Lords Of War

Lords Of War

In 2004, director Andrew Niccol faced a problem most filmmakers never encounter.

He needed guns. Thousands of them.

Not for violence. Not for spectacle. But to tell the truth about a world most people never see — the shadowy business of arms dealing that fuels wars across continents.

His film, Lord of War, would follow an illegal weapons dealer moving rifles from Eastern Europe to conflict zones. To make it believable, the production needed an arsenal that looked real. Niccol expected to spend a fortune on prop weapons. Hollywood prop houses charge premium rates for realistic replicas, especially military-grade firearms.

Then someone on the crew made a phone call.

What they discovered would change everything about the production. It would also expose an uncomfortable truth about the global arms trade.

A Czech arms dealer had thousands of rifles in storage. Real ones. SA Vz. 58 assault rifles that looked nearly identical to the famous AK-47. The dealer made Niccol an offer.

Rent 3,000 real guns for less than the cost of 3,000 fake ones.

Niccol’s team ran the numbers twice. Then a third time. The math seemed impossible, yet it held. Authentic military weapons, capable of firing live ammunition, cost less to acquire than Hollywood props made of rubber and plastic.

The production said yes.

Three thousand rifles arrived on set in the Czech Republic. Not replicas. Not deactivated museum pieces. Working firearms from an active arms dealer’s inventory. The same weapons that might appear in a conflict zone were now appearing on a film set, rented by the day like camera equipment.

But the guns were just the beginning.

For one scene, Niccol needed tanks. Rows of them, lined up for sale like cars at a dealership. The production found another Czech dealer who could provide fifty real tanks.

There was one condition.

The tanks were only available until December. After filming wrapped, the dealer had another buyer waiting. According to reports, those tanks were headed to Libya. The same military vehicles used for a Hollywood scene would potentially roll into a real conflict zone months later.

Before filming the tank scene, the production team took an unusual step. They contacted NATO headquarters. They explained what they were doing and where. They shared their filming schedule.

The reason? Satellite surveillance. NATO monitors military buildups across Europe. Without warning, fifty tanks assembling in the Czech Republic might trigger alarms. Intelligence analysts might mistake a film set for a genuine military operation.

The irony wasn’t lost on anyone involved. A movie about arms dealing required diplomatic clearance because it looked too much like actual arms dealing.

Niccol later told reporters that working with real arms dealers provided unexpected authenticity. They understood the business in ways consultants couldn’t match. They knew how weapons moved across borders, how paperwork disappeared, how prices fluctuated based on conflict and demand.

One crew member reportedly joked that if the film failed, they could always sell the guns and recoup their investment. Nobody laughed very hard. The joke was too close to reality.

The film opened in September 2005. Critics gave it mixed reviews, but audiences connected with its unflinching look at the weapons trade. Amnesty International endorsed it publicly, praising how it highlighted the dangers of unregulated arms sales.

Years later, those fifty tanks would take a strange journey. After their use in Libya, many were eventually purchased by the United States, refurbished back in the Czech Republic, and sent to Ukraine to defend against invasion.

Props that weren’t props. Tanks that served in multiple wars. A film set that required military oversight.

Lord of War set out to expose the strange economics of the global arms trade. It succeeded in ways even Niccol couldn’t have predicted. The production itself became evidence of the thesis — that weapons flow more freely than water, that dealers operate in plain sight, that the infrastructure of conflict is cheaper and more accessible than most people imagine.

The film’s most famous line comes from Nicolas Cage’s character describing the AK-47: “It’s so easy, even a child can use it. And they do.”

But perhaps the real lesson came from behind the scenes. In a world where real guns cost less than fake ones, where tanks move from film sets to battlefields and back again, where arms dealers rent equipment to Hollywood studios between sales to governments — the line between fiction and reality had already blurred beyond recognition.

For those who remember when movies felt separate from the world they depicted, this production offered a different truth. Sometimes the props are real. Sometimes the dealers are actual dealers. Sometimes the most unbelievable part of a story is that it’s not fictional at all.

What does it say about our world when instruments of war are more economical than their plastic imitations? When the infrastructure of conflict operates so openly that Hollywood can rent from the same suppliers as nations? When the economics of violence are so efficient that they undercut even the business of pretending?

Ida Pauline Rolf

Ida Pauline Rolf

Women came to her with chronic pain doctors called “psychosomatic.” She found the physical cause medicine had ignored — and they dismissed her too.

In the 1940s, Ida Pauline Rolf had a problem that wouldn’t go away: she was a brilliant biochemist in a world that didn’t know what to do with brilliant women.

She had earned her PhD in biological chemistry from Columbia University in 1920 — one of the few women in her field. She had worked at the Rockefeller Institute. She had published research. She had the credentials, the training, the mind.

