https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11578455/Wilson-Chin-Gold-Coast-doctor-received-death-threats-anti-vaxxers-dies-suddenly.html
Family doctor who was subject to death threats from anti-vaxxers during the pandemic dies suddenly right before Christmas
Dr Wilson Chin, who trained in Britain, emigrated to Australia in 2018, has died
He became the target of vile threats after two girls fainted after receiving jabs
The false rumours claimed two girls had died when they were unharmed
Apu Nahasapeemapetilon
What's the time on his watch?
https://www.nytimes.com/1972/07/22/archives/freuds-disaster-with-cocaine.html
Freud's Disaster With Cocaine
Freud early in his career became intrigued with the properties of cocaine and urged its use for treating all sorts of psychological and nervous conditions. On the basis of his own experience with the drug, he considered cocaine to be nonaddictive and without serious side effects.
He had learned about cocaine in 1884 from a report, published in a German medical journal, in which a German army doctor reported his observation that the use of cocaine increased the energy of German soldiers during autumn maneuvers in Bavaria. Freud tried the drug and became so enthusiastic about its effects that he called it “magical.” From his own experience, Freud wrote that the drug had resulted in “exhilaration and lasting euphoria…. You perceive an increase of self‐control and possess more vitality and capacity for work …”
Freud began to take small doses of the drug on a regular basis, “against depression and against indigestion.” He recommended cocaine to his friends and colleagues and to members of his family, and praised it in letters to his fiancee, Martha Bernays.
Freud's praise and use of the drug continued for more than two, years. He took cocaine before important social occasions such as a visit to his teacher, the distinguished French psychiatrist Charcot. In a letter to his fiancee, speaking of the visit, he writes: “We drove [to Charcot's] in a carriage the expenses of which we shared. R. was terribly nervous, I quite calm with the help of a small dose of cocaine, although his success was assured and I‐had reasons to fear making a blunder.” Freud then goes on to tell Martha that the evening went very well and he attributes his success with Charcot to cocaine: “These were my achievements (or rather the achievements of cocaine), which left me very satisfied.”
At no point in his letters does Freud consider the possibility that cocaine may produce adverse effects, or indeed any effects apart from those he values. This is clearly illustrated in another letter: “… I was suffering from migraine, the third attack this week, by the way, although I am otherwise in excellent health. I took some cocaine, watched the migraine vanish at once, went on writing my paper as well as a letter to Professor Mendel, but I was so wound up that I had to go on working and writing and couldn't get to sleep before four in the morning.” It does not appear from this letter that Freud was aware of the connection between his use of cocaine and his being wound up and unable to sleep.
From his days as a student in physiology, Freud had vastly admired a colleague and contemporary named Ernst von Fleischl‐Marxow, an early “ideal” who became a close friend. “… At the age of 25, Fleischl had contracted a severe infection in the course of his research, and the amputation of his right thumb, while saving his life, had left him in continuous torture from nerve‐pain. In seeking relief from his torment, Fleischl had become addicted to morphine.
Fleischl's addiction and his terrible suffering affected Freud greatly, and in 1884, soon after his own experimentation with cocaine had begun, Freud offered cocaine to his friend in hopes of weaning him from morphine. According to Freud's biographer Ernst Jones, Fleischl clutched at cocaine “like a drowning man.” Within a short time Fleischl was addicted to cocaine, consuming enormous doses of it, and was in a state of chronic intoxication. Delirium tremens followed, as Freud sat through what Jones describes as “the most frightful night he had ever spent.” A word about Freud's attitude toward drugs in later life: He was himself to suffer for many years from a painful, inoperable, and incurable cancer of the jaw. Yet despite constant pain, he refused to take pain‐killing medication. He is quoted as saying, “I prefer to think in torment than not to be able to think at all.”
One recalls Freud's experience with cocaine at a time when from all quarters we are promised “miracle drugs.” Millions of prescriptions are written by physicians to “help” individuals with problems of everyday life. A potent narcotic, methadone, is promoted by some members of the medical profession as the panacea for heroin addiction. Children who pave difficulty in learning or in accepting school discipline are being diagnosed as hyperactive and drugged en masse. Young people are seduced by the promise that drugs provide a sense of closeness and offer an avenue for the exploration of “inner space.”
Everywhere we are promised something for nothing. Yet, the one clear lesson in the history of drug use is that in the giving and taking of drugs, one pays—in the short range or the long, visibly or invisibly—for what one gets.
>“I prefer to think in torment than not to be able to think at all.”
>XBB.1.5
>https://thepublicinsight.org/paper/a-glimpse-into-the-world-of-pedophilia-support-groups-in-cyberspace/
I would like to express my gratitude to Crete Greece, Kearee, and GPS. My research relies on volunteers who are willing to respond to questions and inquires, many of them with the critical knowledge needed for deeper understanding. The information they uncover and the resistance they maintain against pedophilia and child sexual abuse often comes at a great personal risk to them. They are a crucial and unsung part of the research effort.
https://twitter.com/rothschildmd
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Ornato
>I just stop talking until the subject changes.
works for me, although balenciaga succeeded in breaking into a fortified concrete flak tower
>while Trump did become the first U.S. president to cross into North Korea, he was accompanied by security–that is, by Tony Ornato
https://politizoom.com/tony-ornato-really-doesnt-recall-much-of-anything/
Tony Ornato Really Doesn’t “Recall” Much of Anything