Thursday, July 31, 2008

The "Mothers act" - A bad idea










Hello Again... I saw this great article on the Mothers act and so I decided to put it in my blog... By the way please look at this "new" drug that I have advertised here, look at the name as I think that its very apt.

The Mother's Act - A Bad Idea

By Steve Hayes,
All of us have heard that Congress' approval rating is falling and now hovers between 10% and 15%. We hear about the millions spent on building a bridge that only a few people will cross and wealthy farmers being paid to not grow food. We hear about $1,000 hammers and shoddy work done by government contractors with seemingly no repercussions to the culprits. However, our biggest problem with Congress is that their solutions seldom provide good results. They have "good intentions", but their solutions seem to reward the lobby that contributes the most to their campaigns or makes the most noise, and there is little attention paid to whether the legislation actually produced the intended product.

It is for these reasons that most of us agree with Will Rogers' observation about Congress, "This country has come to feel the same when Congress is in session as when the baby gets hold of a hammer."

Is there anyone who is not concerned that there are mothers who feel not joy but sadness or depression after the birth of their child? If the mother is not happy, what kind of life is in store for the child? We all want to help the mother and the child.

None of us would oppose legislation that would really help. The answer lies in the definition of the word "help." This proposed legislation in Congress has the stated intention of helping mothers and young children who are depressed, by providing grants to "public or nonprofit private entities for projects to establish, operate, and coordinate effective and cost-efficient systems for the delivery of essential services to individuals with postpartum depression or postpartum psychosis and their families."

Besides being invasive, this is the first step on the "slippery slope" to requiring all of our expectant mothers and new mothers and their children to submit to "evaluations" by people who will be making determinations that are based not on scientific studies but subjective opinion.

Then if these evaluators determine that treatment is needed, it will be a treatment not based on successful procedures but on failed treatment protocols. Like many of the acts of Congress, the real beneficiary of these laws will not be the mothers and their children but the "mental health" workers who will be handsomely paid and the drug companies that are behind this legislation. THE MOST IMMEDIATE PROBLEM

Melanie Blocker-Stokes Postpartum Depression Research and Care Act has already passed the House of Representatives and is being considered, without the opportunity for debate, in the Senate. Harry Reid (D-NV), the Senate majority leader, has tried to put the legislation to a vote without the usual process of allowing amendments and debate.

Senator Tom Coburn, M.D. (R-OK) criticized Reid's plan, stating, "What the staff members are saying is we want to bring a bill, but we don't want to debate it. We don't want to vote on it. We don't want to have it amended. We don't want the American people to know what we would rather do in secret."

In plain English, this legislation will insert government into the lives of our citizens and mandate the use of antidepressants by people that are determined by "professionals" to need "treatment."

Of course, this legislation ignores:

· The fact that the proposed "treatment" using antidepressant drugs on pregnant women can create dangerous side effects for these women and their unborn children;

· The fact that recent real scientific studies show that antidepressants are no more effective than sugar pills;

· The fact that almost all of the school shooters were taking antidepressants;

· The fact that Andrea Yates was taking antidepressants when she killed her children;

· The fact that in the past ten years, numerous scientific studies and international drug regulatory warnings have documented the dangers of antidepressant drugs, ranging from suicidal and homicidal ideation to premature births, spontaneous abortions and birth defects;

· The fact that Melanie Stokes was "treated" with these same drugs and given electroshock, and she is no longer depressed because she committed suicide and her child lost her mother to these ineffective treatments;

· The fact as expressed by Dr. Dan Fisher, a psychiatrist, that "A superficial screening by overworked pediatricians would likely result in many false positives with devastating consequences for the children and their families. These quick-fix screening tests invariably end up with quick fixes of kids by labeling them and placing them on medication, without a comprehensive psychosocial evaluation and assistance to the children and their interpersonal environment. As a psychiatrist who has evaluated children in schools, I know that myriad factors can cause what appear to be symptoms of mental illness";

· The fact pointed out by Dr. Karen Effrem that, "One commonly used screening instrument has a 73% false positive rating, meaning that for every 27 children supposedly correctly identified as having an emotional problem on this screening test that follow admittedly 'subjective' criteria that are 'value judgments based on culture' according to the Surgeon General, 73 other families are falsely told that something is wrong with their child and referred for further evaluation and treatment which more and more commonly involves ineffective and sometimes lethally dangerous drugs";

· The fact pointed out by Dr. Effrem that studies in 1999, 2004, and 2005 showed that home visiting programs did nothing to decrease child abuse rates but cost up to $47,000 per family in 1999 dollars and did nothing to improve the cognitive development of the children;