But chronic health issues — her own and her children’s — kept leading her to doctors who had the same response: rest. Wait. Accept it. There’s nothing structurally wrong.

Clean X-rays. Normal blood work. No visible pathology.

The implicit message: maybe it’s in your head.

Ida Rolf didn’t accept that answer. She was a scientist. If the pain was real — and she knew it was — there had to be a physical mechanism medicine was missing.

So she started looking where nobody else was looking: at fascia.

Fascia is the dense, fibrous connective tissue that wraps around every muscle, organ, nerve, and bone in the body. It’s everywhere — a continuous web that holds you together, transmits force, and shapes your structure. In the 1940s, medical schools barely mentioned it. It was considered inert packing material, something you cut through to get to the “important” stuff during surgery.

Rolf saw something different. She saw fascia as dynamic, adaptive, and capable of holding patterns — patterns created by injury, posture, repetitive stress, and emotional trauma. When fascia tightened and reorganized around these patterns, it pulled the body out of alignment. And that misalignment created pain that no X-ray would ever show.

Women came to her with stories doctors had stopped listening to.

Shoulders that never relaxed. Hips that felt crooked. Backs that ached without visible injury. Necks that couldn’t turn fully. Chronic headaches. Jaw pain. Pelvic pain. Exhaustion from holding their bodies together against invisible forces.

They had been told: lose weight. Exercise more. Take a vacation. See a psychiatrist. It’s stress. It’s hormones. It’s menopause. It’s motherhood. It’s life.

The subtext was always the same: you’re unreliable. Your pain isn’t real. You’re exaggerating. You’re too emotional. You’re a difficult patient.

Ida Rolf believed them.

She developed a method she called Structural Integration — a systematic approach to releasing fascial restrictions through deep, sustained manual pressure. She worked methodically through the body in ten sessions, each targeting specific fascial layers and regions. The goal wasn’t relaxation. It was reorganization.

And it hurt.

Rolfing wasn’t gentle. She pressed deeply into tissue, holding pressure until the fascia released. Patients cried. They trembled. They had emotional breakthroughs as their bodies let go of patterns they’d been holding for decades.

But when they stood up afterward, something had shifted. Shoulders dropped. Spines lengthened. Hips balanced. Pain that had been constant for years eased or disappeared entirely.

The women whose suffering had been dismissed as psychosomatic were getting structurally better. Their bodies were changing shape. Their movement was improving. The pain was real, the cause was physical, and the treatment worked.

Ida Rolf tried to bring her work to the medical establishment.

They rejected her completely.

She was a woman. She didn’t have a medical degree. Her method was based on manipulation of tissue doctors considered irrelevant. She talked about “energy” and “gravity” and “structural integration” in ways that sounded unscientific. And worst of all, she was claiming to cure conditions medicine had already categorized as psychosomatic — which implied doctors had been wrong.

The medical community called her a quack. They dismissed Rolfing as pseudoscience, dangerous manipulation, and exploitative bodywork preying on desperate patients. Some doctors warned people to stay away from her.

But the people she helped kept coming. And they kept getting better.

Throughout the 1950s and 60s, Rolf trained practitioners, refined her technique, and built a following — mostly among people medicine had failed. Dancers and athletes came because they understood bodies in ways doctors didn’t. People with chronic pain came because they had nowhere else to go.

Women came because Ida Rolf was one of the only people who believed them.

She was uncompromising, intense, and absolutely convinced she was right. She didn’t soften her approach to make doctors comfortable. She didn’t apologize for lacking an MD. She kept working, kept teaching, kept proving that the pain medicine dismissed was structurally real.

And slowly, science began to catch up.

In the 1970s and 80s, researchers started studying fascia seriously. They discovered it wasn’t inert — it was rich with nerve endings, mechanoreceptors, and cells that responded to mechanical stress. They found that fascial restrictions could create referred pain, limit range of motion, and alter movement patterns. They confirmed what Rolf had been saying for decades: fascia mattered.

By the 2000s, fascia research had exploded. Biomechanics labs were mapping fascial networks. Physical therapists were incorporating fascial release into treatment. Medical textbooks were updating their anatomy sections. Scientists were publishing papers on fascial plasticity, myofascial pain syndromes, and the role of connective tissue in chronic conditions.

Ida Rolf had been right all along.

Today, Rolfing is practiced worldwide. The Rolf Institute trains certified practitioners. Research continues to validate the biomechanical principles underlying her work. Fascia is now recognized as a key player in chronic pain, postural dysfunction, and movement disorders.

But here’s what still needs saying: Ida Rolf’s story isn’t just about fascia. It’s about who gets believed.

