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Paraquat, a legal poison, is identified as a toxic ingredient spread across America and into our food supply. Despite being banned in over 70 countries, it is still widely used in American agriculture, with 8 to 10 million pounds used across farmland. A bill, section four fifty three, shields companies like Syngenta, the maker of Paraquat, from the consequences of poisoning Americans. One sip can kill you, and there is no antidote. Paraquat causes multi-organ failure, pulmonary fibrosis, and increases the risk of Parkinson's disease by up to six times. It has been associated with higher farmer mortality, DNA cellular death, and reproductive problems. There are over 6,354 lawsuits against Syngenta. To combat this, share this information, buy local, ask farmers about herbicide use, buy regenerative or organic, and avoid ultra-processed foods with conventional ingredients.

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In the 1950s and 1960s, the US Army conducted secret experiments involving the release of bacteria in public places across America, including New York City. These experiments were kept hidden from the public for many years. Some of the experiments had fatal consequences, with people developing infections and even dying. The government also covered up the deaths of individuals who were unknowingly tested with mind-altering drugs. It took decades for the truth to come out, and families had to fight in court for justice. The Army and Navy have a history of conducting secret risk assessments to test the vulnerability of American cities to biological attacks. These experiments need to be stopped, and there should be accountability for the harm caused.

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Bayer knowingly sold an AIDS-infected medication called Factor 8 in the US, but when they couldn't sell it there anymore, they dumped it in France, Europe, Asia, and Latin America. The drug was used for hemophiliacs, especially children. The French government officials involved in allowing this were imprisoned, but no corporate executive in the US has faced justice. The FDA and the US government turned a blind eye to this tragedy. Thousands of innocent hemophiliacs have died from AIDS, and their family members have also been infected. Internal documents prove that Bayer was fully aware of the contamination. Bayer's claim of responsible and ethical behavior is just legal jargon.

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In secret, the US Army sprayed zinc cadmium sulfide into the air of a housing project, a neighborhood called Pruittigo. "'We were subjects.'" Residents say they didn't ask for permission and that "'My government used me like I was a guinea pig.'" The spray appeared as eerie smoke and was sprayed from a big machine on a flatbed with hazmat crews. The government admitted a secret series of cold war tests, including one dubbed large area coverage, with more than 30 tests across the US and Canada to simulate how a biological attack might spread. The NRC warns that repeated exposure to zinc cadmium sulfide can cause kidney or bone toxicity or lung cancer if levels are high enough and could not fully assess the risk due to missing or classified records. Residents seek apology, transparency, and declassification; Erin Brockovich weighs in; they want all documents released about the spray.

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During the Vietnam War, the US launched Operation Popeye to weaken the Vietcong's supply flow on the Ho Chi Minh Trail. They used cloud seeding technology to extend the monsoon season and make the trails too muddy for vehicles. The operation lasted five years and cost over $15 million. It was kept secret, but eventually exposed by the media and ended due to ethical and environmental concerns. The US joined an international treaty banning weather modification for malicious purposes. The effectiveness of Operation Popeye is unclear, as no scientific data was collected. Overall, the operation was a strategic defeat for military weather modification.

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In 2007, the US government planned to aerial spray toxins over 7 million people in Northern California. Public outcry revealed the dangers and stopped the project. This is just one instance of over 30 times the US government has covertly experimented with toxic chemicals on its own citizens. Mass covert sterilizations, often via vaccines, have occurred in Brazil, Puerto Rico, Nicaragua, Mexico, and the Philippines, under programs linked to organizations like the Rockefeller Foundation and the World Health Organization. Furthermore, spermicidal GMO corn was field-tested by Novartis and Syngenta with US government backing, framed as a solution to overpopulation. Given these facts, and the current global fertility decline, I believe we must consider the possibility of a direct depopulation agenda to fully understand and address the challenges we face.

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The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution was based on false information about attacks that never happened. Only two members of Congress voted against it. Evidence from sailors and pilots contradicts the claims of attacks. The war in Vietnam was built on lies, as revealed in recently released White House tapes discussing plans for retaliation before the alleged attacks. The whole conflict was a fraud, causing immense damage to both the US and Vietnam.

