Good Cop & Bad Cop Are Best Buds
The pharmaceutical cartel owns the dietary supplement and fortified food cartel.
It’s classic Good Cop, Bad Cop.
The Bad Cop is the “mean” cop.
He’s an outright threat to your health.
The Good Cop is the “nice” cop.
He’s a sneaky threat to your health.
They’re both working for the same Boss Man — the 1%.
Eustace Mullins (Murder By Injection: The Story of the Medical Conspiracy Against America, 1988) wrote …
“Elmer Bobst, who was [Albert] Lasker’s partner in putting the American Cancer Society over the top, was also a tycoon. Unlike Lasker, Bobst had come from a poor family, but he also had the born huckster’s mentality, taken from that native American entrepreneur, P. T. Barnum, who said, ‘There’s a sucker born every minute.’ Bobst joined the drug firm of Hoffman LaRoche in 1911, where his talents as a salesman got him the presidency of the firm. He was also a shrewd businessman; just after World War I, knowing that commodity prices were bound to fall, he was shocked to find that the firm had accumulated huge inventories in the New Jersey warehouse. He quickly closed a deal with Eastman Kodak to buy five tons of bromides, a key ingredient not only of analgesics but also of photographic supplies. He offered the bromides at sixty cents a pound, ten cents below the market price. Within a few weeks, the market price had fallen to sixteen cents a pound.
“Bobst’s great achievement at Hoffman LaRoche was his advertising campaign for vitamins. It was so successful that he won the nickname of ‘the Vitamin King.’ He made millions of dollars in the stock market, and he decided to leave Hoffman LaRoche for greener pastures. In 1944, he called in Cravath, Swaine and Moore, the lawyers for Kuhn, Loeb Company, to negotiate his terms; they got him a very favorable settlement of $150,000 the first year and $60,000 a year until his seventy-fifth birthday. Having made his fortune in peddling vitamins, he now moved on to the higher-priced pills, becoming head of Warner-Lambert. This firm’s biggest product was Listerine. Gerald Lambert, no mean huckster himself, had built Lambert Pharmacal into a giant empire, principally through his relentless warnings about the perils of ‘bad breath.’ His father had invented a mouthwash, for which he appropriated the most famous name in medicine, Baron Joseph Lister, the inventor of antiseptics and asepsis in hospitals. A prominent surgeon, Baron Lister had operated on Queen Victoria herself, the only time she submitted to the knife. Gerald Lambert made his name a household word with fullpage advertisements for Listerine. Banner headlines warned that ‘Even your best friend won’t tell you.’ Lambert coined a new word for this plague, halitosis, from the Latin for bad breath.”
Hoffman-La Roche, a Swiss “global health company,” was a pioneer in manufacturing “vitamins” and their derivatives.
The first mass-marketed synthetic vitamin C (sold under the name Redoxon) was unleashed on the public in 1934.
The Swiss have zero tolerance for whistleblowers.
Stanley Adams was imprisoned for “blowing the whistle” on Hoffman-LaRoche’s vitamin price-fixing in 1975.
Redoxon is now being sold by Bayer AG, the same German pharmaceutical company that gave the world heroin and Bayer aspirin.
Eastman-Kodak was the original manufacturer of vitamin E, synthesizing it from soybean oil thanks to the powdering agents “colloidal calcium silicate, sodium silico-aluminate, finely-divided alumina, colloidal silica, and colloidal titania.”
Zinc halide is mostly used in the manufacturing of vitamin E today.
Following the saponification of soybean oil (described above), the distillation of what marketers call vitamin E results in the degradation of it — to a greater or lesser degree.
“Vitamin E” is an all-embracing “wastepaper basket” marketing term for a family of different homologues (vitamers) of tocophenols, tocotrenols, etc., all serving different bodily functions in regard to methylation sites, side chain saturation, chain-breaking qualities, substrate interactions, etc.
Pteroylmonoglutamic acid is the man-made form of folate.
Every vitamin you buy in a health food store is synthetic.
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'Good Cop & Bad Cop Are Best Buds' have 13 comments
September 21, 2015 @ 9:32 pm Atom
Ivan Illich (Toward a History of Needs, 1977, 1978) wrote …
“The credibility of the professional expert, be hescientist, therapist, or executive, is the Achilles’ heel of the industrial system. Therefore, only those citizen initiatives and radical technologies that directly challenge the insinuating dominance of disablingprofessions open the way to freedom for nonhierarchical, community-based competence.”