· The fact that many of the bill's strongest supporters have financial connections to Big Pharma;

· The fact that an estimated 2,900 babies died via spontaneous abortion because of SSRI antidepressants given to pregnant women;

· The fact that babies exposed to SSRIs in pregnancy have a six-fold increased risk of persistent pulmonary hypertension (PPHN), a potentially fatal lung problem;

· The fact that nearly one-third of women who take SSRIs during pregnancy have a baby who dies, is premature or underweight, or who has seizures;

· The fact that women being screened are not guaranteed sufficient data to allow the women to give "informed consent." (This is because if they were given all the data about the side effects created for them and their babies, few women would ever take the drugs.)
CONCLUSION

Big Pharma has no conscience and could care less if people die or become more ill-if they can sell more drugs. At Novus Medical Detox Center, we could choose to view the Mother's Act and the other bills attempting to "treat" people by putting them on these dangerous drugs as guarantees of our beds being always full of people needing medical detox. In the same way, undertakers could choose to view these bills as good for business because more people will die before their time through suicide or mass murder.

The drug store chains will expand more because more people will be hooked on these dangerous drugs. Doctor's offices will be more crowded because we know that these dangerous drugs often lead to serious health side effects that will require medical treatment.

The real problem is that we could have legislation that makes available real and proven medical and nutritional tests to actually find the cause of the depression in most people. Others who are depressed because they have no way of effectively providing for their child and themselves because they are not trained in any skilled position could be helped through the provision of training to allow them to become more productive.

Instead, we ignore the likely causes for the great majority of depressed mothers and treat them with failed treatment options. This is not only cruel but unnecessary and will create far greater costs for society and far more problems for the mothers and their children.

This bill and the other bills pending in Congress seeking to "treat" mothers and their children are good examples of why more and more of us are agreeing with the American Indians saying that the biggest lie is, "I am from the government and I am here to help you."

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Picketing the "Pill Mills" in Pinellas Park


















Hello All!


Yesterday was a blast as I went for a picket in Pinellas Park area!

As most of you know I participate on a radio show called "Prescription addiction Radio" In the Tampa Bay area on a station called 860am WGUL and it covers the facts that this society has a opium epidemic among it and its not doing enough (if anything) as a whole to put an end to it.

As the host of our show is a pharmacist and does fill prescriptions he has noticed in the past certain prescriptions that did not seem correct etc and they were coming from a certain clinic. Upon further investigation in turns out the clinic will fill what you need for a certain price... If that does not violate the Hippocratic oath then I don't know what does! This clinic on 8800 49th St in Pinellas Park FL is actually supplying peoples habits in states other than Florida!!!

SO... We got some people together and went out and picketed. It was great and a lot of people were honking from their cars etc. I thought it was good and I am very glad that we did it.

The point of the whole thing was to bring awareness to the neighborhood of what was going on here, we know that if there was a man on the corner there selling Heroin or Cocaine that the neighbors would not tolerate it and do something to end it even if the Police were not doing something, this we KNOW.

But then why do the same people let this clinic pass out Oxycodone or Roxys or other opiates? If you think that there is a difference, then think again. I work as a Counsellor at a Detox and let me tell you... There is NO difference - The Heroin users will use Dilaudid or Oxy's to substitute their habit - So why is this then acceptable to be going on?

Well - We have no brought about public awareness and we shall see if they start pulling together as a society and group to put an end to this.

We will be doing more in the future and I will keep you informed.

Later - Monty

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Doctors are taking gifts from pharma companies...




Hello again,

I wanted to share this with you as I know that I have blogged about this before but this is good data on the fact that Doctors (over 2/3) are accepting gifts from the pharma company's... This makes me remember that I read a quote once that was from a man who had been in the area of Counterespionage his whole career and he stated coolly and calmly that "everyone had a price, all of the people he ever went to had a price. Some big and some small, but all had one." That being said and the fact that around 50 BILLION dollars is spent annually on marketing TO the DOCTORS... I have nothing further your honor.

Later - Monty

Monday, July 14, 2008

Dangerous Online Drugs




This video goes into the facts and figures of what the online pharmacies are doing and how and why YOU could be affected. Watch it and let me know what you think.

Later - Monty

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Tom Cruise, family enjoy holiday outing


















Tom Cruise was seen with his family at a Fourth of July celebration in Telluride, Colorado.

The "Top Gun" star wore a cowboy hat as he enjoyed the holiday Friday with his wife, actress Katie Holmes, 29, and their two children, the Daily Mail reported Saturday.

