Title: FDA-approved drug turns ordinary people into obedient zombies... saps all free will... allows people to be programmed by the media or government... sold as transdermal patch Source:
[None] URL Source:http://www.naturalnews.com/050459_D ... ontrol_drug.html#ixzz3gS087UJf Published:Jul 20, 2015 Author:staff Post Date:2015-07-20 12:43:37 by Horse Keywords:None Views:152 Comments:7
When I lived in Ecuador, I was warned about the pollen from the flower of a beautiful tree. The pollen is called "Devil's Breath," and when a tiny amount is blown into the face of an intended victim, it immediately saps that person's free will, turning them into a compliance zombie who will do anything they're commanded to do: Empty their bank account, engage in sexual acts or even donate a kidney.
This isn't some urban legend, either. The Devil's Breath pollen is rich in scopolamine, a potent drug that saps free will and turns people into zombies. Scopolamine can "can wipe the memory of its victims," reports the Daily Mail:
Scopolamine can be blown in the face of a passer-by on the street, and within minutes, that person is under the drug's effect - scopolamine is odourless and tasteless.
'You can guide them wherever you want,' he explained. 'It's like they're a child.'
...The drug, he said, turns people into complete zombies and blocks memories from forming. So even after the drug wears off, victims have no recollection as to what happened. (Shhhhh! Please don't tell Bill Cosby!)
FDA-approved drug that literally saps human will and turns people into obedient zombies If all this sounds exactly like what we're all witnessing in American society today, that's because drug companies have turned scopolamine into an FDA-approved prescription drug.
Sold today as a transdermal patch, the scopolamine drug is offered under the name "Transderm Scop" and it's designed to be placed right behind the ear, allowing the scopolamine drug to be absorbed into the bloodstream.
When the scopolamine chemical enters the bloodstream, it immediately affects the brain, turning a normal human being into an auto-suggestion hypnosis subject who believes and obeys anything they hear. If that person happens to be watching MSNBC while absorbing this drug, they might mindlessly come to believe that they're supposed to vote for Hillary Clinton because she's so smart, honest and awesome!
Combine this drug with the effects of mass fluoridation and widespread antidepressant drug use and you get a toxic cocktail of mind-numbing drugs that sap free will and turn humans into walking zombies.
"The drug... turns people into complete zombies and blocks memories from forming. So even after the drug wears off, victims have no recollection as to what happened," reports the Daily Mail.
It kind of sounds like exactly what we're seeing today with all the people who voted for President Obama in the 2008 and 2012 elections. They have no recollection what they voted for, and they can't seem to realize that all of Obama's campaign promises were outright lies. They voted out of obedience, not rational thinking, and now as so many of the very people who voted for Obama find themselves jobless, laid off or with their work hours cut, they're starting to come to their senses and ask, "What have I done?"
Now, mindless obedience is available as an FDA-approved pharmaceutical. It's a Brave New World, after all, and you can't have let people have the freedom to think, can ya?
I can't imagine folks willingly volunteering to take such a drug. If there is a god willing and able to "bless" America, such a blessing could only be a serious example of "tough love".
John Howard says: There are 4 schools of economics: Marxism: steal everything Keynesianism: steal by counterfeiting whenever needed Chicago school (Milton Friedman): steal by counterfeiting at a steady, predictable rate Austrians: don't steal
I can't imagine folks willingly volunteering to take such a drug.
Not that I'm a defender of pharmaceutical drugs, but in fairness, the "legit" pharmaceutical use is in doses far less than the amount needed for zombie like effects to kick in, though I don't know what those uses are.
But criminal use of the drug is, I'm sure in every case, considered a significant overdose of the drug.
In all my time in Ecuador, I've never had any first hand encounter with this drug. I do know one guy who says he was a victim of it, accepting a homemade candy treat of some kind from a stranger on a bus. He was a photographer, and work up in a park with camera and stuff stolen.
On an email list a while back, someone claimed he and his wife were victimized during a taxi ride. They woke up in their home with much of their home possessions missing. Certainly among the worst case scenarios, but not *the* worst, as killings could probably be carried out with it, and in strong enough doses, the drug itself is lethal, which happens if a victim is demonstrating some resistance to it and perpetrators continue to add more drug to the victim's drinks. Criminal use of the drug in that way is understandably not always administered in well measured amounts.
Standard precautions are to avoid consuming anything that anonymous people have made or have access to. Restaurants are not a serious source of it as victims would know where they were drugged, and therefore could track down the perpetrators if they were restaurant employees, so those targeting victims choose alternate venues, such as bars, where they can get talking to people whom do not know them or how to find them later, and also have access to their consumables.
I don't know how practical it is to criminally administer the drug by inhalation, as it may be questionable how much is really being inhaled, and the perpetrator himself may be at risk of inhaling it also. Whether sniffing a flower alone is enough to completely do someone in, I have doubts about, as normally some purification is required, or significant quantities consumed, with herbal sources for a serious/desired effects to be possible.
I think you've got the real scoop. Like other questions and IDKs voiced here, legit use of scopo is discussed in wikid pedia.
First we heard (cpl yrs ago) the drug was every bit this scary, then that it was all a myth. Now we're scared again and even snopes doesn't refute it. Hope this is more like it --
'Quality of the journalism in that video is really low...... What truth can be found about the drug is that it induces memory loss, drowsiness and overall make the victim of it offer less resistant. It also seems to work to some extent as making victim tell the truth.
I didn't manage to find any real proofs of turning into "zombie".'
To clarify, I am of the firm belief that criminal use of the drug IS real, that in sufficient quantity it WILL turn someone into a "zombie", though that may not be a proper description it won't even be apparent at first glance that someone is under it's effects. Memory loss (well, that may not be a correct description either as it doesn't really erase memory, it just prevents new memories from forming... everything that happened up to the time the drug effects kick in are retained) is also a real effect. (I'm guessing though that hypnosis should allow subconscious memories to recall the events, though I've not heard of that ever being attempted).
Victims will do whatever they are asked to do... turn over credit cards, pin numbers and such, and even make withdrawals or purchases as they remain reasonably lucid enough to perform those tasks.
To me, what might be questionable but what has been claimed via documentaries, is a victim would even take his handlers to his hotel, introduce them to the hotel staff as his friends who are there to help him move out of his room, and the hotel staff would accept that explanation, not realizing the victim is drugged.
However, in spite of all this, there are practical limits to how this drug can be used criminally. Availability, cost, risk of discovery, uncertainity of how much of the drug should be administered (too much and you kill someone which a perpetrator would not want, too little and either there's not sufficient effect meaning investment lost, or he can be caught) and unknown qualities of a potential victim and so forth limit how frequently a perpetrator could/would try to make common use of the drug. Ergo, criminal use of it exists but there is no pandemic by any means.