean, there's been studies looking back, you know, 60, 70, 80, 90 years ago and seeing the level of even retardation
among kids was almost none back then and compared to now. Obviously, it is something that is in our
system of life that is causing this. And, you know, we're getting a little off topic, but regardless,
SSRIs are affecting the chemical imbalance. I think it's causing chemical imbalances in people's brains.
And especially even more so, you know, the big question here is, many of the psychiatrists agree
what happens when you give someone that doesn't have an imbalance or doesn't have something,
type of high or low manic type thing going on, whether it be bipolar, whether it be some of these
other things, what happens when you give someone that doesn't have those, this, right?
Does it make you more bipolar?
Does it make you more down or more, you know, whatever the case is?
And it seems like that could be very well potential.
I mean, that could be very well the cause of some of these school shootings.
Now, many parents believe that big drug companies have evidence that their risk of suicide with
psychotropic drugs are extremely high on psychotropic drugs.
And Big Pharma knows that selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors or SSRIs.
They know they pose serious risk or potentially inducing homicidal or suicidal behavior,
but they downplay these results completely.
Now, they have admitted, as Tucker said,
they have admitted that these suicidal or even potentially homicidal tendencies do exist.
They have admitted it because they can't not admit that.
they have somewhere seen this in their studies that this could potentially cause homicidal feelings or suicidal feelings, right?
So on the homicidal thing, we're going to talk about the school shootings.
We're going to talk about the gun debate, right?
Well, I want to play one more clip to you guys, and this is on the antidepressants in school shootings.
This specifically talks about this, and I think this is very important, and we'll wrap this up in just a second.
This is 911. Who is this?
Where is your sister? What is she trying to do? Take pills?
What?
My dad told him now.
Our beautiful little girl, Candice, died by hanging four days after ingesting 100 milligrams of Zoloff.
Matt violently and with great difficulty took his own life.
She ended the night by cutting her wrist.
I found Jacob hanging from the rack.
in our attic. It wasn't the disease that caused my daughter to viciously mutilate herself.
It was the drug. These parents believe that drug companies had evidence there was a risk,
but never told them. I'd like to introduce you to my daughter, Caitlin Elizabeth McIntosh.
Well, it's actually only a two-dimensional image of her, but it's all I have left. She died of
suicide at age 12 years, three months, just eight weeks after being put on Paxil,
and then Zoloft.
Our daughter, Julie, had been excited about college,
and it had scored 1,300 in her SAT
several weeks before her death.
Instead of picking out colleges with our daughter,
my wife and I had to pick out a cemetery clot for her.
Instead of looking forward to visiting Julia's school,
we now visit her grave.
On September 9, 2001,
in a state of confusion and hopelessness,
I put a 38th special
Smith-and-West revolver under my chin and pulled the trigger.
I went from being a shy and mildly depressed,
but never suicidal kid.
to being overcome with thoughts of hurting and killing myself while on the SSRI drugs,
thoughts which I acted on.
He told me, I cannot stand the way this drug makes me feel.
Two days later, he committed suicide.
How do you erase the picture of your child trying to run in front of a moving car?
Would you people put your children on this drug?
Would you take it yourselves?
A lot of the people who spoke this morning,
the picture that was presented of their child or someone they knew was not someone
who was very, very ill. It was someone who had relatively minor type findings who were put on
these drugs with terrible consequences. Dr. David Healy is a world-renowned expert on antidepressant
drugs, and he joins me in the studio. Thanks for coming in. Hi. Thank you very much for having me.
I actually use drugs to treat people who got problems with their nerves. I used them when they
came out first, and I used them still. And GPs prescribed them in good faith because they think
these things are...
What can be harmless? Yes. In actual fact, they aren't.
What's happening is we're not just picking up people who were ill and need to be treated.
We've gone way, way beyond that and are actually making people ill.
I want to ask the question of what kind of society have we become when increasingly, it seems,
pharmaceutical companies can get drugs on the market, which haven't been shown to work,
and which have been claimed to be safe and effective when they aren't.
Oh, this is about money.
This is not about science.
pharmaceutical industry has systematically misled physicians and patients.
The bottom line, we don't really know what these drugs are doing in real live human beings.
