If you think you’re healthy, but you’re not, you’ve been drugged. Drugs fool mother nature. Drugs trick you into thinking that you are healthy by covering up the symptoms. Health is not the absence of symptoms. Health is the state in which all organs of the body are functioning properly.
A symptom is a warning signal that something is malfunctioning in your body. A headache is a symptom. But a simple headache can be a warning signal of many not-so-simple malfunctions in the body: High blood pressure, muscle spasms in the head and neck, sinus congestion, viral infections, brain tumors, etc.
You complain about headaches. Do you ask why you have the headaches? Not usually. You just want the pain to go away, so you take a drug to remove the symptom of the headache. No more feeling of headache, yet the CAUSE of the headache still exists. When the drug wears off, the headache returns, so you take more drugs. Welcome to the symptom-treatment cycle.
Picture yourself asleep in a hotel room. The building catches on fire. A heat sensitive device sets off a symptom in your room. The symptom is a very loud irritating alarm, and it awakens you from a sound sleep. You do not want to be awake; you want to be asleep. Are you going to cover up this symptom by disconnecting the alarm, then go back to sleep? Put out the fire and the heat sensitive alarm will stop. Get rid of the CAUSE of the headache and it will stop.
Symptoms are a way your body lets you know that something is wrong. Covering up symptoms is dangerous, and this is the silent danger in drugs. Decades ago, America had a gold medal contender for figure skating in the Olympic games. A few days before the big event, he fell while practicing and injured his leg. The medical experts loaded the young man with pain killers and anti-inflammatory agents and permitted him to continue practicing. As he practiced, he continued to aggravate and injure the leg; but he was unaware of this – he felt no pain. When the day of the competition arrived, he could not skate; his leg would not support him during jumps. Had common sense been used, letting pain be the guide as to what he could do and when he could do it, the leg may have had enough time to heal before the contest.
Drugs treat symptoms, and that is ALL they do. Drugs can never ultimately get rid of the cause of the symptom. Drugs can get rid of the cause of one symptom by covering another symptom, but this leads to trouble. For example, let’s say you have a headache from high blood pressure. Instead of taking headache medication, you take drugs to lower the blood pressure. Indeed, the blood pressure drops, and the headache goes away. You eliminated the cause of the headache, but did you eliminate the cause of the high blood pressure? No. If the drug truly got rid of the cause of the high blood pressure, you would take it a few times and be done with it. But now you are stuck on blood pressure medication, the side effects of which will drain the life out of you. If you quit taking the medication, the blood pressure soars, so you go back to the medicine cabinet. You are treating an effect rather than a cause. You are stuck in the symptom-treatment cycle.
Here is where the mistake came: You did not ask the question WHY enough times. Why do you have the headache? Answer: High blood pressure. Why do you have high blood pressure? It could be many things. Overstimulation of nerves controlling the smooth muscle in vessels causing them to constrict. Too much salt in the diet. Lack of exercise. Obesity. There are ACE2 receptors that are on cells that line the interior walls of blood vessels. The letters stand for Angiotensin Converting Enzyme. These receptors are responsible for maintaining blood pressure control. We now know that the spike protein created by the Covid-19 shot will attach to ACE2 receptors resulting in dangerously high blood pressure in some people. The point is, we must keep digging until we find the root cause of the symptom.
Another danger with drugs is that they all have side effects, sometimes severe side effects; worse than the disease the drug is treating you for. The drug Motrin is a good example. Motrin is generally used to take away symptoms of rheumatism, but for some reason this drug is handed out like candy in industrial plants. Usually when a worker gets what he thinks is a minor injury, the goes to the plant doctor, nurse, or paramedic. Motrin is usually prescribed. One of the side effects of this drug is anaphylactic shock and death if the recipient is hypersensitive to aspirin. I wonder how many workers are checked for allergy to aspirin prior to the administration of Motrin.