Women are significantly more likely than men to have their pain dismissed, minimized, or attributed to psychological causes. Studies show women wait longer in emergency rooms, receive less pain medication, and are more likely to be prescribed psychiatric drugs for physical symptoms. Chronic pain conditions that predominantly affect women — fibromyalgia, endometriosis, chronic fatigue syndrome — took decades longer to be taken seriously than comparable conditions affecting men.

Ida Rolf saw this pattern in the 1940s. She saw women being gaslit by a medical system that didn’t have the tools — or the interest — to understand their suffering.

And when she developed those tools, when she found the physical mechanism medicine had missed, the same system dismissed her too.

A PhD biochemist with reproducible results was called a quack because she was a woman working outside traditional medical hierarchies, treating a patient population medicine had already decided was unreliable.

It took decades for science to validate what she and her patients already knew: the pain was real. The tissue held the story. The body could be reorganized. And women weren’t making it up.

Ida Pauline Rolf died in 1979 at age 83. She lived just long enough to see her work begin to gain scientific recognition, but not long enough to see fascia become a major field of research.

She spent most of her career being dismissed by the very establishment she had been trained in.

But she kept working. She kept believing her patients. She kept insisting that invisible pain deserved visible solutions.

And she proved that the most profound healing often begins not with a diagnosis written by someone who doesn’t believe you, but with someone who listens — to your body’s structure, its silent stories, and the tissue that remembers what medicine chose to overlook.

When the Ship Can’t Dock

Three deaths, a vessel turned away, and what a strange outbreak in the South Atlantic tells us about a much older story.

By Robert W. Malone, MD, MS · Chief Medical Officer, Curativa Bay

This week, I want to start where the news started.

A Dutch-flagged expedition cruise ship called the MV Hondius left Ushuaia, Argentina, more than a month ago, made its planned stops in Antarctica, returned briefly to Ushuaia, sailed north past Saint Helena, and on Sunday anchored off Praia, the capital of Cape Verde, an archipelago off the west coast of Africa. By the time it dropped anchor, three of its passengers were dead. Six more were symptomatic. One British national had been airlifted off and was in critical condition in a Johannesburg ICU. Two crew members were in urgent need of evacuation.

Cape Verde refused permission for the ship to dock.

The official reason — and Cape Verde’s reason was the right one — was the protection of public health. The country’s health authorities sent a medical team aboard to assess the symptomatic crew. They are now monitoring the situation from offshore, and the ship may be redirected to Las Palmas or Tenerife in the Canary Islands, where the docking question will be asked again.

The suspected pathogen is hantavirus. One laboratory-confirmed case so far. Five additional suspected cases. The World Health Organization has been clear that the broader risk to the public is low — hantavirus is rare in humans and, for the strains we usually encounter, is not transmitted easily from person to person. It is most often acquired through contact with rodent excreta.

So why am I, as Chief Medical Officer of a hypochlorous acid company, choosing this story to introduce you to the Curativa Bay Substack?

Because of what the story is actually about — which is not hantavirus.
What the Cruise Ship Is

A cruise ship is a fascinating epidemiological object. It is, in essence, a small floating city — a few hundred or a few thousand people living in close quarters for weeks at a time, eating from shared kitchens, breathing recirculated air, sharing surfaces in narrow corridors, sleeping behind thin walls. When something biological boards that ship, whether it walked on two legs through a customs checkpoint or scurried in on four through a cargo hold, the entire vessel becomes the host environment.

This is why cruise ships have been the location, over the years, of some of the most instructive outbreaks in modern public health. Norovirus on the Diamond Princess. Legionella outbreaks in onboard water systems. Influenza, repeatedly. SARS-CoV-2 famously, on multiple vessels, including the same Diamond Princess that has by now contributed more to our understanding of respiratory pathogen transmission than most universities. The ship turns the population into an unblinded study cohort whether the operators intend it or not.

I want to be careful here. The hantavirus suspected on the Hondius is not, in the ordinary sense, the kind of pathogen we worry about in cruise-ship transmission models. The strains that infect humans most often are acquired through environmental exposure to rodent waste, not by inhaling someone else’s cough. So if you are imagining the Hondius as another Diamond Princess — passengers infecting each other in dining rooms — the analogy is wrong, and Cape Verde’s quarantine decision was about caution and burden of proof rather than about a clear human-to-human chain.

But the Hondius matters for the same reason the Diamond Princess mattered. The ship is the laboratory the world keeps building for itself.

And the fact that we keep building it should make us think hard about what is on board, and what could be on board the next time.
The Pathogens We Actually Worry About

Here is what your epidemiologist friends spend their lunches arguing about. Not the hantavirus on this particular ship. The next outbreak. The one that does spread efficiently, person to person, in close quarters. The one that gets onto a vessel because someone touched a doorknob, or a serving spoon, or a bathroom faucet, and then someone else touched it twenty seconds later.

