How I Exposed the Biggest Pharma Scandal of Our Lifetime

Sackler Family – Mass Murderers of an estimated 500,000 victims

When I walked into the diner my source was already there, sitting in a booth. It was late summer of 2001 and, earlier that year, I had started writing articles for The New York Times about the growing abuse of a then little-known painkiller, OxyContin. Its maker, Purdue Pharma, was promoting the powerful narcotic to doctors as a “wonder” drug that was far safer from abuse and addiction than other pain pills.


I did watch the Netflix movie, it’s good.

In a just world the death chamber would be made ready but the money this family made on the graves of hundreds of thousands of victims bought their immunity.

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850 people are still missing after Maui wildfires: Hawaii county mayor

Maui Mayor Richard Bissen said Monday 850 people are still missing as search and rescue efforts continue after devastating wildfires tore through the island earlier this month.

Bissen said there are currently 850 names on the list of missing persons, a decrease from over the more than 2,000 names that were initially reported missing. In a video update Monday morning, Bissen said over 1,285 people have been safely located.

“It is my sad duty to report that 114 individuals have been confirmed deceased,” Bissen said in a video update Monday morning. “Twenty-seven individuals have been identified and 11 families have been notified.”

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The Killer Worms Are Here!

This kid is toast.

Worms that secrete a dangerous paralyzing toxin spreading in Montreal

MONTREAL — An invasive worm species from Asia that secretes a dangerous, paralyzing toxin has been spotted in the Montreal area.

Lisa Osterland, a retired teacher, found some twenty hammerhead flatworms earlier this week while removing slugs that were eating flowers in her garden in Westmount, Que., a municipality on Montreal Island.

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Nude ‘Tour de France’ banned for public indecency on several of its stages

Seven stages of the so-called “nude Tour de France” were banned for public indecency in restrictions which climate activists said was “state intimidation”.

The cyclists are taking part in the World Naked Bike Ride, an annual event launched in 2004 in London and which last year crossed the capital without raising eyebrows. However, since the tour kicked off in Nantes, western France, on Aug 8, local authorities have prohibited seven stages by decree.

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Cows for the Climate? Canada Breeds ‘Emission-Friendly’ Bovines

Canada’s dairy farms are set to go whole hog on specially-bred cows whose burps would emit less methane—a world first.

By using a rigorous process of genetic selection, Semex, the company providing semen from ‘low-methane-emitting’ bulls, claims emissions by Canada’s dairy industry could drop 20-30% by 2050.

Researchers from the University of Guelph and the University of Alberta examined methane-emission data from the Holstein Friesian breed of cattle on 6,000 farms— about 60% of all Canada’s dairy farms.

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Trudeau vs. Poilievre: redefining the Family Man

 

Mrs. Doubtfire, a character immortalized by the late Robin Williams, once said, “There are all sorts of different families … But if there’s love, dear … those are the ties that bind, and you’ll have a family in your heart, forever.”

This sentiment, emanating from the 1993 film where a father dresses as a woman to remain connected to his children, deeply resonated. Since then, our societal perception of family has evolved.


Not sure but I think this article is testing the waters for Junior’s coming out.

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These 14 American Cities Have A ‘Target’ Of Banning Meat, Dairy, And Private Vehicles By 2030

meat and guns

Fourteen major American cities are part of a globalist climate organization known as the “C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group,” which has an “ambitious target” by the year 2030 of “0 kg [of] meat consumption,” “0 kg [of] dairy consumption,” “3 new clothing items per person per year,” “0 private vehicles” owned, and “1 short-haul return flight (less than 1500 km) every 3 years per person.”

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Fat Bottomed Girls cut from Queen’s greatest hits to appease younger audience

Suggestive 1978 hit single considered by Universal Music Group to be too raunchy

Queen’s Fat Bottomed Girls has been dropped from a greatest hits compilation targeted at younger listeners.

The suggestive 1978 single in praise of “dirty ladies” with fuller figures was a chart success and featured on previous selections of favourite tracks by the glam rock band.

However, a new compilation of Queen hits released by Universal Music for a younger market does not feature the Fat Bottom Girls and its lyrics celebrating the beauty of a “heap big woman”.

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