Often a doctor prescribes pill A for symptom A, pill B for the side effects of pill A, pill C for the side effects of pill B, and so on. The following excerpt shows you what this practice can lead to. Reprinted from “The Medicine Men”, by Leonard Tushnet, MD, copyright 1971, with the permission of St. Martin’s Press, Inc., New York:
A young man had an acutely inflamed throat. He went to his doctor, who gave him an injection of penicillin. The sore throat quickly got better.
Three days later, the young man began to itch. The itching got worse, and he developed hives all over his body. The doctor made the correct diagnosis of an allergic reaction to penicillin. He prescribed antihistamines. The hives disappeared.
The young man, a machine operator, got drowsy from the antihistamines and cut his hand at work. The nurse in the dispensary gave him first aid and put on an anti-bacterial ointment containing penicillin. The hives returned and now the young man had swelling of the eyes and lips. The doctor recognized that a potentially dangerous allergic reaction was present; he ordered a course of corticosteroid treatment.
Result – the itchiness, the hives and the swellings disappeared, and the patient was well again.
Except that now he had a pain in his belly plus heartburn, and he began to show signs of blood in his stools. The correct diagnosis of a peptic ulcer (induced by the corticosteroids) was made. The young man did not do well on medical treatment; he continued to bleed from his ulcer. His doctor, therefore, had a surgeon in consultation. The two doctors agreed that partial gastrectomy was necessary, an operation to remove the ulcer bearing portion of the stomach. The operation was successful.
But because of the previous bleeding and the unavoidable blood loss at the operation, a transfusion of 1000 milliliters (two pints) of blood was given. Hepatitis (inflammation of the liver) followed. The young man became intensely jaundiced; he vomited his food and had to be fed intravenously for a few days. His youth did him good stead. He recovered from his hepatitis.
At the right ankle, where the intravenous needle and the plastic tube had been inserted into a vein exposed by cutting through the skin, a tender nodule appeared. It became red and inflamed, evidence of infection. Because of the bad experience the patient had had with penicillin, the doctor prescribed tetracycline. The inflammation promptly subsided.
Because of the antibiotic, diarrhea came on and the patient had severe colicky cramps. The doctor ordered a special diet and gave a new anti-spasmodic drug to control the cramps. Diarrhea stopped.
The new drug was in the belladonna class. It relaxed smooth muscle all over the body, and by its action on the iris, it caused dilation of the pupil.
The young man’s vision was impaired. He drove his car into a tree. Exitus young man.
This is a true story.
It appears that modern medicine has created a clever system whereby one round of medical “cures” creates the next round of diseases that can be cashed in on.
Drugs have paradoxical effects sometimes. That means that the drug may produce the very same symptom that it is trying to get rid of. An excellent example of such a drug is Valium, one of the most frequently prescribed drugs in America. Now, whether you call it Valium, Librium, Darvon, Tranxene – they are all the same junk, tranquilizers. The following information is taken from the Physician’s Desk Reference, commonly called the PDR. This book lists all drugs, what the drugs are used for, how much to use, when not to use them, and the side effects. Author’s update note: The PDR is available for download on the internet.
Here is what Valium is supposed to do for you: It is supposed to take away tension, anxiety, fatigue, depression, agitation, tremors, hallucinations, and muscle spasms. These are the side effects: tension, anxiety, fatigue, depression, agitation, tremors, hallucinations, and muscle spasms. Now, this leaves the doctor in a peculiar situation. If the patient complains that he is not improving, should the doctor stop the medication or increase the dosage? This would be funny if it weren’t real.
All drugs have side effects, even aspirin. An article originating in Chicago was printed in many newspapers across America in October of 1970. It stated:
Aspirin, the pain killing tablets Americans gulp by the millions, is a sometimes dangerous and even fatal drug that should be given only by prescription, a medical researcher said today.
Evidence that aspirin is more dangerous than hitherto believed has been accumulating over the last two years, Dr. Rene Menguy of the University of Chicago told the American College of Surgeons at their annual meeting here.