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Checklist for summary approach: - Identify and order the main claims and their sequence. - Preserve key facts, dates, and figures mentioned. - Highlight unique or unexpected details (e.g., CIA memo and term origin). - Exclude filler, repetition, and off-topic material. - Translate only if needed (transcript is in English); present in English. - Avoid adding personal judgments or external context; present claims as stated. - Aim for a concise, cohesive 377–472 word summary capturing essential points and conclusions. In 1964, president Lyndon B. Johnson claimed that a US ship called the USS Maddox had been attacked by North Vietnamese forces in the Gulf of Tonkin, but the second attack never happened; it was a complete fabrication. Yet Congress passed the Gulf Of Tonkin Resolution, effectively giving Johnson a blank check to escalate the war in Vietnam. By 1968, over half a million US troops were in Vietnam, with carpet bombing of villages and the spraying of chemical weapons like Agent Orange, and millions of Vietnamese citizens affected, all described as based on a lie. After France lost its colonial war in Vietnam, the US stepped in, ignored international agreements, and installed a dictator in the South. He was so corrupt and brutal that even the Vietnamese people hated him. When nationwide elections were planned to unify the country, Ho Chi Minh was guaranteed to win, but the US backed out and canceled democracy. So, the US didn’t just join the Vietnam War; it escalated, provoked, and manipulated its way into it. As thousands of soldiers died and anti-war protests surged in the US, people asked questions about the rationale for Vietnam, why the poor were drafted while the rich received deferments, and why the government lied about the Gulf of Tonkin. The CIA was not about to lose that narrative. In 1967, they wrote a classified memo, CIA dispatch number 1035-960, a propaganda guide sent to journalists and foreign operatives on how to quietly discredit critics, especially when questions arose around JFK. This memo labeled those questions as conspiracy theorists because that term didn’t exist before then. The memo was weaponized to shame critical thinkers, equating questioning the government with being unhinged or batshit crazy. It worked: the Vietnam War escalated with a provable lie sustained by media propaganda and shielded by a weaponized insult that’s still used today. Conspiracy theorists at the time didn’t mean crazy; they were people who weren’t buying the government’s story, and many of those critics were right. So when someone says the government would never do that, remember that it did, and they created a stigma to silence dissent. And if you think this is crazy, consider what happened in Panama. Follow for more deep dives. They don’t want you to know.

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In secret during the 1950s–60s, the US sprayed zinc cadmium sulfide over Pruittigo, Saint Louis. The fog drifted through the streets like a ghost. They didn't ask for our permission. My government used me like I was a guinea pig. Saint Louis was chosen for spraying experiments because it had characteristics similar to Soviet targets. More than thirty tests across the US and Canada sprayed zinc cadmium sulfide from planes, rooftops, and vehicles to simulate a biological attack. A 1997 NRC review warned that repeated exposure can cause kidney or bone toxicity or lung cancer if levels are high enough, and noted that some army records remained classified. The army said none of the reports contained evidence of a radioactive component to the zinc cadmium sulfide dispersion tests. Erin Brockovich weighs in.

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The military industrial complex often evokes images of soldiers in combat, but it encompasses much more. In light of recent global events, previously taboo topics, including government secrecy around bio labs, have gained attention. One notable example is Project 112, authorized in 1962 under Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. This project involved extensive testing of biological and chemical agents, including VX nerve gas, Sarin, and E. Coli, across various locations. The aim was to explore controlled temporary incapacitation as a military strategy. The government denied Project 112's existence until 2000, raising concerns about the safety of military personnel involved, many of whom were unaware of the risks. The project reflects a troubling reality where governments that condemn bioweapons may simultaneously engage in their development, leaving the public unaware of the potential dangers lurking in their midst.

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Miscarriages reportedly increased by almost 300% over the 5-year average, and cancer increased by almost 300% over the 5-year average. Neurological issues, which could affect pilots, reportedly increased over 1000%. There was a reported increase from 82,000 to 863,000 in one year. Soldiers are allegedly being experimented on, injured, and possibly killed. Some doctors are reportedly attacked for speaking out.