Norovirus is the classic example. The infectious dose for norovirus is somewhere between ten and a hundred viral particles. Ten. That is a number so small that essentially any contaminated surface in a high-traffic area becomes a transmission vector. Norovirus survives on surfaces for days. It resists most household disinfectants at the concentrations commonly used. It fells cruise ships routinely — every winter, you will read another headline.

Influenza, on a ship, can move through a closed population in days. Respiratory syncytial virus the same. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus — MRSA — colonizes surfaces and hands, and on a cruise ship full of older passengers (the demographic skews older for expedition cruises like the Hondius), MRSA infections in wounds or surgical sites can become serious quickly.

And then there is the broader category of communicable disease the public health community calls emerging — the pathogens we do not yet know about, or the ones we know about but have not seen at scale. The next coronavirus. The next H5N1 spillover. The next thing that boards a ship in a port and gets discovered three thousand nautical miles later, when there is no port that will take you.

When a cruise ship ties up at the dock and a passenger steps off, that passenger walks into an airport, into a city, onto a connecting flight to somewhere on the other side of the world. The ship is a node in a much larger network. What gets onboard becomes what gets ashore, and from there, becomes what arrives in your city six weeks later.

This is not catastrophizing. This is just what infectious disease specialists call routine.
Four Conditions, Three Centuries of Unbroken Logic

In every introductory epidemiology course, students learn that for a communicable disease to transmit from one person to another, four things must be true. There must be a pathogen present. The pathogen must be present in sufficient quantity to cause infection — what we call the infectious dose. There must be a route of entry into the new host. And the new host must be susceptible, meaning they do not already have immunity.

If any one of these four conditions fails, transmission fails.

The four-condition model is more than a hundred years old. It has not been overturned. It has not been replaced. It has been refined and quantified, but the underlying logic is the same logic John Snow used in 1854 to take the handle off the Broad Street pump and stop a cholera outbreak in central London. Break one of the four conditions, and the chain collapses.

Disinfection — environmental disinfection, the kind done on doorknobs and dining surfaces and bathroom fixtures and HVAC ductwork — is the most direct intervention against the first two conditions. Reduce the pathogen present. Reduce the quantity below the infectious dose. Break the chain on the surfaces and in the air, before the chain ever reaches a human host.

This is where the rest of the conversation gets interesting. Because for most of the last century, the disinfectants we have used to break that chain have come with their own costs.
The Trouble With Most Disinfectants

Bleach kills almost everything. It also damages tissue, off-gasses chlorine fumes, requires PPE for safe use at concentrations high enough to kill resistant pathogens like norovirus (which requires bleach concentrations as high as 5,000 parts per million to inactivate), and is dangerous to use in occupied spaces.

Quaternary ammonium compounds — the active ingredients in most institutional disinfectant sprays — are positively charged molecules that struggle to penetrate the negatively charged matrix of bacterial biofilms. They are ineffective against non-enveloped viruses like norovirus and parvovirus. They have been associated with occupational asthma in cleaning staff. They leave persistent residue on surfaces. And resistant strains of bacteria have been documented.

Hydrogen peroxide vapor works, but it is a respiratory irritant and requires evacuation of the space being treated.

Alcohol kills most enveloped viruses but evaporates quickly, is flammable, and is largely ineffective against spores and non-enveloped viruses.

Each of these chemistries is useful. None of them is good enough alone. And none of them — none of them — can be safely deployed in occupied spaces while passengers and crew continue going about their business.

This is the gap I want to close.
The Molecule the Body Has Been Using for Six Hundred Million Years

The Curativa Bay Substack is the editorial home of a company built around a single biochemical insight. The molecule the human immune system itself produces to destroy pathogens — hypochlorous acid, or HOCl — is also one of the most powerful broad-spectrum antimicrobial agents we have ever identified. It is produced by your white blood cells, every minute of every day, when those cells encounter a bacterium or a virus or a fungus. The reaction is catalyzed by an enzyme called myeloperoxidase, and the resulting HOCl molecule attacks pathogens through four simultaneous oxidative mechanisms — membrane disruption, enzyme inactivation, nucleic acid oxidation, and biofilm degradation. There is no documented resistance to HOCl in over a century of clinical and industrial study, because there is no single target for evolution to find.

What makes the molecule operationally interesting — and the reason a company exists around it — is that it can now be stabilized outside the body, in solution, at controlled concentrations. It can be sprayed on a wound. It can be fogged into a room. It can be applied to food-contact surfaces, to children’s toys, to door handles in a passenger corridor, to the air handling system of a vessel — all without evacuating the space, without PPE, without leaving toxic residue. After it reacts, it degrades into water and a trace of saline. That is its full byproduct profile.