When you look at all of the documents, you see a pattern of misleading doctors who then
unwittingly mislead patients. This is a betrayal of the public trust in physicians behind the scenes
by the industry, and it must stop.
Harvard psychiatrist Joseph Glenn Mullen consults for lawyers suing antidepressant manufacturers.
He prescribes these drugs to patients but says he closely monitors them
because he's seen extreme and dangerous reactions in some patients.
People who were not suicidal before I put them on the drug,
who very clearly became agitated, sleepless, restlessness,
and completely preoccupied with suicidal thoughts.
And when I took them off the drug, it went away.
Two years ago, 16-year-old Corey Badsguard took a rifle to his high school and held 23 classmates hostage.
Describe around that time how you were feeling.
In the morning, I just didn't feel like going to school.
I felt sick, didn't feel like really like I could get up very well.
So I went back to bed and the next thing I remember, and I'm in Juviate in the detention center where I used to live.
I had no doubt that the medication did this.
I mean, he had amnesia, you know, hallucinations earlier.
abnormal dreams, which are all side effects of the medication.
That morning, Corey was on a mix of antidepressants,
prescribed for what doctors called situational depression.
His father says the pills turn Corey from a sensitive teenage boy
to a volatile marauder, susceptible to blind rage.
He was never a violent kid.
I mean, he's always been a good kid, loved us, hugged us all.
He's never watched violent videos, and until medication, he started, you know, after that,
then we realized that he was having aggression problems.
You know, it was out of character.
At Fox News, we found the Badskard story with antidepressants compelling.
So we investigated further.
We found a disturbing number of recent school shooters were either on medication or were experiencing withdrawal.
The list includes 15-year-old Kip Kinkle, withdrawing from Prozac when he shot 22 classmates, killing two,
after murdering his mother and stepfather at his home in Springfield Or.
Oregon. 18-year-old Jason Hoffman on a Fexor and Selexa, and he opened fire at his California
high school, wounding five. 15-year-old Sean Cooper on a mix of antidepressants when he shot
students in Idaho. 15-year-old T.J. Solomon also on a mix of antidepressants when he aimed
his shotgun at classmates in Conyers, Georgia, wounding six. And 17-year-old Eric Harris
on Louvaux when he and partner Dylan Klebold killed 12 classmates and a teacher in the bloodiest school
massacre yet Columbine.
One of the things that in the past we have known about depression is that it very, very rarely
leads to violence. It's only been since the advent of these new SSRI drugs that we have
a murderous, sometimes even mass murderers taking antidepressant drugs.
What's going to happen to you when some months is.
Some years up the road, you actually tried to hold this drug.
You have the sudden electrical jolts.
Electric shock sensation.
I couldn't walk.
Incredibly fatigued.
I could hardly talk.
I used to get the shakes.
Pins and needles.
Extreme.
Vertigo.
Vertisies spills.
I fainted a couple of times.
Chest pains.
I couldn't sleep.
Stomach spasms.
Migraine headaches.
The nervousness.
Racing thoughts.
Anxiety attacks.
Heart and emotional sensitivity.
Crying spells.
I was very angry.
I was in actual physical pain from these zaps.
I mean, they just go through your whole body.
And it's not only the zaps and getting sick,
it just feels like all the panic attacks
that you've missed from taking the drug
are now bottling out of you, like, at an uncontrollable rate.
Doctors are told, oh, our drugs don't cause withdrawal.
They cost something called discontinuation syndrome,
but that's transient and mild.
Don't worry about it too much.
Physicians miss that ultimately they're the consumers,
but there's this weird market here because I consume by putting pills in your math
and you're the one who's going to have to suffer the consequences of things if they go wrong.
There you go. That was pretty nuts.
That's pretty scary because I do see a lot of that in me.
And it is kind of scary to hear like the same.
things that they were experiencing, like the zaps, the headaches.
I've had the zaps and it sucks.
Oh, it's horrible.
And I'll get them if I even miss my medicine by six hours.
Yeah, now there's some things I want to point out with this particular audio clip,
which is very, very important to point out.
Well, there's a couple things, actually.
I want to go back to Tucker Carlson for one second, right?
In the previous audio we pointed out, when Tom Cruise was on there and he was talking on
NBC, I believe it was NBC with Matt
Lauer. And this is when
you know, even though they had pushback
and Tom Cruise talked about
this deal that like you
this is bad. We should not be
doing this. You know,
we should not be putting people on this.