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The Vietnamese invented various traps to target American soldiers during the war. One trap involved bamboo sticks being inserted into the soldiers' calves when they stepped on it. Another trap used two grenades inside a can, which would explode when a soldier touched the trip wire. A crossbow trap would shoot a poisoned arrow at any soldier who triggered the trip wire. The bamboo trap involved bamboo rafts falling from the sky to trap unsuspecting soldiers. The Vietnamese also used poisonous snakes to surprise soldiers who fell into their traps. These traps caused horrific deaths and were a challenge for American soldiers to deal with.

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During the Vietnam War, the American government compelled chemical companies, including Monsanto, to create Agent Orange. The same companies then sold patented seeds to farmers, which now cover 80% of American farmland. These seeds, including corn, soybeans, alfalfa, and wheat, were created to be resistant to Roundup, also owned by Monsanto. Roundup contains glyphosate, identified as a neurotoxin. These crops are subsidized by the government and are largely used to make ultra-processed food, which makes up 60-90% of the standard American diet. The government deems this food safe for American families.

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During the Vietnam War, Operation Ranch Hand sprayed defoliants, including Agent Orange, over a large area of Vietnam. US officials claimed there were no lasting effects, but the Vietnamese government blamed Agent Orange for miscarriages, birth defects, and rare cancers. Today, hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese still suffer from these health issues. Meanwhile, Project Storm Fury aimed to reduce hurricane devastation by cloud seeding with silver iodide. This process would create a new outer eye wall in the hurricane. The US Army also experimented with cloud seeding in Vietnam, leading to allegations of causing heavy rain and death. Despite controversy, governments continue to explore weather modification for various purposes, including military applications and controlling the world.

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After World War II, there were massive stockpiles of chemical weapons, particularly mustard gas. These weapons were extremely dangerous and corrosive, causing death by liquefying the lungs. During the war, both the Germans and the French used mustard gas, often resulting in self-inflicted harm when the wind changed direction. After the war, the issue of what to do with these stockpiles arose. Some were dumped in the ocean, while others were destroyed. The dumping of chemical weapons has caused pollution in places like the Adriatic Sea and the English Channel. In the 1960s and 1970s, the denial of this issue was prevalent, but now it is widely known.

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Operation Babylift was a mass evacuation of children from South Vietnam to the US and other Western countries at the end of the Vietnam War. Playboy helped move 41 babies to New York City on Hugh Hefner's private jet. Over 3,300 infants and children were airlifted, with 2,500 being adopted without consent. The operation was controversial due to concerns about the children's best interests and the fact that not all were orphans. The chaos of war zones creates opportunities for child trafficking, like Operation Babylift, where children were taken from homes with families.

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During the Vietnam War, the American government compelled seven chemical companies, including Monsanto, to create Agent Orange. The same companies then sold patented seeds to farmers, which now cover 80% of American farmland. These seeds, including corn, soybeans, alfalfa, and wheat, were created to be resistant to Roundup, which is also owned by Monsanto. Roundup contains glyphosate, which is claimed to be a neurotoxin. These crops are subsidized by the government and are largely used to make ultra-processed food, which makes up 60-90% of the standard American diet. The speaker claims that the majority of American families are eating this food because the government deems it safe.

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The Vietnamese invented various traps to target American soldiers during the war. One trap involved bamboo sticks being inserted into the soldiers' calves when they stepped on it. Another trap used two grenades in an empty can, which would be triggered by a trip wire, causing an explosion. A crossbow trap would shoot a poisoned arrow at any soldier who touched the trip wire. The bamboo trap involved bamboo rafts falling from the sky to trap unsuspecting soldiers. The Vietnamese also used poisonous snakes to further harm soldiers who fell into their traps. These traps caused horrific deaths and instilled fear in the American soldiers.