Norovirus, which requires 5,000 ppm of bleach to kill, is killed by HOCl at concentrations between 160 and 200 ppm. That is a 25- to 31-fold concentration advantage, achieved with a molecule the human body itself produces. The applications across cruise ships, schools, hospitals, food processing, and public-health stockpiles are, in my professional opinion, substantial — and they are precisely the kind of applications where conventional chemistry has fallen short.
Why I’m Writing Here

I came on as Chief Medical Officer of Curativa Bay because, after a long career thinking about countermeasures, I have not encountered another antimicrobial platform that combines this kind of broad-spectrum lethality with this kind of human-tissue safety. The combination is rare in chemistry and common in biology — for good reason. The body has been engineering it for hundreds of millions of years.

The Curativa Bay Substack will be the place where I, and the team here, write regularly about what this molecule means for medicine, public health, biodefense, and the everyday questions of how we protect ourselves and our families from communicable disease. We will cover the science. We will cover the history of antimicrobial chemistry and the failures that brought us to where we are. We will write about wound care, about chronic non-healing infections, about hospital-acquired infections, about pandemic preparedness, about federal stockpiles, about humanitarian deployments. We will write about the institutional and political conversations that shape what countermeasures are available to whom, and at what cost.

We will not catastrophize. The hantavirus outbreak on the Hondius is, in all likelihood, a contained tragedy with a small number of victims and a manageable public-health response. WHO is correct that the broader risk is low. Cape Verde made the right call. The cruise will be redirected. The investigation will continue.

But the Hondius is also, in a smaller way, a flare in the sky. A reminder that ships can carry things across oceans. That ports have the right to say no. That public-health infrastructure depends on the ability to break the chain of transmission before it reaches the next person. And that the chemistry we use to break that chain matters enormously — to the safety of the workers wielding it, to the patients sleeping near it, to the children playing on the surfaces it has touched.

There is a better chemistry for this. Your body has been using it since long before any of us learned to build ships.

I am glad you are here. Subscribe, and stay with us. The next pieces will go deeper — into the four mechanisms HOCl uses to destroy pathogens, into the unsolved problem of biofilm-driven chronic wounds, and into what a serious national biodefense posture would actually look like in 2026.

Thank you for reading.

— Robert W. Malone, MD, MS

Dr. Robert W. Malone is the Chief Medical Officer of Curativa Bay (CuraClean Technologies). He is a physician, scientist, and the inventor of foundational mRNA vaccine technology. He has served on multiple biotechnology and biodefense advisory bodies and writes regularly on pandemic preparedness, medical countermeasures, and public-health policy.

https://open.substack.com/pub/curativabay/p/when-the-ship-cant-dock

They Tortured Thousands

(Tom: If you ever wonder why I am SO against psychiatry, this will give you just a fraction of the reason. Not even a big fraction. Maybe one percent of the data I have seen on it over the years.

Psychiatry was behind Hitler’s genocide of the Jews in the 1930s and 1940s, behind the ethnic cleansing in Yugoslavia in the 1990s, behind the drugging of children with ‘speed’ for a fictitious ADHD diagnosis, the list is long and odious.)