There's no such thing as serotonin
whatever, you know,
imbalances. Right. And what are
the long term effects on people
that take them for a long term?
Yeah. Now the beginning of this
when all of these parents in the
beginning of this last audio clip we just played you, these parents went to an FDA hearing
and it was in front of Congress to where they talked about their experiences, them losing
their kids from suicide, continual suicides. And this was back in the time when I was literally,
which I've never seen this, I mean, I played a little bit of it before the podcast, but
I knew it was going to be what we kind of wanted to talk about tonight. This was about the time
that when I was saying that Zoloft was becoming this.
massive problem among youth that people were killing themselves.
Kids were having this effect that they wanted to kill themselves.
Some of the things that the guy just talked about is like it feels like when you get off of them
or even if you forget to take them or whatever the case is, especially as a youth, all these
anxiety attacks and panic attacks, which I used to have growing up like crazy.
And I think a lot of that had to do with home life and what was going on there.
But you start taking these medications and it could definitely turn you the,
100% opposite way.
One of the things that was really insane to kind of hear was mainstream media in a lot of these
reports, even back then, about Columbine, about, I don't know how many school shootings
they just depicted, seven or eight or nine of them, to where they said that, yes, they were
on antidepressants to where they...
Or getting off them.
We're getting off of them, right?
That's a huge thing.
It's worse.
It's worse getting off of them than being on them in some points.
It can be.
Yeah.
And so if you don't know that it.
if your kid is on or off of them,
or if they're taking their medication,
if they're not,
if they're not taking their medication,
it completely F's your mind.
But that should tell you that it is a,
obviously a chemical that is going into your body
that is not natural that could make you do violent things.
It could make you cause you to go into a school and hold it hostage,
like the one kid that was talking about.
Like, I don't need,
he didn't even remember,
no,
but the kid,
the kid that went and held his classroom hostage.
He didn't even remember any of that.
He said I woke up in Juvie and then I was like, what the hell?
Like, where am I at?
What am I doing?
Yeah, and I've seen many, many cases like that before.
And the thing is, is like a lot of these school shooters, for example, you know, you got to think about, you know, if most of, and according to many experts, and RFK Jr.
And so many others that have studied this, even back in this report in the early 2000s, they were talking about the connection between SSRIs and school shooters.
Well, and homicide.
Yeah, and what's what I'm saying.
Suicide and homicide.
Way back before it even got as big it is now.
Yeah.
But that's what I'm saying is then the mainstream media covered it.
They actually covered it.
They did their jobs like they were supposed to do.
And they pointed out that here's the connections.
Here's what happened.
The parents are coming forward and saying, well, he got on this and this is what happened.
He got on this.
This is the problem.
This is the problem.
It's not guns.
It's not video games.
Like RFK Jr.
It's like we got to look at video.
It's not even that.
Yeah.
We had violent video games back in a day.
Yeah, but you've got to think about these kids that are getting on the SSRIs or whatever.
These kids, you know, a lot of times they're going through bad family stuff.
Maybe they're being bullied at school.
Maybe there's other things going on.
And, you know, doctors are trying to help them like sort through it to make it not so.
extreme, I guess, because that's the only reason I got on it is because I didn't want the extremes
of the way I was feeling. I felt so bad, all I could do was cry, and I didn't know why.
You know, and I'm talking about this as an adult. And just imagine being a youth going through
these feelings. And a lot of youth, I mean, most youth, they go through a lot of hard times growing up.
Kids are mean, you know. And if they're particularly mean and picking on one child,
And the child's like, I need help.
Give me help.
You know, they put them on medicine and then they end up being mass murderers.
But I think the problem here is the big issue is that big pharma saw an opportunity to take advantage of depression, quote unquote, to push it on all the kids because they wanted to parents to believe that the kids would be saved if you just, they wanted to pull on the heartstrings of adults.
That's how they started this, right?
they started this by saying your kids are depressed.
You might have a bad home life.
You might have this.
Well, look, here's a magic potion, mom.
Well, you're not getting along with your husband or your husband is abusing you or you're
abusing your husband or whatever the case is.
We have a magic potion.
You can make that all go away.
