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Church
of Scientology of Canberra
Freedom
Below is a thoughtful article sent to us by email,
now reproduced
here in the public interest:
Our
U.S. Military: Betrayed and Drugged

By
Shane Ellison
Award-winning scientist, Masters Degree in Organic Chemistry
March 31, 2010
Chad was a Marine Scout
Sniper who served two tours in Iraq.
Upon being honorably discharged as a Sgt. in 2007, he summoned the
courage to ask for help in dealing with the images and emotions that
gnawed on him from being dropped into combat. Like so many of his
peers, the help he was given was “meds.”
Although
Chad was used to putting his life at risk, he never expected that his
life would be more directly threatened by the
“treatment”
he was offered—psychiatric drugs.
After a single day of “following doctor’s
orders,”
Chad felt things were starting to look up. He seemed to be
more
cognizant, and the weight of daily struggles was lifted. But, as he
describes it, things “quickly flip-flopped.”
“As time passed, I began changing into someone I
wasn’t.
Once a focused, motivated sniper, my reaction time became stagnant. My
thought process became dry and lethargic, while my independence
drifted. I became unable to make decisions on my own and reluctantly
found myself relying on others in ways I had never done before. I had
become a sort of medicated drone. All emotion turned into apathy and I
found myself lackadaisical and eventually felt meaningless.
That’s where it got really bad for me, and it’s
hard to
talk about now…. It was as if my brain chemistry went
whack.”
This bleak scenario is becoming all too common for today’s
military. The psychiatric death threat is becoming riskier than
combat. In 2010, Time magazine reported that,
“During the
month of January, more soldiers committed suicide than were killed by
enemy fire in Afghanistan and Iraq combined.” Mystified by
the
death toll among troops, Army Chief of Staff George Casey said that,
“The fact of the matter is, we just don’t know why
suicides
have increased.”
A group of U.S. Senators have finally raised concern that the use of
antidepressants and other prescription drugs are on the rise in the
military, particularly among troops in Iraq and
Afghanistan. The U.S. FDA has warned these drugs
can cause
worsening depression, mania, psychosis, suicidal and homicidal
ideation. Senator Jim Webb, D-Va., who led the
recent
Senate Armed Services Committee’s hearing in Washington, said
the
apparent increase in prescription drugs is “on its face,
pretty
astounding and troubling.” In fact, Department of
Defense
statistics show that from 2005 to 2008, there was a 400 percent
increase in the prescription of antidepressants and other drugs used to
treat anxiety. And a 2007 Army report showed that about 12
percent of combat troops in Iraq and 17 percent of those in Afghanistan
were taking antidepressants or sleeping pills.
The suicide trend is not inexplicable, and must be highlighted if
troops like Chad are to be saved from the psychiatric death threat.
Like the loss of power to a car that results from a broken fuse, mental
circuitry is shut off with each and every dose of psychiatric
medication. The latest cloning techniques and laboratory methods show
this to be the result of “neurotransmitter
hijacking,”
which scrambles brain circuitry, leaving users like Chad feeling
“dry and lethargic,” in times of deep emotional
turmoil.
Once neurotransmitter hijacking takes place, users become fully under
the spell of psychiatry. The brain can become so scrambled that all
normal reality and reason are overwritten by a new confusing and
violent agenda. A new personality arises—one with homicidal
and
suicidal tendencies. Commenting on the biochemical fiasco, CNN
publicized that, “Antidepressant drugs actually create a
perilous
brain imbalance.” Chad barely escaped.
“Rebounding on and off the drugs, I reached the darkest point
in
my life, strangely enough at home. I packed up my ghillie
suit—the same thing I used to camouflage myself as a sniper
in
enemy territory—and hiked into the wilderness late at night,
where no one would find me. I held my .45 cal pistol while
attempting the unspeakable…many things raced through my
mind,
and at the forefront were feelings of worthlessness and my inability to
relate to anyone, even myself. As a combat decorated Marine,
it’s
not something I’m proud of. But it’s a reality that
seems
to be more common among my peers, and it’s scary as
hell.…
To this day, I’m not sure what stopped me, probably an act of
God. I walked backed vowing to reclaim my life – with
everything
I had. And, since my mental health declined so drastically
since
getting on the meds, I felt that getting off them was the first place
to start.”
No doubt, combat leads to emotional stress beyond what the rest of us
can concede. Listening to the combat experience of Chad
paints
painful images in my own mind. It’s no wonder indelible scars
are
left on the minds of our troops. And rather than help them cope, they
are literally being drugged to death in a large-scale experiment that
goes ignored. Former military psychiatrist, Dr. Grace Jackson,
substantiated this stating that, “It’s really a
large-scale
experiment. We are experimenting with changing people’s
cognition
and behavior.”
Once off the drugs, Chad’s escape came from getting back to
basics—really basic. He starts each day with rigorous
exercise
and ends it with a deep sleep, induced by L-tryptophan and valerian.
His diet is fortified with whey isolate twice per day with meals that
consist of unprocessed foods. Sugar and alcohol have been reduced to an
absolute minimum. Sauna treatments are regular, and real therapy comes
from writing and talking to others who share his experience, as well as
giving back in the form of support. He knows his story is only
“one of thousands” and that other veterans need
help.
Today, Chad has earned his bachelor’s degree—with
honors—in a record 2.5 years. At the same time, he founded a
Veterans center, which serves as a hub at his Alma Mater to offer
support in all matters that relate to being a vet. And when he can, he
helps others heed his warning about the military death threat:
“Psychiatrists under contract with the Veteran
Affairs—in
my opinion—are legal drug dealers who almost took my
life.”
Shane Ellison is the bestselling author of Over-The-Counter Natural
Cures and holds a masters degree in drug design (organic chemistry). He
is a two-time recipient of the prestigious Howard Hughes Medical
Institute Research Grant for his studies in biochemistry and
physiology.
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