They Tortured Thousands

1953. The Cold War was hot. The CIA was paranoid. American POWs had come back from Korea praising communism. Confessing to crimes they didn’t commit.
The CIA believed the Soviets had cracked it. Mind control. Brainwashing. A way to rewrite a human being.
America needed it too. Or they’d lose the war before it started.
Allen Dulles gave a speech at Princeton. Called it “brain warfare.” Said the Soviets were doing it. Never mentioned America was about to do it first.
On April 13, 1953, Dulles approved Project MKUltra.
In charge: Sidney Gottlieb. Chemist. PhD from Caltech. Club foot. Stutterer. Drank goat’s milk. Grew Christmas trees on his farm.
Looked like a gentle eccentric. Was the most dangerous man in American intelligence.
They called him the Black Sorcerer. He designed poisoned cigars for Castro. Poisoned handkerchiefs. Exploding seashells. Toothpaste laced with toxins.
MKUltra was his project. His vision. His playground.
The goal was simple. Find a drug that could control minds. Erase memories. Force confessions. Create the perfect spy. The perfect assassin.
They tried everything.
LSD. Mescaline. Heroin. Barbiturates. Scopolamine. Electroshock. Sensory deprivation. Hypnosis. Sleep deprivation for weeks. Verbal abuse. Sexual abuse. Isolation chambers.
149 subprojects. Funneled through fake foundations. Front companies. So universities wouldn’t know they were taking CIA money.
Over 80 institutions. 185 researchers. Harvard. Stanford. Columbia. Johns Hopkins.
None of them told the subjects what was happening. Most subjects didn’t know they were subjects.
Here’s what they did.
They dosed prisoners. Drug addicts in a federal facility in Kentucky got LSD for 77 straight days. Black inmates. Given LSD continuously for over two months.
Just to see what would happen.
They dosed mental patients. Terminal cancer patients. Soldiers. Students who signed up for “paid research.”
They dosed each other. CIA agents at a 1953 work retreat had their drinks spiked. No warning. Just dosed.
One of them was Frank Olson. 43 years old. Army scientist. Biological weapons expert.
The LSD broke him. He couldn’t sleep. Couldn’t concentrate. Told his wife: “I’ve made a terrible mistake.”
Nine days after being dosed, Frank Olson went through a 10th-floor hotel window. November 28, 1953.
The CIA said suicide. Said the drugs made him do it.
In 1994, his son had the body exhumed. Forensic pathologist found a hematoma above the left eye. No glass in his hair. Injuries inconsistent with falling through a window.
The medical examiner changed the ruling. Homicide.
Frank Olson didn’t jump. Someone hit him. Then threw him out the window.
Because he knew too much. And was about to talk.
But Olson was just the famous one.
Operation Midnight Climax. Subproject 3.
The CIA rented apartments in San Francisco and New York. Set them up as safehouses. Hired prostitutes. Paid them $100 a night.
The prostitutes brought men back to the apartments. Dosed their drinks with LSD. Random targets. Drug addicts. Alcoholics. Anyone they could get.
Behind a two-way mirror sat CIA agents. Drinking martinis. Watching. Taking notes.
The operation ran ten years. Hundreds of victims. All dosed without consent. All watched like animals.
The man in charge was George Hunter White. Federal narcotics agent. Installed a portable toilet behind the mirror so he never had to leave.
He wrote a letter to Gottlieb years later:
“I toiled wholeheartedly in the vineyards because it was fun, fun, fun. Where else could a red-blooded American boy lie, kill, cheat, steal, rape, and pillage with the sanction and blessing of the All-Highest?”
That’s what this was. Fun. For the people running it.
Meanwhile, in Montreal.
Dr. Ewen Cameron ran the Allan Memorial Institute. Former president of the World Psychiatric Association.
The CIA funded him. Funneled money through a front foundation.
Cameron called his experiments “psychic driving.” He put patients in drug-induced comas. Up to 86 days at a time.
While they slept, he played tape loops. Phrases repeated tens of thousands of times. Designed to break their minds.
Then “depatterning.” Massive doses of electroshock. 30 to 40 times the normal amount. Combined with LSD. PCP. Barbiturates.
The goal: erase the personality completely. Rebuild it from scratch.
It didn’t work. He destroyed them instead.
Patients came out unable to read. Unable to remember their children. Unable to control basic bodily functions. Adults reduced to infant states.
These were people who’d gone to him for anxiety. Mild depression. Normal disorders.
They left broken. Many never recovered.
Cameron died in 1967. Never prosecuted. Obituary praised his contributions to psychiatry.
The program kept going. Year after year. Victim after victim.
Some survivors figured out what had happened. Most didn’t. Most went to their graves thinking they’d gone crazy on their own.
Not knowing a government chemist had broken their minds for an experiment that never worked.
Because it didn’t work.
After 20 years and millions of dollars, the CIA never created a Manchurian Candidate. Never found a truth serum. Never figured out mind control.
All they did was torture people for nothing.
In 1973, Richard Helms knew the scandal was coming. Watergate had broken. Congress was starting to look.
Helms was CIA Director. He ordered Gottlieb to destroy every MKUltra file.
They shredded everything. Every experiment. Every subject. Every name. Gone.
They thought they’d gotten away with it.
Then in 1977, a CIA clerk found 20,000 pages. Misfiled under financial records. Missed the shredder.
Those pages became the Church Committee hearings. America learned about MKUltra for the first time.
Over 30 universities involved. Covert drug tests on unwitting citizens. At every social level. High and low.
Sidney Gottlieb was called to testify. Claimed he didn’t remember. Couldn’t recall specifics.
No one went to prison. Not Gottlieb. Not Helms. Not Dulles. Not Cameron. Not White.
Gottlieb retired to Virginia. Grew organic vegetables. Volunteered at a hospice. Practiced folk dancing.
Died in 1999. Age 80. In his own bed. Peacefully.
The victims didn’t get that.
Thousands of Americans and Canadians used as test subjects. Without consent. Without knowledge. Without follow-up care.
Many were poor. Many were incarcerated. Many were mentally ill. Many were minorities.
Chosen because no one would believe them. No one would defend them. No one would miss them.
Some killed themselves. Some spent years in mental hospitals. Some never recovered.
We will never know how many. The files are gone. Gottlieb burned them.
Here’s what makes this unforgivable.
This wasn’t a foreign enemy. Wasn’t a rogue agent. This was official US policy. Approved at the highest levels. Funded with taxpayer money.
American citizens. Drugged. Raped. Tortured. Driven mad. By their own government. For nothing.
And the men who did it faced no consequences. No prison. No disgrace. Died rich. Died respected.
The victims died screaming. In bedrooms and mental wards and hotel windows. Their names never said out loud.
MKUltra wasn’t a conspiracy theory. It was real. It happened. Proven in Senate hearings. The CIA admitted it. The President apologized.
And almost no one was punished.
The United States government ran a torture program against its own people for 20 years.
Destroyed the evidence.
Got away with it.