All you got to do is take this.
That's all you got to do.
All you got to do is give this to your kid.
Don't worry about anything else.
Just give this to your kid.
And then you don't have to feel guilty about whatever the hell that you just put your kid through.
The underlying issues.
Yeah, which is the underlying issue.
But you just give this to your kid and everything will be fine.
And so obviously they saw this as a massive multi, multi, multi,
still to this day.
And multi billion, billion, billion, billion dollar industry, probably trillion dollar industry.
And they've still not stopped prescribing it.
They are going to prescribe it and push it on kids.
And by the way, I just saw a new study recently that they are approved other SSRIs or new SSRIs on kids under nine.
So now they want to push SSRIs and antidepressants on kids that are.
even potentially down to the infant level.
This is nuts what we're talking about.
And if you want to know what the problem with gun control is,
or not gun control,
but gun violence in America,
it is SSRIs, I think in a large part.
I think it has a lot to do with it,
especially on the side of white kids.
And the reason I say white kids is because many black kids are not on SSRIs,
which is why you don't typically see black kids
shooting up schools in mass shootings
and just doing this crazy off-the-wall shit out of nowhere
never had any, you know, criminal convictions, never had any of this stuff.
No, look, you still have criminals.
You still have people out there that are going to do things, both black and white,
that just, you know, that's just who they are.
You know, there are teachers that can see those early on in first, second, third,
fourth grade, the defiant kids, they remain defiant.
I remember, you know, growing up in elementary and middle school,
I knew who the defiant kids were.
And they were the most defiant that I ever saw in my.
school. And then later on, after I graduated, they're mostly in prison. A lot of them are.
Oh, and you can point them out. Yeah. Definitely. You can point kids out early on. But the fact
is, is the kids that are on these medicines and these medications, what are they causing these kids to do,
right? Yeah. And, you know, I'm just thinking personally because I'm listening to all this and
I'm like, oh my God, I'm on this stuff too. But, you know, I'm an adult. I'm not thinking about going
out in, you know, being a mass murderer of a school or anything.
I don't think that way, but my brain is way different than a child's brain or a youth's brain.
Their brains are not fully developed, right?
And so maybe that's why it affects me differently.
But in ways, it doesn't affect me differently because what am I addicted to, Chad?
What do I watch all the time?
Murder.
Oh, you do?
Yeah, I do.
I have to watch murder shows.
This is what I'm addicted to.
Maybe that's my, like, release or whatever.
I don't know.
But I don't ever think about, oh, I'm going to, you know, I want to kill myself and go murder a bunch of people.
I don't ever think that way, but murder is definitely on my brain.
Like, I enjoy watching what other people are like that.
Yeah, I don't think that, yeah.
I mean, I think you just have a, you want to know why they are like that.
Yeah, I want to know what's inside their brain and why they're like the way they are.
Yeah, so Sherry's not a murderer, by the way, guys.
She doesn't want to murder anyone.
No, definitely not.
I'm the nicest person you'll ever meet unless you mess with my husband.
Yeah, well, I'm saying my, unless you mess with me too.
We're a damn, we're a road dog team, man, you know.
We are.
Trust me.
Ask people to know us.
But regardless.
I mean, I think you're right on the, you know, in the sense of like we're pushing these medications on underdeveloped brains.
Yeah.
That the chemical structure of the brain is not even developed yet.
I mean, you know, you've got to think about there's a reason why you have laws against consent as far as minor consent, as far as what they can do with an adult, which is the whole thing about pedophilia is why adults are not allowed to have sex with kids because they do not have the mental capacity.
You either say yes or no.
Yes, they don't understand.
And by the way, I mean, I think we all know that.
We all did dumb stuff growing up.
We all did dumb stuff, you know, really up until about 25.
And the older you get, the smarter you get, the more mature you get.
And now they're pushing, not now.
They've been doing this for a while.
SSRIs on brains of kids.
And yet you wonder why there's mass shootings, violence.
And like I said, there are other circumstances.
You do have criminals.
You do have gang members.
You do have kids that grow up in the hood or trailer parks.
But we're not specifically talking about that at this time.
We're talking about what happens to kids on these medications.
I know.
I get that.
But what I'm saying is you can still have kids that shoot and kill other people that have nothing to do with SSRIs.