September 21, 2015 @ 9:33 pm Atom
Raymond Peat, Ph.D. (From PMS to Menopause: Female Hormones in Context, 1997) wrote …
“Occasionally, someone complains that they ‘don’t want to read a lot of technical stuff’ (These people prefer to do what ‘the authorities’ tell them. Where would the authorities be without them? I wouldn’t want to interfere in their relationship with the authorities, except that the system they sustain is tending to kill everyone.) […] Generally, physicians have found my writing more challenging than the average woman does, because my purpose is at odds with the medical culture, and women are realizing that much of the medical culture is at odds with them.”
September 21, 2015 @ 9:35 pm Atom
Sir Henry Thompson (Food and Feeding, Ninth Edition, 1898) wrote …
“I may here advert to a belief which appears to be widely entertained, viz. that fish contains certain elements which adapt it in an especial manner to renovate the brain, and so to support mental labour. There is no foundation whatever for this view: the value of fish to the brain-worker is due simply to the facts already referred to, viz. that it contains, in smaller proportion than meat, those materials which, taken abundantly, demand more physical labour for their complete consumption, and which without this produce an unhealthy condition of body, more or less incompatible with the easy and active exercise of the functions of the brain.”
September 23, 2015 @ 7:33 am john
Hi atom, what foods have a lot of Vit A in them ?
September 24, 2015 @ 4:58 pm Atom
Egg yolks, butter, and salmon are the best sources. (Salmon contains many beneficial nutrients despite its high omega-3 content.)
September 25, 2015 @ 7:27 am John
What’s the problem with the high omega-3 content ?
September 26, 2015 @ 9:11 am Atom
Re: What’s the problem with the high omega-3 content?
Many things are wrong with omega-3s.
For starters, omega-3s are immunosuppressive, antithyroid, antimitochondrial, lipoperoxidative, light-sensitive, inability to remember dreams, etc.
This information was suppressed by the fish oil industry, who were left hanging after the paint industry stopped using fish oil in their products.
Thereafter, it was either dump their menaden (and lately krill) into landfills or stock stores with their oil advertised as “health supplements.â€
September 24, 2015 @ 8:28 am John
Hi Atom,
the Adano prismer of love audios on Youtube, what part of it is the sonic colonic or is the whole thing the sonic colonic ?
What is the best time of day to listen to it for maximum colonic results ?
September 24, 2015 @ 5:04 pm Atom
The Fast Sperm plus the Fast Ovum equal one complete recording. Best colonic results are obtained at Large Intestine Time, Heart Time, Kidney Time, and/or Gall Bladder Time.
One year (maybe 1988?) I listened to it every day almost 24-hours a day (recommended only for fanatics like me). :o
September 25, 2015 @ 7:28 am John
What result did you experience ?
September 25, 2015 @ 5:00 pm Atom
Spiritual materialism. I received a whole bunch of goodies. :)
It’s an involved story, worthy of telling the story the next time Patrick interviews me.
Swami Nitty-Gritty warned about thinking about anything negative while listening to the Sonic Colonic.
Re: What’s the problem with the high omega-3 content?
I’m inserting this question here because your original question seems to have disappeared.
Many things are wrong with omega-3s.
For starters, omega-3s are immunosuppressive, antithyroid, antimitochondrial, lipoperoxidative, light-sensitive, inability to remember dreams, etc.
This information was suppressed by the fish oil industry, who were left hanging after the paint industry stopped using fish oil in their products.
Thereafter, it was either dump their menaden (and lately krill) into landfills or stock stores with their oil advertised as “health supplements.”
September 24, 2015 @ 8:30 am John
Hi Atom, what is your opinion about FIR saunas, safe or not ?
September 24, 2015 @ 5:16 pm Atom
It depends on the model, frequencies, temperature, dosage, proximity, electromagnetic bleed-over, etc.
FIR generates heat. NIR doesn’t. (People are routinely exposed to NIR from their TV’s remote control).
I worked at Infrared Industries, Inc., in the late 1970s, but infrared biology is mostly above my pay grade. :)