the us has lost the war on drugs and you can both profit and do good by having abroad Outlook.
Bcg has many uses besides protecting against multi drug resistant tb. Which now makes tb aerosol
A viable weapon.
What you may do is take the work of Denise l faustman and RISTORI and trat people.
See eg faustmanlab.org, Pubmed.org faustman DL, pubmed.org. RISTORI + Bcg
Bcgworks well for autoimmune diseases . Shoot me with Bcg for plaque psorias and put meon YouTube. I will be glad to help you sell ang give awaybcg to those who may wish to try same to mitigate their suffering.
As the anniversary of the death of my friend dr Eugene j ratner approaches I wish to share
my drug/destroy with you.
I was representing dr ratner at a hearing before a governmental agency on 125th street in manhattan.
He was charged with writing too many narcotics prescription. When Anne., a patient, was the subject,I simply told the investigator to call the manhattan office of the dea, speak to the investigator and speak to Anne. The deahad visited her at home and found nothing amiss. Ratner
's father Benny was the head of thecoomunist part I. Ny for many years. Ratner was a usveteran, had a security clearance and worked for the us veteran's administration for many years. See eg pubmed.org ratner ej
The problem with the dea is that the are not interested I'd good science and art such as that produced by ratner and faustman.
The dea fights a war it cannot win to the detriment of many.
I urge you to take a page out of the Pablo Escobar play book and do good by seeing that Bcg is available to all who seek same.
Healthcare is a matter of good science and. Art.
Ratner treated many cases of the suicide disease, aka trigeminal neuralgia.
He also left us with the means to publish anew als, pathology that will enable you to explain an or treat. Al's,Lou gherig's disease.
The us should do better than fighting wars it can't win.
- U.S. authorities are investigating Venezuela's powerful parliamentary chief, Diosdado Cabello, and other senior officials for possible cocaine trafficking and money laundering, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.Citing more than 12 people familiar with the probes, the newspaper said federal prosecutors in New York and Miami and a Drug Enforcement Administration unit were gathering evidence from former cocaine traffickers, Venezuelan military defectors and people once close to top Venezuelan government officials.Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, an ideological foe of Washington, was not a target of the U.S. investigation, the Journal said..Reuters could not immediately confirm the report.Venezuelan opposition leaders and U.S. officials have made accusations for years of money laundering and drug trafficking against the governments of Maduro and predecessor Hugo Chavez.Officials in Caracas call them unfounded smears that are part of a wider U.S.-led campaign to end the OPEC country's 16 years of socialism.Spanish newspaper ABC reported in January that a former member of Cabello’s security detail had fled Venezuela and had told U.S. authorities that he was involved in a drug ring.Cabello, National Assembly president and No. 2 in the ruling Socialist Party, filed a defamation suit last month against 22 people linked to three media outlets for having republished information from that story." They accused me of being a drug trafficker without any proof," he said on state TV last week.In its report, the Journal quoted a Justice Department official as saying Cabello was "a main target" of the probe, adding there was "extensive evidence" to suggest he was one of the heads of a suspected trafficking cartel involving military officers and top government officials."It's a criminal organization," the unidentified Justice Department official was quoted as saying.The newspaper quoted U.S. authorities as saying their investigations were far along but that any indictments might be sealed until arrests were made. Such arrests could be impossible unless the suspects left Venezuela, the Journal added.It said the investigations resulted from a boom in drug trafficking in Venezuela, following the shift in operations there by many Colombian traffickers after a government crackdown there.(This story has been refiled to fix reporting credit)(Reporting by Peter Cooney; Editing by Doina Chiacu)
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