This is more environment-based.
Yeah, that's environment-based, which is why they don't necessarily lash out in just shooting up an entire school.
This is something that kids, you know, even like I said, when I was on this stuff and some of those testimonies from all.
all these people that they were talking about what it made them feel like as far as how it made them
feel and all this stuff. I mean, I had the worst, you know, I got on this for, I guess, partially
anxiety attacks and depression. And a lot of these medications made my anxiety a million times
worse. I mean, it made it to where I felt like I was going to jump off a damn roof because I was
miserable. I could not take it. I cannot take what I felt like inside of myself. I, I will,
that those were the, by far the worst times of my entire life. I mean,
like the way I felt mentally, the way I felt physically.
And you're about 12?
12.
I mean, it lasted for probably three or four years.
I mean, and it was horrific.
Like, I hated that feeling.
I mean, I was up all night.
I was freaking out.
I was on the porch.
I had freaking, I literally, I would never forget the feeling of feeling like you had
butterflies crawling, like flying in your skin.
Like, it was almost like the mind zaps to where if you look left or right and just
zaps your brain and your whole body fills it.
you can fill it in your chest you can fill it everywhere and that's when you're getting off medication
sometimes or something like that but this was like a whole body filling to where i felt like i wanted to
pill my skin off um it was it was the crazy experience and then um and then and then after all of this
stuff i went to another doctor um because you know we didn't have insurance of stuff growing up
we had whatever it was i don't have medicaid we have medicaid or whatever so even as an older age
I think it was 15-16, I still had to go to a pediatrician, because that's all it would pay for.
So I went to this damn pediatrician, and he put me on this medication.
And I think if I'm not mistaken or remember it to his day, it was doxifen.
I believe was the medication of what it was called.
Anyways, long story short, though, this dumb-ass doctor put me on the highest dosage possible.
And apparently this medication is one of the strongest antipsychotic medications.
you can possibly put someone on.
And so they put me on like the highest level.
Like I think the highest level in the beginning.
Yeah.
I think the highest level was like 50 milligrams.
I mean,
I could be wrong about this.
But I think it was like,
this is the difference.
So it was like 50 milligrams and you're supposed to start on five, right?
And work into this medication because it's so strong.
Right.
Yeah.
He put me on 50.
Whatever the top level was,
that's what he put me on.
And I was on this for a week and I had a overdose on it.
It was an overdose in my system.
I had convulsions.
My blood pressure was like completely dropping.
My heart rate was dropping.
I was bleeding out of some of my pores.
I was basically hemorrhaging.
I mean, I almost died that night.
EMS was there.
I was in the hospital for a few days.
I mean, it was nuts, right?
And so this is the type of shit.
And this is why like this topic is very important because parents are still doing this.
Parents are still doing this.
They're kids.
I mean, it's a same.
Same thing is like parents doing this shit to their kids with the vaccine with the COVID vaccine.
I know this.
They're trying to do what's right for their children and make it right for them.
But parents don't really understand the side effects or what could possibly happen.
But this goes back to, this goes back to you have to nowadays in 2023 be smarter about your surroundings.
You have to protect your kids like a mama bear grizzly bear.
in Alaska is going to protect their kids against the government.
Do you think that if the United States government comes out to Alaska and says,
Hey, Mama Bear, let me have your kid.
We're going to give them some shots and all this shit.
You know what that Mama Bear is going to do?
Grizzly Bear, she's going to rip your freaking face off.
And you know why?
She don't trust you for the same reason that we shouldn't trust you.
And as a mother, you have to act like a mama grizzly bear for your kids against this government.
I don't give a damn what they say.
You have to be smart.
I'm not saying that, you know, I'm not one of those people that say no pharmaceuticals are good.
Right.
I'm not saying that.
You're not an anti-vaxxer or whatever, but.
I mean, I'm starting to be because they've led me to have no choice, right?
I mean, if what they just did over the past three years is anything like what, I think it's awake in our minds to see what they've probably been doing for a long time.
And this is just a huge example.
And so, you know, if going forward, you're going to trust.
the same government, the same people to give your kids or give you, whatever does they give you,
but it's not keeping you healthy. It's keeping you sick. You know, it's not about, it's not about
curing anything. It's about the pharmaceutical is all about keeping you sick, but alive.