Cruise's son Connor, 13, is from his previous marriage to actress Nicole Kid man.

Suri, donned a headband with two American flags sticking out of it, was the star of the family's holiday outing based on Cruise's glowing comments about the child's outgoing personality, the Daily Mail reported.

The actor also said his daughter was emerging as a star performer and is apparently a Spice
Girls fan.

-

Wow - I think that Suri is SOOO lucky, she is growing up to have the greatest parents ever and she seems to be super happy. I always see her glowing in all the photos that I see of her.

Later - Monty

Guns don’t kill people; psychiatry does









In view of the rash of shootings recently, may I suggest that what the United States needs is not gun control, but shrink control. When you trace the cause of most of these shootings, it is inevitably mental-health problems in the shooter, and all too often, the shooter is receiving or has received treatment.

There are almost as many theories of psychiatry and psychology as there are practitioners. Which theories work? Which don’t? Nobody seems interested in finding out, lest someone’s lucrative income be lost.

Some years ago, when we suffered another of those acute reforming impulses, the powers that be decided that too many mental patients were locked up. Why, now with our new miracle drugs, they can all be let go and receive outpatient treatment in their hometowns, said the powers that be.

That was one of the reforms that sounded good, but it had two flaws. In most towns, there were no outpatient treatment facilities, and there still aren’t. The second flaw was to expect that people who are mentally ill will nevertheless show the discipline to take their medications without any supervision. I should add that a third flaw in the reformist scheme was the usual blind faith in pills. The main result of this reform was to greatly increase the number of homeless people.
Psychiatry remains the most primitive of the medical arts. Most of the medical arts concern themselves with mechanics of the body. There is an infection. One of the organs in the body goes awry. These, at least, are tangible things that doctors can see, locate and sometimes repair.

The psychiatrist, alas, deals with the mind, which is not the same thing as the brain. The brain is the machine. The mind is the product of that machine, and it is an intangible product. We might liken the brain to a movie projector and the mind to the flickering images that are projected.

But where exactly are these images? Where are the voices no one else can hear? Where are those things no one else can see? Another problem psychiatry faces is that most mental patients do not realize they are ill. If you’ve ever talked with a delusional person, you will know that he or she has no doubt whatsoever that the delusion is real. Such people, first of all, are difficult to persuade to seek treatment, and if they do, the treatment is often difficult or ineffective.

The medical profession, like the legal profession, is supposedly self-regulating and self-policing, but neither one does a decent job at either task. Perhaps one day a creative prosecutor will charge with manslaughter members of a medical board that refuses to lift the license of an incompetent physician. That might get their attention by reminding them that they are responsible for the consequences of their decisions.

Because physicians claim to be scientists rather than artists, it’s past time to subject the various theories of psychology and psychiatry to scientific testing and then reject the theories that fail the test. As for the law, perhaps the liability laws should be revised to make the psychiatrist or psychologist who says a person represents no threat to himself or others subject to suit when the opinion turns out to be wrong.

It is obvious that when someone turns a dangerous person loose on society, he or she shares responsibility for whatever harm that dangerous person causes. We hold dog owners liable if their dog attacks someone, yet we let psychiatrists get away with unleashing people who are far more dangerous than a pit bull.

Crimes are never caused by inanimate objects. They are always caused by humans.

Later - Monty

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

I am running for PRESIDENT!!!




Please vote for me my people! I will not let you down! I stand for what You stand for and that's a fact and not a wishy washy promise!

Montana(R)FL

Monday, July 7, 2008

Its Hurricane season...


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Hurricane Bertha should remain out of the oil-rich Gulf of Mexico for at least the next five days as it approaches Bermuda, meteorologists forecast Monday.



The center of Bertha, which formed this morning, was located about 845 miles east of the northern Leeward Islands, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said in an advisory.
The Leeward Island include the Virgin Islands, Anguilla, Saint Martin, Saint Kitts, Nevis, Barbuda, Antigua, Montserrat and Guadeloupe.


While a hurricane does not form in the Atlantic every year in July, the NHC noted another Hurricane Bertha formed in 1996 which, coincidentally, also happened on July 7.
The current Bertha was moving west by northwest at nearly 17 miles per hour with maximum sustained winds near 75 mph.


The NHC forecast Bertha would strengthen some over the next couple of days, but expects the storm to remain a Category 1 hurricane over the next five days with winds of 74-95 mph.
Energy traders watch for storms that could enter the Gulf of Mexico and threaten U.S. oil and gas production facilities.