"About one of every seven persons now being treated for massive stomach bleeding in hospital emergency rooms can trace their trouble to aspirin,” said Dr. Menguy.
“I’d estimate that 1,000 people per year die in the country because of stomach bleeding caused by aspirin.”
In 2017, scientists estimated that more than 3,000 people that take aspirin daily will die each year as a result. But that’s not all! In 1982, Richard S. Schweiker, Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, proposed a warning label for aspirin. The label was supposed to warn parents they Reye’s syndrome may be caused by the use of aspirin by children under 16 years of age who have viral illnesses like the flu or chickenpox. Reye’s syndrome is a serious disease that results in permanent brain damage and sometimes death.
The pharmaceutical manufacturers stopped that move real fast. They lobbied against the warning label – and won.
At the time of this writing in 1984, the public was making a big stink about Tylenol (the aspirin substitute). They wanted tamper proof wrappers on the bottles because somebody secretly poisoned a bunch of bottles and several people died as a result. The routine use of aspirin by the unsuspecting public will result in far more deaths than the Tylenol poisonings. Yet the drug companies objected to the aspirin warning labels. It does not make any sense! Maybe they were afraid of lawsuits.
Those of you who think Tylenol is safer than aspirin are wrong. Tylenol contains acetaminophen, a chemical present in over 200 brand name drugs including Darvocet, Tempra, Excedrin, and Vanquish. Overuse of such drugs will lead to serious liver damage and by the time a victim shows obvious signs of being sick, it is too late to administer an antidote and death will occur. Tylenol is especially dangerous for the chronically ill, malnourished or alcoholic. Their bodies can be damaged by smaller doses that those for healthy people.
Here is an interesting article titled “Doctors may be harmful” that appeared in many newspapers in October 1981:
Is modern medicine more likely to kill than cure? Statistics gathered after “doctor strikes” indicate that today’s physicians may not be living up to the first part of the Hippocratic oath, admonishing them to do no harm.
As a protest to soaring rates for malpractice insurance, doctors in Los Angeles went on strike in 1976. The result with no doctors around? An 18 percent drop in the death rate. That same year, according to Dr. Robert S. Mendelsohn, doctors in Bogota, Columbia, refused to provide any services except for emergency care. The result was a 35 percent drop in the death rate. When Israeli doctors drastically reduced their daily patient contact in 1973, the Jerusalem Burial Society reported that the death rate was cut in half. The only similar drop had been 20 years earlier at the time of the last doctor’s strike.
This year alone, several million Americans will be subjected to unneeded and sometimes contraindicated surgery. Thousands of these people will die. The facts and figures are staring you in the face. Deaths reported in the Vaccine Adverse Effects Reporting System (VAERS) have skyrocketed since the rollout of the Covid-19 shot. The question is, will YOU become a statistic?
I’m so glad I was referred to your Substack by Dr. Kory. You are writing on information that is so important. I worked in the healthcare industry as an administrator for 26 years. I worked for an older Hematologist for over 16 yrs and when I first started with him I had a neck injury that physical therapy didn’t help. Everyday I took Motrin, a muscle relaxer and sometimes a Darvocet. He came over to my desk and threw the bottles in the trash and told me I was going to ruin my bone marrow and organs and then I was really going to be a physical mess. I asked him what am I suppose to do cause I’m in constant pain. He told me to try stretching or find a natural doctor. I started researching and eventually found an Integrative Medicine doctor and I also discovered grounding or earthing. Or hippy stuff as my husband calls it. But I have a herniated disk in my neck and I take nothing. I ground everyday and it’s amazing. I’m in my mid sixties and take no pharmaceutical drugs. I’m glad I had an old Indian doctor for a boss that put me in the right direction.
Powerful stuff. I have long known such things and yet still got swept up into a few treatments with the same kind of results. The problem is very real.