Right. To make more money to make more money off of you. But they also want to kill off a large
port of population because they want population control. They think that, you know, the more people
that is on the earth, the less they can control the earth.
That is 100% what they want to do.
I think the Bible talks.
I think God knows this.
I think God knows what they're doing.
I think God 100% has a plan of what's to come.
But guys, I don't know.
All I'm telling you is the SSRI thing in this particular topic is very important to me
because, you know, I went through this.
Sherry's on them.
She's went through a lot of shit with them as well.
But I'm just saying in Pacific with your kids and all this stuff,
it is very important that you understand.
and very much research anything you put your kids on that pharmaceutical companies are doing.
I'm going to say one last thing.
We had mentioned this on the podcast earlier with the Biden crime family.
But we had talked about this earlier, but it goes back to the same thing we're talking about right now.
You know, our dogs got fleas like three weeks ago from whatever reason.
And, you know, and I want to preface this with this.
our last beagle, which we had, was it four years ago, I guess, four or five years ago.
River was in the name.
So we had saw this beagle, you know, he was in Ingalls parking lot.
He was in multiple parking lots around.
Walgreens everywhere.
School parking lot, you name it.
And there was this beagle looking dog that a lot of people saw him.
He used to like run in Walgreens.
He used to be in the parking lot in our grocery store.
He used to all this stuff.
At the school. Everyone was feeding this dog. Everyone was like, oh my gosh.
Trying to get this dog. But the dog was nowhere. He didn't want to get near people.
He's like, nope, I will take your food, but you're not getting near me.
And you would see this dog in pouring rain. You would see this dog and snow and sleet and everything else.
And you felt the worst for dessert. He was the cutest dog ever.
But he would not come in your car or do anything or get near you or anything.
So we got him one time. We finally got him. I think we trapped him.
Yeah, we trapped him in a cage.
Yeah, anyway, so we got him, we brought him home.
He got out.
He literally, I let him, we let him outside.
We have a fence in our backyard, and it's about a four-foot fence.
He jumped the fence.
And we were like, well, we're never going to see him again.
And we had, like, really done everything to try to take care of him.
And we were so worried.
Like, how is he going to find us way around?
What is, you know?
No. Like, the next day, he was back at the grocery store.
And we're like, you asshole, dude.
And we're like two miles from the grocery store, right?
And here we are trying to protect him, putting blankets on him, giving food, loving him, everything.
And we videoed him all the stuff.
Then a school resource officer at a local school trapped him about a week later.
And he was going to take him to the Humane Study.
Well, we had contacted him.
And so he said, well, and he lived about 13 miles away.
So he said he put the dog in this cage in his garage, right?
And so when he put this dog in the cage in a garage, I guess when the Humane Society came to get him.
this dog escaped the damn cage.
From the human society.
Yeah, so we're like, well, we're definitely never going to see him now.
Yeah, this was like 13 miles away.
So three days later, his ass is back at the grocery store.
13 miles away.
Don't know how he got back.
Have no idea.
Anyways, long story short, the third time we finally did get him.
And the reason we got him was we put something on the internet and said, if anybody sees this dog, it was on next door app or whatever.
And so someone responded.
and said he actually is in my house right now by the grocery store because my dog is in heat or whatever
it's a girl dog her chihuahua was in heat and he came right into the house yeah so we rode over
and got him and uh so then we're like we are locking down this house he is not getting out of this
shit yeah he's on locked down yes and he was the we built the best relationship with this dog ever
but it was so sweet because it was the first time he had ever been inside it's the first time he'd
learned how to go upstairs. It was the first time he learned how to get love. I mean, it was all
first for this dog. And he was the most amazing dog in the world. But he was also, he was also,
he was also the scaredest dog in the world. And, and you had to earn his love. You had to earn his
respect. You had to earn everything with this dog. But we did. And we, we were willing to do that. And we
did it for two years. And he became like our baby. I mean, Sherry and I, by the way, for those of you
don't know, we've lost two babies, right? I mean...
Well, I think three now, but we'll just leave it at that.
