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Millions of people worldwide are waking up to the fact
that the pharmaceutical
industry is an investment industry based on the continuation of diseases.
The survival of the pharmaceutical investment industry
is threatened by four main factors:
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Dr. Matthias Rath is the physician and scientist who led the
breakthrough in the natural control of cardiovascular disease
and cancer. He is member of the New York Academy of Sciences
and other renowned scientific organizations. 10 years ago,
the late Dr. Linus Pauling, recipient of the Nobel Prize in
Chemistry and Peace stated: "Your discoveries are so
important for millions of people that they threaten entire
industries. One day there may even be wars just to prevent
this breakthrough from being widely accepted. This is the
time, when you need to stand up!" - This time is now.-
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| While many events led up to the current crisis,
none was as threatening to the survival of the entire pharmaceutical industry
as the scandal around Bayer’s
cholesterol lowering drug Baycol.
In August
2001 Bayer had to withdraw its leading new drug Baycol because more
than 50 people had already died from taking it and more than 6 million
patients were at risk from the deadly side effects of rhabdomyolysis (dissolving
of muscle tissue). British pharmaceutical multinational Smith Kline Beecham
(SKB) was Bayer’s global marketing partner.
Bayer - a century old flagship of the pharmaceutical industry
- and British SKB - the world's second largest drug maker - were faced
with crippling lawsuits and other devastating economic consequences:
- Over
7,000 Patients taking Baycol from around the world have
filed individual and class action lawsuits against these drug companies.
- Government
authorities filed criminal lawsuits against the executives
of these pharmaceutical companies for gross negligence. These executives
knew about the deadly side effects while continuing to press for higher
dosages.
- Investors
lost billions of dollars in share value, threatening the
very survival of these companies.
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| The Baycol
scandal was only the beginning of a ‘domino effect’. Within
weeks many multinational drug companies were faced with lawsuits from
patients suffering severe side effects from taking other pharmaceutical
drugs (beta blockers, calcium antagonists, estrogen replacement, etc).
In summary, the pharmaceutical industry was facing
the same grim fate as the tobacco industry, with entire States and Nations
suing these companies for billions in damages. In August 2001, the end
of the pharmaceutical industry seemed closer than ever.
But then everything stopped on September 11, 2001.
On this day global attention shifted away from the crisis facing this
industry.
Since then, the main goal of the Bush administrations
has become to secure the survival of the pharmaceutical industry through:
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September 11, 2001 2,600
innocent people died in this tragedy. The same number of people
die from side effects of prescription drugs every ten days (Source:
JAMA, April 15, 1998).
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- Attempts to overcome the unsolvable scientific conflicts.
The Bush administration is spearheading an international effort by the
pharmaceutical industry to outlaw natural health therapies world-wide
by abusing the United Nations ‘Codex Alimentarius’ (food
standards) commission.
- Attempts
to overcome the unsolvable ethical conflicts.
The recent ‘relief’ program for fighting AIDS in developing
countries is a 15 billion Dollar subsidy program for drug makers. While
neglecting effective natural therapies to fight immune deficiencies
this plan maintains the economic dependency on drug companies.
- Attempts to overcome the unsolvable legal conflicts.
A key provision of the ‘Homeland Security Act’ grants immunity
to the pharmaceutical companies for present and future product liability
claims for vaccines. Further plans for ‘medical litigation reform’
include limiting product liability lawsuits against drug companies.
- Attempts
to overcome the unsolvable business conflict.
This conflict cannot be solved because it would destroy the very nature
of the pharmaceutical “business with disease”. The only
option for this industry’s survival are protectionist laws that
artificially maintain control of the pharmaceutical investment business
and its global health monopoly.
The war against Iraq is not primarily about
fighting ‘terrorism’ or conquering oil fields. It is part
of a long-term strategy of the pharmaceutical/petrochemical investment
groups to create the psychological state of fear to maintain global control.
Long term international conflicts, wars - even
the use of weapons of mass destruction - can be used to achieve this goal
and suppress any opposition.
This war is not a sign of strength
- but of desperation
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| LESSONS FROM HISTORY
70 years ago, this week, an event shocked
the world and set the stage for the last World War. On February 28, 1933
the German parliament building, the Reichstag, was set on fire.
The official version that ‘terrorists’ had
led the attack was soon questioned abroad. Today it is a fact that the
Reichstagsbrand was deliberately used as a pretense and that the ‘empowerment
laws’ following this event had been prepared in advance.
Following the burning of the Reichstag:
The Reichstag-Assault in 1933 provided the legal
platform for 12 years of dictatorship and WWII. Its main
benefactor was IG-Farben, the largest European petro-chemical Cartel
seeking control of the oil and chemical industry worldwide.
In the Nuremberg War Tribunal in 1946/47 this Cartel was
tried for ‘conquest’, ‘robbery’ and ‘slavery’
and - as a result - it was dismantled into Bayer, BASF and Hoechst.
This War Tribunal established that without these
corporations, World War II would not have been possible. US-Chief Prosecutor
Telford Taylor stated: “If their guilt is not brought to the daylight,
they will do even more harm in future generations.”
Then and now millions of decent people are in danger
of being mislead by their own governments. And those who do not learn
the lessons from history are doomed to live through it again!” |
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