Guest guest Posted July 31, 2011 Report Share Posted July 31, 2011 One more mass killer, one more drug-addled mind Last updated at 12:33 PM on 31st July 2011 http://www.facebook.com/2008/fbml" /> Add to My Stories Share It's the drugs, stupid. In hundreds of square miles of supposed analysis of the Norway mass murder, almost nobody has noticed that the smirking Anders Breivik was taking large quantities of mind-altering chemicals. In this case, the substances are an anabolic steroid called stanozolol, combined with an amphetamine-like drug called ephedrine, plus caffeine to make the mixture really fizz. Almost nobody has noticed that the smirking Anders Breivik was taking large quantities of mind-altering chemicals I found these facts in Breiviks vast, drivelling manifesto simply because I was looking for them. The authorities and most of the media are more interested in his non-existent belief in fundamentalist Christianity. I doubt if the drugs would ever have been known about if Breivik hadnt himself revealed this. I suspect that mind-bending drugs of some kind feature in almost all of the epidemic rampage killings that Western society is now suffering. More... If you want to comment on Hitchens, click here Anabolic steroids were also used heavily by Bieber, who killed one policeman and tried to kill two more in Leeds in 2003, and by Raoul Moat, who last summer shot three people in Northumberland, killing one and blinding another. Steroids are strongly associated with mood changes, uncontrollable anger and many other problems. In my view, this link remains formally unproven only because no great effort has yet been made to prove it. A serious worldwide inquiry should be launched into the correlation between steroid use and violent incidents. Likewise with so-called antidepressants, whose medical value has recently been seriously questioned in two devastating articles in The New York Review Of Books by the distinguished American doctor Marcia Angell. Her words ought to be reproduced and circulated to all doctors. I pointed out some time ago how many shooting incidents involved people who had been taking these suspect pills. Purdy, culprit of the 1989 Cleveland school shooting, and Jeff Weise, culprit of the 2005 Red Lake High School shootings, had been taking antidepressants. So had McDermott, culprit of the 2000 Wakefield massacre in Massachusetts. So had Kip Kinkel, responsible for a 1998 murder spree in Oregon. So had Hinckley, who tried to murder President Reagan in 1981. They were also found in the cabin of the Unabomber Ted Kaczynski, of whom more later. Then there are the dangerous illegal drugs that are increasingly common since the State stopped bothering to prosecute users. Loughner, who smiled so beatifically (like the equally unhinged Breivik) after murdering six people in Arizona, had been a heavy smoker of cannabis for much of his youth. The use of this allegedly soft drug is increasingly correlated with mental disturbance, often severe. All these poisons have their defenders, who will, I know, respond to the facts above with a typhoon of rage and spittle. This is because they all have their selfish or commercial reasons for preventing a proper inquiry into their effects which is all I am calling for here. Shame on them. They are disgusting. The rest of us must consider more wisely. The human brain is a delicate and mysterious organ, of which we know amazingly little. But we do know this. Several drugs, especially the testosterone that is in steroids, the SSRIs such as Fluoxetine that are in antidepressants and the tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, which is the main ingredient of cannabis, have potent effects on brain chemistry. Anyone can have unusual or unconventional ideas. Unkind conservative Americans used to play a game of guessing whether various alarmist statements about the environment had been written by the Unabomber who lived in a forest hut and murdered people by sending them letter bombs or by Vice President Al Gore, who lived in the Washington National Observatory with a Secret Service guard. It usually turned out that the wilder ones had been penned by Mr Gore. And I have no doubt that the eloquence of writers can move people to action. Yeats feared that his patriotic poems might have set some Irishmen on the path to Easter Rising violence in 1916. But it is rational action. Nobody but a madman and steroids have in my view made Anders Breivik mad could believe that mercilessly slaughtering the flower of Norway would advance any cause. Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2020583/Anders-Behring-Breivik-One-mass-killer-drug-addled-mind.html#ixzz1ThgI7V2d Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 31, 2011 Report Share Posted July 31, 2011 One more mass killer, one more drug-addled mind Last updated at 12:33 PM on 31st July 2011 http://www.facebook.com/2008/fbml" /> Add to My Stories Share It's the drugs, stupid. In hundreds of square miles of supposed analysis of the Norway mass murder, almost nobody has noticed that the smirking Anders Breivik was taking large quantities of mind-altering chemicals. In this case, the substances are an anabolic steroid called stanozolol, combined with an amphetamine-like drug called ephedrine, plus caffeine to make the mixture really fizz. Almost nobody has noticed that the smirking Anders Breivik was taking large quantities of mind-altering chemicals I found these facts in Breiviks vast, drivelling manifesto simply because I was looking for them. The authorities and most of the media are more interested in his non-existent belief in fundamentalist Christianity. I doubt if the drugs would ever have been known about if Breivik hadnt himself revealed this. I suspect that mind-bending drugs of some kind feature in almost all of the epidemic rampage killings that Western society is now suffering. More... If you want to comment on Hitchens, click here Anabolic steroids were also used heavily by Bieber, who killed one policeman and tried to kill two more in Leeds in 2003, and by Raoul Moat, who last summer shot three people in Northumberland, killing one and blinding another. Steroids are strongly associated with mood changes, uncontrollable anger and many other problems. In my view, this link remains formally unproven only because no great effort has yet been made to prove it. A serious worldwide inquiry should be launched into the correlation between steroid use and violent incidents. Likewise with so-called antidepressants, whose medical value has recently been seriously questioned in two devastating articles in The New York Review Of Books by the distinguished American doctor Marcia Angell. Her words ought to be reproduced and circulated to all doctors. I pointed out some time ago how many shooting incidents involved people who had been taking these suspect pills. Purdy, culprit of the 1989 Cleveland school shooting, and Jeff Weise, culprit of the 2005 Red Lake High School shootings, had been taking antidepressants. So had McDermott, culprit of the 2000 Wakefield massacre in Massachusetts. So had Kip Kinkel, responsible for a 1998 murder spree in Oregon. So had Hinckley, who tried to murder President Reagan in 1981. They were also found in the cabin of the Unabomber Ted Kaczynski, of whom more later. Then there are the dangerous illegal drugs that are increasingly common since the State stopped bothering to prosecute users. Loughner, who smiled so beatifically (like the equally unhinged Breivik) after murdering six people in Arizona, had been a heavy smoker of cannabis for much of his youth. The use of this allegedly soft drug is increasingly correlated with mental disturbance, often severe. All these poisons have their defenders, who will, I know, respond to the facts above with a typhoon of rage and spittle. This is because they all have their selfish or commercial reasons for preventing a proper inquiry into their effects which is all I am calling for here. Shame on them. They are disgusting. The rest of us must consider more wisely. The human brain is a delicate and mysterious organ, of which we know amazingly little. But we do know this. Several drugs, especially the testosterone that is in steroids, the SSRIs such as Fluoxetine that are in antidepressants and the tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, which is the main ingredient of cannabis, have potent effects on brain chemistry. Anyone can have unusual or unconventional ideas. Unkind conservative Americans used to play a game of guessing whether various alarmist statements about the environment had been written by the Unabomber who lived in a forest hut and murdered people by sending them letter bombs or by Vice President Al Gore, who lived in the Washington National Observatory with a Secret Service guard. It usually turned out that the wilder ones had been penned by Mr Gore. And I have no doubt that the eloquence of writers can move people to action. Yeats feared that his patriotic poems might have set some Irishmen on the path to Easter Rising violence in 1916. But it is rational action. Nobody but a madman and steroids have in my view made Anders Breivik mad could believe that mercilessly slaughtering the flower of Norway would advance any cause. Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2020583/Anders-Behring-Breivik-One-mass-killer-drug-addled-mind.html#ixzz1ThgI7V2d Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 31, 2011 Report Share Posted July 31, 2011 One more mass killer, one more drug-addled mind Last updated at 12:33 PM on 31st July 2011 http://www.facebook.com/2008/fbml" /> Add to My Stories Share It's the drugs, stupid. In hundreds of square miles of supposed analysis of the Norway mass murder, almost nobody has noticed that the smirking Anders Breivik was taking large quantities of mind-altering chemicals. In this case, the substances are an anabolic steroid called stanozolol, combined with an amphetamine-like drug called ephedrine, plus caffeine to make the mixture really fizz. Almost nobody has noticed that the smirking Anders Breivik was taking large quantities of mind-altering chemicals I found these facts in Breiviks vast, drivelling manifesto simply because I was looking for them. The authorities and most of the media are more interested in his non-existent belief in fundamentalist Christianity. I doubt if the drugs would ever have been known about if Breivik hadnt himself revealed this. I suspect that mind-bending drugs of some kind feature in almost all of the epidemic rampage killings that Western society is now suffering. More... If you want to comment on Hitchens, click here Anabolic steroids were also used heavily by Bieber, who killed one policeman and tried to kill two more in Leeds in 2003, and by Raoul Moat, who last summer shot three people in Northumberland, killing one and blinding another. Steroids are strongly associated with mood changes, uncontrollable anger and many other problems. In my view, this link remains formally unproven only because no great effort has yet been made to prove it. A serious worldwide inquiry should be launched into the correlation between steroid use and violent incidents. Likewise with so-called antidepressants, whose medical value has recently been seriously questioned in two devastating articles in The New York Review Of Books by the distinguished American doctor Marcia Angell. Her words ought to be reproduced and circulated to all doctors. I pointed out some time ago how many shooting incidents involved people who had been taking these suspect pills. Purdy, culprit of the 1989 Cleveland school shooting, and Jeff Weise, culprit of the 2005 Red Lake High School shootings, had been taking antidepressants. So had McDermott, culprit of the 2000 Wakefield massacre in Massachusetts. So had Kip Kinkel, responsible for a 1998 murder spree in Oregon. So had Hinckley, who tried to murder President Reagan in 1981. They were also found in the cabin of the Unabomber Ted Kaczynski, of whom more later. Then there are the dangerous illegal drugs that are increasingly common since the State stopped bothering to prosecute users. Loughner, who smiled so beatifically (like the equally unhinged Breivik) after murdering six people in Arizona, had been a heavy smoker of cannabis for much of his youth. The use of this allegedly soft drug is increasingly correlated with mental disturbance, often severe. All these poisons have their defenders, who will, I know, respond to the facts above with a typhoon of rage and spittle. This is because they all have their selfish or commercial reasons for preventing a proper inquiry into their effects which is all I am calling for here. Shame on them. They are disgusting. The rest of us must consider more wisely. The human brain is a delicate and mysterious organ, of which we know amazingly little. But we do know this. Several drugs, especially the testosterone that is in steroids, the SSRIs such as Fluoxetine that are in antidepressants and the tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, which is the main ingredient of cannabis, have potent effects on brain chemistry. Anyone can have unusual or unconventional ideas. Unkind conservative Americans used to play a game of guessing whether various alarmist statements about the environment had been written by the Unabomber who lived in a forest hut and murdered people by sending them letter bombs or by Vice President Al Gore, who lived in the Washington National Observatory with a Secret Service guard. It usually turned out that the wilder ones had been penned by Mr Gore. And I have no doubt that the eloquence of writers can move people to action. Yeats feared that his patriotic poems might have set some Irishmen on the path to Easter Rising violence in 1916. But it is rational action. Nobody but a madman and steroids have in my view made Anders Breivik mad could believe that mercilessly slaughtering the flower of Norway would advance any cause. Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2020583/Anders-Behring-Breivik-One-mass-killer-drug-addled-mind.html#ixzz1ThgI7V2d Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 31, 2011 Report Share Posted July 31, 2011 One more mass killer, one more drug-addled mind Last updated at 12:33 PM on 31st July 2011 http://www.facebook.com/2008/fbml" /> Add to My Stories Share It's the drugs, stupid. In hundreds of square miles of supposed analysis of the Norway mass murder, almost nobody has noticed that the smirking Anders Breivik was taking large quantities of mind-altering chemicals. In this case, the substances are an anabolic steroid called stanozolol, combined with an amphetamine-like drug called ephedrine, plus caffeine to make the mixture really fizz. Almost nobody has noticed that the smirking Anders Breivik was taking large quantities of mind-altering chemicals I found these facts in Breiviks vast, drivelling manifesto simply because I was looking for them. The authorities and most of the media are more interested in his non-existent belief in fundamentalist Christianity. I doubt if the drugs would ever have been known about if Breivik hadnt himself revealed this. I suspect that mind-bending drugs of some kind feature in almost all of the epidemic rampage killings that Western society is now suffering. More... If you want to comment on Hitchens, click here Anabolic steroids were also used heavily by Bieber, who killed one policeman and tried to kill two more in Leeds in 2003, and by Raoul Moat, who last summer shot three people in Northumberland, killing one and blinding another. Steroids are strongly associated with mood changes, uncontrollable anger and many other problems. In my view, this link remains formally unproven only because no great effort has yet been made to prove it. A serious worldwide inquiry should be launched into the correlation between steroid use and violent incidents. Likewise with so-called antidepressants, whose medical value has recently been seriously questioned in two devastating articles in The New York Review Of Books by the distinguished American doctor Marcia Angell. Her words ought to be reproduced and circulated to all doctors. I pointed out some time ago how many shooting incidents involved people who had been taking these suspect pills. Purdy, culprit of the 1989 Cleveland school shooting, and Jeff Weise, culprit of the 2005 Red Lake High School shootings, had been taking antidepressants. So had McDermott, culprit of the 2000 Wakefield massacre in Massachusetts. So had Kip Kinkel, responsible for a 1998 murder spree in Oregon. So had Hinckley, who tried to murder President Reagan in 1981. They were also found in the cabin of the Unabomber Ted Kaczynski, of whom more later. Then there are the dangerous illegal drugs that are increasingly common since the State stopped bothering to prosecute users. Loughner, who smiled so beatifically (like the equally unhinged Breivik) after murdering six people in Arizona, had been a heavy smoker of cannabis for much of his youth. The use of this allegedly soft drug is increasingly correlated with mental disturbance, often severe. All these poisons have their defenders, who will, I know, respond to the facts above with a typhoon of rage and spittle. This is because they all have their selfish or commercial reasons for preventing a proper inquiry into their effects which is all I am calling for here. Shame on them. They are disgusting. The rest of us must consider more wisely. The human brain is a delicate and mysterious organ, of which we know amazingly little. But we do know this. Several drugs, especially the testosterone that is in steroids, the SSRIs such as Fluoxetine that are in antidepressants and the tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, which is the main ingredient of cannabis, have potent effects on brain chemistry. Anyone can have unusual or unconventional ideas. Unkind conservative Americans used to play a game of guessing whether various alarmist statements about the environment had been written by the Unabomber who lived in a forest hut and murdered people by sending them letter bombs or by Vice President Al Gore, who lived in the Washington National Observatory with a Secret Service guard. It usually turned out that the wilder ones had been penned by Mr Gore. And I have no doubt that the eloquence of writers can move people to action. Yeats feared that his patriotic poems might have set some Irishmen on the path to Easter Rising violence in 1916. But it is rational action. Nobody but a madman and steroids have in my view made Anders Breivik mad could believe that mercilessly slaughtering the flower of Norway would advance any cause. Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2020583/Anders-Behring-Breivik-One-mass-killer-drug-addled-mind.html#ixzz1ThgI7V2d Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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