thedame
23-04-2007, 03:03 PM
Hello all,
Please take a look at the following news stories from two British papers:
THE METRO
http://www.metro.co.uk/news/article.html?in_article_id=46173&in_page_id=34
THE GUARDIAN
http://www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,2063211,00.html
These stories refer to scientists developing a new drug which would be mixed into a milk formula and fed to children either IN UTERO or in their first weeks outside the womb. The drug would supress the appetite and, it seems, alter the child's 'energy balance settings...' essentially engineering them to be a certain way as they develop into adults.
There's a number of things wrong with this. Firstly, the whole subject of pre-birth treatment has always been controversial: it amounts to gentic engineering and would possibly lead to scientists 'creating' supermen who are physically and mentally perfect. Playing God as the extreme christian right would no doubt say.
Also, I'm sure the similarities with the notorious Thalidomide scandal in the 60s aren't THAT too tangential. Thalidomide is described by Wikipedia as 'hypnotic.' If anyone can point me in the direction of any research into this scandal and any links it has to the Mind Control Programmes illustrated by David Icke in 'THe Biggest Secret' and other works?
I think the obesity story needs to be looked into in greater detail...
thedame
Please take a look at the following news stories from two British papers:
THE METRO
http://www.metro.co.uk/news/article.html?in_article_id=46173&in_page_id=34
THE GUARDIAN
http://www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,2063211,00.html
These stories refer to scientists developing a new drug which would be mixed into a milk formula and fed to children either IN UTERO or in their first weeks outside the womb. The drug would supress the appetite and, it seems, alter the child's 'energy balance settings...' essentially engineering them to be a certain way as they develop into adults.
There's a number of things wrong with this. Firstly, the whole subject of pre-birth treatment has always been controversial: it amounts to gentic engineering and would possibly lead to scientists 'creating' supermen who are physically and mentally perfect. Playing God as the extreme christian right would no doubt say.
Also, I'm sure the similarities with the notorious Thalidomide scandal in the 60s aren't THAT too tangential. Thalidomide is described by Wikipedia as 'hypnotic.' If anyone can point me in the direction of any research into this scandal and any links it has to the Mind Control Programmes illustrated by David Icke in 'THe Biggest Secret' and other works?
I think the obesity story needs to be looked into in greater detail...
thedame