Anonymous ID: 38cca9 Feb. 8, 2018, 11:40 a.m. No.307593   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>307094

Sorry to hear about your father. Fortunately, you educated yourself & now you can educate others. Make no mistake, more and more doctors and scientists are waking up and speaking the truth. Here is a video of one of my colleagues doing just that.

David Diamond, Ph.D.: Assessing the Myth that Elevated Cholesterol Causes heart disease.

https:// youtu.be/SYlhG8_nZe0

Anonymous ID: 38cca9 Feb. 8, 2018, 11:50 a.m. No.307679   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>307565

The same thing happened after 911 although those doctors and scientists were in significant positions of research that we’re heading toward the development of very effective anti-viral treatments.

 

The one that I remember most clearly was this famous influenza scientist who was at a scientific meeting and the official story was that he drove an hour and a half away at 3am, pulled over to the side of the road on a bridge, had a seizure, and then fell off the bridge.

Anonymous ID: 38cca9 Feb. 8, 2018, 12:04 p.m. No.307764   🗄️.is đź”—kun

The FED’s war against kratom has absolutely nothing to do with harm reduction!  They are running the same deceptive fear tactics they always do and this time willing redefine pharmochemical nomenclature. Mitragynine, the active alkaloid in kratom is structurally more similar to tryptamines than to opioids

 

If they were really worried about teenagers buying “legal party pills” containing kratom

marketed at local head shops, they could simply enforce existing FCC and FDA dietary supplement laws which prohibit the sale and mislabeling of such products.  The kratom purchased online by “responsible adults” are  sold as botanical incense and labelled “not for human consumption” which is completely legal.  This puts the responsibility entirely on the consumer where it should be.  Reputable and trusted vendors routinely test their imported inventory for alkaloid content and contaminates and only sell to verified adults.

 

The latest research out on mitragynine’s pharmacology across the 3 main opioid receptors suggests that it has the “holy grail” therapeutic profile that researchers have been aiming to develop synthetically for some time, but without success.  Interestingly, a friend of mine recently weaned himself off suboxone using just a teaspoon of kratom powder each day and he is very happy about it.

 

Based on recent patents issued on mitragynine derivatives and the companies which own them, I suspect that Big Pharma lobbyists are likely behind efforts to ban it so they can exploit and monopolize its profit potential.  As I recall, a ranking official at the DEA came from one of these companies, so there is a clear conflict of interest at play here.

 

https:// www.livescience.com/61694-kratom-warning-opioids-definition.html