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J. Marion Sims performed surgeries on enslaved black women without anesthesia. The Tuskegee experiment withheld penicillin from black men with syphilis. Puerto Rican women were given experimental birth control pills, resulting in seizures and hemorrhages. At Edgewood Arsenal, over 60,000 troops were exposed to nerve gas and LSD. The Navy sprayed San Francisco with bacteria linked to pneumonia. The Pentagon released weaponized mosquitoes in Florida. Soldiers were infected with biological agents in Operation White Coat. Millions were injected with the SV40 virus. Military planes sprayed mock bioweapons on civilian cities. Pregnant women at Vanderbilt drank radioactive iron. Orphans were fed radioactive milk. MK Ultra used extreme electroshock and sensory deprivation. Lyme disease mutations were researched at Fort Detrick. Vaccines are claimed to have catastrophic fertility side effects, micro clots, graphene, and prion contamination. The US funded gain of function research in Wuhan. Anthony Fauci funneled millions into weaponizing viruses. Government agencies are accused of experimenting, burning records, and denying the truth.

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80% of Americans have Roundup in their urine. Roundup contains glyphosate, a powerful herbicide, and was introduced to commercial agriculture in 1974. Its use wasn't widespread until 1996, when Monsanto began selling genetically modified seeds resistant to Roundup. This allowed farmers to spray entire crop beds without harming their crops. 87% of children have glyphosate in their system. Roundup is allegedly dangerous and illegal in some countries, but making it illegal in America would impact monocrop agriculture companies.

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Speaker 0: We've set out to overthrow functioning constitutional democracies in over 20 countries. We manipulated elections in dozens of countries. We created standing armies and directed them to fight. We went after to organize ethnic minorities to encourage them to revolt. The first thing we did in Nicaragua was to go to the Mosquito Indians who had never gotten along with the other people in Nicaragua very well and give them more money than they had seen in the entirety of history and arms and training and rationales and sanctuaries in Honduras and sent them into Nicaragua to attack, kill, fight, rape, burn, pillage. And this has been a technique the CI has used in Nicaragua, in Thailand, in Vietnam, in Laos, in The Congo, in in Iran Iraq with the Kurds in different parts of the world. We created, trained, and funded death squads like the treasury police in El Salvador, and we've assassinated world leaders, including The United States president in 1963, and I'll get to that in more detail in just a moment. You can never be sure how many people are killed in the jungles of of Laos or the hills of Nicaragua, but adding them up as best we can, we come up with a figure of 6,000,000 people killed, minimum figure. It has to be more than that. These things are all done in countries of the third world where the governments don't have the power to force The United States to stop destabilizing the country and brutalizing their people.

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The speaker finds government conspiracy theories interesting but angering, citing MK Ultra and Agent Orange as examples. Researching DARPA's history led to the realization that they were involved in "bad stuff," specifically during the Vietnam War with chemical companies like Dow Chemical and DuPont creating agents blue, purple, and orange. The speaker notes that more American soldiers got sick than killed in that conflict. The speaker dedicated the episode to their father-in-law, who suffered injuries from Agent Orange. The government denied responsibility for years but finally agreed to a settlement in 1981. The speaker's father-in-law applied for and eventually received his settlement forty years later.