Commodities traders also watch storms that could hit agriculture crops like citrus and cotton in Florida and other states along the Gulf Coast.


The NHC will issue another advisory at 11 a.m. EDT.




Later - Monty

Friday, July 4, 2008












Happy Independence day everyone!!!

I hope you have a great day and that you make it worth it for yourself, here are some quotes that I have always liked in reference to this day.

On the day when we can fully trust each other, there will be peace on Earth." - L. Ron Hubbard

Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves. ~Abraham Lincoln

For what avail the plough or sail, or land or life, if freedom fail? ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

In the truest sense, freedom cannot be bestowed; it must be achieved. ~Franklin D. Roosevelt

No one is free when others are oppressed. ~Author Unknown

Freedom has its life in the hearts, the actions, the spirit of men and so it must be daily earned and refreshed - else like a flower cut from its life-giving roots, it will wither and die. ~Dwight D. Eisenhower

Later - Monty

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Skating in the rain...

Hello Everyone!

You ever have that day where you really want to do something but for some reason or other you just can't.Well, I had that yesterday - Not a disaster but it was sorta crummy.

You see, as you may or may not know I am skateboarder who moved from Los Angeles to Tampa Florida, and when I was in LA i used to skate all the time - I loved it and it was an urge that had to be satiated daily.

But when I came here I did not really know many skaters so sort of have not been doing it... There is no excuse for the bad behavior I must admit.

Anyhoo, Yesterday I had a great oppurtunity to be in the Tampa area and just go for a good skate, I arrived there at 7pm and there were dark clouds everywhere, I quicklied hustled my rear end to the downtown area and got out my board... and then.... rain drops were everywhere... So what did I do? I sat in my car for over an hour and just looked and imagined what I would be doing if it were not raining.

Oh well, I am going to try again on the weekend, Hopefully I can get some pix and put them up...So that is what happened.

I put this blurb up as if you look through my blog you will see what appears to be a blog being done by a middle aged man...

Do not be deceived, I am a young man who just does not like the currrent opium epidemic being caused by the Big Pharmas, or the Mind altering Chemical Lobotomy drugs either...

So, If you work for the pharmas and are being sent to take me out... Dont look for the old man in the wheelchair... Look for the kid jumping over him on a skateboard.

Later - Monty

Lilly Loses Appeal to Limit Damages in Canadian Suit


Eli Lilly & Co. lost an appeal to limit potential damages in a lawsuit filed by Canadian patients who claimed they developed diabetes after using its Zyprexa schizophrenia drug.
An Ontario appeal court today affirmed a lower court's decision that plaintiffs in a class-action, or group, suit may try to recover money the Indianapolis-based company made from sales rather than get damages. The plaintiffs sought C$900 million in damages in their initial claim.

Lilly, the world's biggest maker of psychiatric medicines, is accused of failing to warn the Zyprexa schizophrenia treatment may cause diabetes. Opting to go after a company's sales is unprecedented in court, said Toronto class-action lawyer Paul Bates, who isn't involved in the Zyprexa suit.

That has ``the power to make defendants liable for truly enormous amounts of money,'' Judge Sidney Lederman wrote last July 10 in granting Lilly permission to appeal. ``The ramifications of exposure to this type of liability will extend beyond the parties to affect not just the pharmaceutical industry as a whole, but also the securities market.''

...``We're disappointed in today's decision of the Ontario Divisional Court to not correct certain aspects of the initial certification decision,'' she said. She didn't say whether the company planned to appeal to the Court of Appeal for Ontario, the province's highest court.

Lilly agreed to pay Alaska $15 million to settle a similar suit in March, before that case went to a jury.

Today's decision from a three-member panel shows the U.S. and Canadian cases ``are developing somewhat along different paths,'' Michael Eizenga, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said today in a telephone interview. ``You don't very often have drug cases certified any longer down there,'' referring to certification of cases as class action.

Lilly fell 1 cent to $46.09 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.

...Studies linking Zyprexa and similar medications, including Astrazeneca Plc's Seroquel and Risperdal, made by a Johnson & Johnson unit, to weight gain and diabetes prompted the Federal Drug Administration to require warnings to doctors in 2003 and 2004.

Lilly has paid about $1.2 billion to settle 31,000 claims brought by U.S. patients who said they weren't adequately warned that the medicine can cause diabetes, weight gain and pancreas inflammation. About 1,200 similar lawsuits remain in the U.S., spokeswoman Tarra Ryker said earlier this year.

Later - Monty