Well, we've lost two babies. And one of them, she had to get a DNC. So dogs have been a large
part of her life. People say that, you know, dogs are your family and dogs or whatever. But for us,
it was, it was a, you know, it was literal. It was literal because some of these dogs have got us
through, you know, really hard times. Yeah, those times when we lost kids. And so, uh,
anyways, come to find out, though, this damn dog, two.
few years later, or a year and a half later,
starts freaking out at night
for no reason. I mean, like
having these crazy experiences freaking out.
And come to find out, he had liver
failure, or no, his kidney failure. Yeah, kidney
failure. And so
we spent, it was like $5,000,
$6,000 on this dog to try to fix
him, ended up not working.
He still died.
We actually, anyways, this is depressing.
But the point is,
this was a beagle, which we loved, and it was
river. It was like our little kid. And so
then we
We decided one day, which I have regretted it a lot, that we went to get another beagle.
And it was a full bread beagle.
And we drove like two hours to get it, got the beagle, took him home.
We've had him, what, for two years now?
Yep. His name is Maverick.
Maverick.
And so we've had Maverick for two years.
And he has been a pain in the ass.
I'm not going to, I'm not going to lie.
He is a pain in the ass.
But he is very sweet and he's very loving and all that.
stuff, but he is a pain he ass. And then, but I've developed a relationship with him more and more.
And, um, and we're telling this story for a reason because I, I want to correlate this to something.
So anyways, so then he got flees three weeks ago. So this is no and everything we went through with
river, which by the way, we cried. Like that was the first thing. I don't really, like my dad died,
right? And which I had a very close relationship with. I did cry to his funeral. But I, I am not one of
those emotional people. I don't really cry. I don't really show emotion a lot. Um, I don't know why.
maybe it's the way I grew up.
But when River died, I cried.
I was sad. It was horrible.
It was something that hurt me very bad because, you know, you develop a family.
You develop a relationship with this dog for two years and save him and rescue him multiple times.
He bit me in the throat one time because he ran out.
And I caught him because I was just having to be bastard in him.
But anyways, so three weeks ago, Maverick, our new Beagle gets fleas, right?
and they got so bad.
We have to do something.
We went to the vet.
We researched all this stuff.
Well, there was a flea pill,
which my mom gives her dog,
and we got him this flea pill.
Now, some of the flea pill medicine brands,
some of these brands,
people are like,
this killed my dog.
This did this, this did that, right?
There was these brands.
But this particular brand,
which is Brevecto,
they had pretty decent reviews.
And I was like, okay, we'll try this.
Although in their stuff,
it does say it can cause,
neurological and seizures on some of the cases.
What blah blah?
Well, anyways, Maverick has been having seizures for four days now.
And it's like, you know, it's bad enough for him to have seizures, but it's also bringing back the times of river for me.
And so we're not sleeping well.
Like, for example, I have to tell this story, Chad.
This morning, I think at 5 o'clock, Chad woke me up.
He's like, Sherry, you just got to put a hand on Maverick.
You got to film to make sure.
because when he starts the seizures, he starts shaking.
And that's how you know why, because I randomly woke up.
I think it was like 4.45.
Yeah, and Chad woke me up and I'm like, oh, my God, I was so, like, deep in sleep.
But my head was heavy.
He's like, you got to put your hand on him to make sure he doesn't have a seizure.
This is like 445 or whatever.
I'm like, okay.
So I kind of wake up.
I'm like, okay, I'm going to turn around.
I'm going to put my hand on him.
Chad has his hand on him, blah, blah, blah.
And not freaking 30 minutes later, he had a seizure.
He did, yeah.
Like, Chad, sensed it.
It was so weird.
That was strange.
I don't know why.
And at least that we were awake and knew that he was having the seizures so that we could be there for him.
Because, you know, because it's really scary.
I don't know if any of you guys have ever experienced, like, seizures with humans or pets.
But it's a really, it's really a scary experience.
Absolutely, yeah.
And it's scary for the person that's having the seizure or the dog that's having the seizure.
And, you know, they don't know where they are.
Are they just like their brain is zapped?
Yeah.
But the reason I want to bring this up and this whole entire thing up.
Now, the river, our first beagle, that died of liver failure or sorry, kidney failure.
Yeah.
That was uncontrollable.
There's nothing we could have done about that.
Apparently it was something that he was born with, which may be why someone left him on the side of the road, probably when he was a baby because he had been out there for a while.