FDA Covered Up Safety Signals

Sen Ron Johnson FDA Uncovered

This is earth-shattering. Senator Ron Johnson just revealed that Secretary Kennedy provided him with 11 MILLION pages of HHS documents on the COVID vaccine. What the documents exposed about the FDA is truly disturbing.

JOHNSON: “We have now uncovered the fact that FDA officials knew in March of 2021 that their analytical system for the VAERS system, was completely inadequate, that it would MASK significant safety signals.”

“They had a different system that would, you know, produce this information unmasked.”

“They presented that to top FDA officials, and they covered up.”

“They were 49 cases of extreme masking, resulting in 25 safety signals, including sudden cardiac death, bell’s palsy, pulmonary infarction, very serious side effects.”

“And again, I said, I don’t I didn’t need a sophisticated system.”

“I saw deaths per year go from a couple hundred to over 20,000 the year the vaccine came out in 2021.”

“And yet the FDA officials hid behind their analytics that they knew would hide these safety signals to continue to claim to this day, we didn’t see any safety signals with the Covid injection.”

Click to view the video: https://x.com/overton_news/status/2047370947150192792?s=20

The Man Out of Time

Some stories refuse to die because they might just be true.
Others refuse to die because they’re too beautiful to let go.
Javier Pereira belongs somewhere between those worlds.
In 1956, a man walked into Cornell Medical Center in New York City and broke every assumption doctors had about human aging.
He stood just 4 feet 4 inches tall.
He weighed 77 pounds.
He had no teeth left.
And he claimed—calmly, matter-of-factly—that he had been alive since 1789.
Javier Pereira was an indigenous Zenú man from Colombia.
When the world discovered him in the 1950s, he wasn’t just old.
He was impossibly old.
He said he’d outlived five wives.
He’d buried all his children, all his grandchildren, and according to some accounts, even great-grandchildren who had died decades earlier.
The last known descendant in his family line reportedly died in 1941—at age 85.
Javier stood alone, the final ember of a bloodline that had burned through two centuries.
If his claims were true, he’d been born when George Washington became America’s first president.
He would have lived through Napoleon’s rise and fall, two world wars, the invention of the airplane, the atomic bomb, and the moon landing.
He would have been older than every country in the Western Hemisphere except the United States.
Could any of it be real?
🔬 What Doctors Found
In 1956, Ripley’s Believe It or Not brought Pereira to New York.
The world wanted proof.
At Cornell Medical Center, physicians conducted extensive examinations.
The results unsettled them.
His hair remained brown, not white.
His arteries showed remarkable elasticity—no significant hardening, no severe calcification.
His reflexes were sharp.
He climbed stairs unaided.
He walked without assistance.
He moved, reacted, and functioned in ways that defied his claimed age.
One doctor allegedly remarked—though never in official published records—that Pereira appeared to be “well over 150 years old” based purely on physical markers.
Not 80. Not 100. But something beyond the known scale of human aging.
No one could verify he was 200.
But no one could explain what they were seeing, either.
😄 The Punch That Stunned the Room
At a press conference in the Hotel Biltmore, reporters gathered expecting a frail relic.
What they got was a revelation.
Pereira, laughing with mischievous energy, suddenly threw playful punches at four people in the room—journalists, doctors, onlookers.
The room froze.
Then erupted.
This wasn’t a man barely clinging to life.
This was someone still fully alive.
A reporter asked the question everyone wanted answered:
“What is your secret?”
Pereira smiled.
“I chew cacao, drink coffee, and avoid worries.”
No exotic herbs. No mystical rituals. No fountain of youth.
Just simplicity. Just lightness.
Just a life lived without the weight of anxiety.
📜 Memories That Shouldn’t Exist
Pereira didn’t just claim age.
He claimed memory.
He spoke of the Siege of Cartagena in 1815, a brutal Spanish reconquest that reshaped Latin American history.
He described famines, wars, and upheavals that belonged to textbooks, not living testimony.
He recalled a Colombia that had vanished—colonial towns, indigenous traditions erased by modernization, landscapes transformed beyond recognition.
Were his memories perfect? Likely not.
Human memory distorts, blends, reshapes across decades.
But the specificity of his accounts—the details no one his apparent physical age should possess—left scholars and journalists unsettled.
How could someone remember what they’d never lived?
🇨🇴 A Nation Remembers
When Javier Pereira died in 1989, Colombia didn’t dismiss him.
They didn’t call him a liar or a curiosity.
Instead, the nation issued a commemorative postal stamp in his honor.
Not to validate his age.
But to preserve a story that had become part of Colombia’s soul.
Because sometimes, legends matter more than facts.
🧬 What Science Says
Let’s be clear:
No human has ever been verified to live beyond 122 years.
The oldest confirmed person in history was Jeanne Calment of France, who died in 1997 at 122 years, 164 days.
Pereira had no birth certificate.
No baptismal records.
No documentation that could withstand rigorous verification.
Modern gerontologists and demographers are unanimous: his claim of 167-200 years is biologically implausible given current understanding of cellular aging, telomere degradation, and metabolic limits.
And yet.
The doctors who examined him found something they couldn’t categorize.
The people who met him witnessed vitality that defied explanation.
The memories he carried seemed to reach back further than one lifetime should allow.
🌌 Why Javier Pereira Still Matters
Was he truly 200 years old?
Almost certainly not.
But here’s what matters:
Javier Pereira challenged certainty.
He reminded us that the world still holds mysteries science hasn’t fully mapped.
He lived simply, laughed easily, and carried himself with a lightness that modern life has forgotten.
He walked between worlds—indigenous tradition and modern spectacle, folklore and medical examination, memory and myth.
And in doing so, he left behind something more valuable than proof:
A reminder that not every truth lives in documents.
Some truths live in witness.
In wonder.
In the quiet defiance of a small man who climbed stairs unaided at an age when most humans are dust.
Javier Pereira may not have lived 200 years.
But the idea of him—the possibility he represented—will live far longer than any of us.
And maybe that’s the real secret to immortality.

Glyphosate – Pipe Cleaner To Food Poison

Glyphosate - Pipe Cleaner To Food Poison

The hidden truth about Glyphosate: It started as a pipe chelator — and it was never meant to touch our food. Most people think Glyphosate (Roundup’s main ingredient) is just a weedkiller. But here’s the lesser-known truth: it was originally patented and used as a powerful chelating agent to clean pipes and boilers. What Glyphosate Really Is A chelator is a molecule that tightly binds to minerals (calcium, magnesium, zinc, iron, manganese, etc.) and makes them unavailable. In 1964, Stauffer Chemical patented glyphosate (U.S. Patent 3,160,632) specifically as a descaler to dissolve mineral buildup in hot-water pipes and industrial systems. It was excellent at pulling calcium and magnesium out of pipes. In the 1970s, Monsanto repurposed it as an herbicide. Suddenly this pipe cleaner was being sprayed on food crops — especially Roundup-Ready GMO plants — and has been ever since. How It Steals Minerals at Every Level • Pipes: Binds and flushes out mineral deposits. • Soil: Locks up essential trace minerals so plants can’t access them. It also harms soil microbes that normally release these minerals. • Plants: Crops absorb less zinc, magnesium, iron, manganese, and calcium. Glyphosate residues remain in the plant tissue we eat. • Humans & Animals: When we consume these foods, glyphosate continues chelating inside our bodies — binding minerals and stripping them from our cells, enzymes, and organs. This affects every living being. Why This Matters So Much Minerals are the foundation of health. They power: • Magnesium: Energy production (ATP), muscle/nerve function, sleep, blood pressure, blood sugar control. • Zinc: Immune function, DNA repair, hormones, skin, brain function, wound healing. • Potassium: Heart rhythm, muscle contraction, fluid balance. • Iron, Manganese, Calcium, Boron, Selenium, Copper: Oxygen transport, bones, antioxidants, thyroid, detoxification. Today, most people are deficient in these minerals — not from lack of calories, but because modern industrial farming and glyphosate have depleted our soils. Trace minerals that once came naturally through healthy soil into our food are now largely missing. Processed foods, filtered water, and stress make it worse. The result: widespread fatigue, anxiety, brain fog, weak immunity, hormone issues, muscle cramps, poor sleep, and rising chronic illness. Bottom Line Glyphosate was never designed to touch our food. Its core job is to bind minerals and disrupt life processes. Yet it’s now one of the most used chemicals on Earth, with residues in our bread, oats, vegetables, and more. We can’t fix mineral deficiency by just “eating more veggies” if the soil is broken. Real solutions require regenerative farming, remineralizing our bodies (through better food and targeted supplementation after testing), and reducing exposure. Our health depends on getting these minerals back. Share if this opened your eyes. What mineral deficiency symptoms have you or your family noticed?