But, you know, from my standpoint is, you know, when we decided to give this, Sherry and I went back and forth.
And I was like, I really don't want to give this dog this.
Even though he had fleets, he was miserable with that.
And I was like, I don't want to give this dog this.
But I know this.
The only thing we can probably do to like stop this.
Because we did everything.
Sherry was doing everything for weeks before.
I was putting salt and baking soda on the carpet.
We were constantly combing him with flea medicine.
We're doing shampoos.
We did everything.
Flea dips, you know.
We even did the like stuff on their neck.
That didn't work.
Nothing worked.
But it was one of those things to where we were like, you know, I was, I'm always.
I mean, you can ask you.
I'm always, like, cautious about everything.
Yeah, I don't...
Chad's going to research anything we do.
Yeah, and I'm just like, I don't know if I am comfortable with this.
I don't know if I want to give him this, and we're like, we both concluded.
We got to do this.
I'm like, we have to.
He's miserable.
And then, of course, of course, he gets seizures.
Two weeks later, he has seizures from these pills.
Yeah.
And a lot of these people said that a lot of these seizures from when they took this medication was
happened about two or three weeks later.
And a lot of these people also said it lasted for a life.
They never got rid of it. It completely ruined their dog's life. And so the reason I want to say this is it sucks because, you know, this, our dogs are like my kids. I don't have a kid. I mean, you have a kid, which is my stepdaughter. And I love and care about her as well, obviously. But this is like my kids. This is who we're here with every day. And so I want to, the only correlation I can give any of you that has kids, right, that has kids in your household that you are thinking about giving them this or giving them.
Now, just understand that that one thing or that one, whatever you heard or whatever it is could change the course of their entire life.
Oh, listen to you.
And it could change the course of your entire life as well.
Absolutely.
And listen, I, you know, because we had another dog, Maddox, he took some kind of type vaccination and messed him up.
We were in the emergency room with him.
He's on steroids.
Now he's like a 500-pound dog in human life.
I find out.
He is from the, you know, all the steroids and stuff.
And he's been that way since.
Yeah.
And he's just lived a miserable life because of it.
So after that, I was like, nope, no vaccines.
Like, I refuse to give our dogs any kind of vaccines.
They don't get rabies.
No, they don't.
Because I always, like, tell the vet.
I thought I did.
Their vet's like, oh, it's a law.
You have to have the rabies shot.
I'm like, well, he doesn't feel good.
We'll bring him in in three days when he feels better to get the.
shot. But I'm not going to bring them in because my dogs are not going to get any vaccinations.
And then here I give them a pill and now we're screwed. So that's that.
Well, it's just the point of is that guys, the same pharmaceuticals that make all this SSRI shit and then I mean, it's all pharmaceutical.
If you don't think dog pharmaceutical companies are making billions, they are, especially on flea stuff, especially those little pills that they chew and all this stuff.
All I'm telling you guys is that we are in this against.
the elites, the corporations, the people that are out there that are given out this stuff
with little to know evidence or knowledge of what may happen to either your kid or you or
your animal.
And that's all I'm saying.
We have to protect ourselves because if you are in the mindset that you believe that the
people that are in control of this government that take your hard-earned money and taxes
that basically send it to make them more money and all this bullshit, if you think
thing those people are for you and care about you or your kids or your dog or you're anything,
you are sadly mistaken.
And it's not about politics.
It's not about any of this shit.
It's about evil versus good.
It's good versus evil.
And I think, though, I still believe that good is going to prevail over evil.
But we have to have people like you.
We have to have people like us.
We have to have people that stand up and talk about this, which is why we're doing this.
And this particular SSRI thing is important to me because obviously you're on it.
I've been on it. It's infected me.
I believe probably I've had people in my life that have have suicided because of it.
And I mean, I'm sure some of you could also.
Oh, and everyone knows somebody that has committed suicide in their lives.
And I guarantee they're probably on some kind of medication.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
There's no question about that.
But guys, I think that's going to be it for us tonight.
We're going to have great episodes coming for you guys.
We're so glad we're back.
We love each and every one of you.
We care about you guys, which is why we do these episodes.
This is Kings of Summer by Aoki, featuring Quinn.
Until next time, peace out.
Peace out, guys.
Being a lot while.