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They present a history where science is cast as a weapon and subjects as expendable. In 1845 Alabama, J Marion Sims, called the father of gynecology, strapped down enslaved black women with no anesthesia or consent, performing 30 operations while his journals admit the practice. The US medical establishment funded his work and later enshrined him as a hero. In 1932 Tuskegee, the Public Health Service and the CDC lured 600 black men with free treatment; 400 already had syphilis. The cure penicillin was deliberately withheld; autopsies were mandatory, and broken families buried their fathers without knowing the government had murdered them for medical data. In the 1950s, Puerto Rico became a laboratory where poor, some illiterate, women were coerced into testing birth control pills by big pharma, suffering seizures and hemorrhages; some called it population control, the victims called it genocide. Decades later, those same players would push vaccines with catastrophic fertility side effects. History is a spiral. World War II ended, but the Pentagon began a war on its own soldiers. At Edgewood Arsenal, secret documents show over 60,000 troops exposed to sarin, VX, and LSD; a veteran wrote, they told us it was harmless. The truth was declassified after eighty percent of the victims were already dead. In September 1950, the US Navy operated aerosolized sprayers over San Francisco, releasing Ceratia marcescens bacteria into the fog, linked later to fatal pneumonia; a whistleblower’s report was buried until a 1976 Senate hearing forced admission. Operation Big Buzz 1955 released millions of weaponized mosquitoes in Florida, testing infection spread; internal memos bragged that subjects showed symptoms within seventy-two hours. No warning, no cure. The Pentagon also turned soldiers into lab rats. Operation White Coat infected thousands with biological agents; a veteran testified, they told us it was harmless. It was classified as national security with no compensation or justice. Even vaccines became weapons; millions of Americans were injected with s v forty, a monkey virus linked to cancer. The CDC buried the truth for forty years; how many died remains in redacted reports. In 1977, planes sprayed mock bioweapons on civilian cities from New York to Saint Louis to study how quickly a lethal pathogen could spread when aerosolized. The victims were unconsenting civilians. Before MK Ultra, Plum Island, there were the Tuskegee syphilis experiments and the deliberate infection of hundreds of black men, the lie of free treatment, withheld medicine while the CDC watched. Sea Spray 1950 tested turning an American city into a test lab; Vanderbilt pregnant women drank vitamin cocktails laced with radioactive iron, and their babies were stillborn or deformed; files sealed for fifty years. The Fernald School experiments fed orphans radioactive milk, smiles for cameras, later claimed there were no long-term consequences. MK Ultra involved LSD, electroshock at unsafe voltages, sensory deprivation, aiming at total mind fragmentation; data were laundered through Princeton and Harvard. Plum Island fueled Lyme’s mutations; Fort Detrick and the 1960s spirochete research connected to weaponized ticks; the Pentagon’s patents point to the truth. Victims of chronic Lyme are labeled hysterical. Gulf War syndrome and Morgellons follow the same playbook: silence the sick, discredit the dying, deny everything. Then vaccines—untested, unnecessary, unleashed with legal immunity, with VAERS rising and the CDC scrubbing data. Doctors who spoke out were suspended or erased. The narrative extends to digital IDs, CBDCs, depopulation, food shortages, and a spanning claim that agencies once poisoned cities and murdered victims now demand total compliance. The Wuhan lab leak theory is a distraction, the text asserts, because Fort Detrick and NIH funded decades of gain-of-function research; Fauci’s emails, EcoHealth Alliance grants, and the 2011 bat coronavirus patent are cited as evidence. Now the claim is an ongoing program of transmissible vaccines, self-replicating mRNA, and mosquito drones, branded as biodefense but described as an extermination agenda, with witnesses disappearing and no statute of limitations on crimes against humanity.

The Why Files

The Dark Side of DARPA | The Human Cost of Technological Supremacy
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In the early Space Race, the Soviet Union achieved significant milestones, including launching Sputnik and sending the first humans into space, while the U.S. struggled to keep pace. In response to fears of Soviet advancements, the U.S. established the Advanced Research Project Agency (ARPA), later known as DARPA, to develop advanced military technologies. DARPA's innovations include the internet, GPS, and AI, with many technologies initially designed for military purposes later benefiting civilian life. However, DARPA's history also includes controversial projects like Agent Orange during the Vietnam War, which caused extensive harm to civilians and veterans. The agency operates with little transparency, often funding projects through private channels, leading to concerns about the military-industrial complex's influence. Despite its advancements in technology, DARPA's legacy is mixed, balancing significant contributions to society with morally questionable actions. The discussion raises questions about the ethical implications of DARPA's work and the necessity of its existence in modern warfare.

American Alchemy

UFOs & Human Experiments: Big Pharma's Horrific Past... (ft. Brigham Buhler)
Guests: Brigham Buhler
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From the outset, the conversation stitches together a provocative thesis: the modern health system is deeply entangled with political power, corporate profit, and hidden histories. The speakers trace a throughline from the early 20th century reforms to today’s sick-care economy, then layer in a parallel story about UFOs, covert programs, and the uneasy boundary between government secrecy and private industry. The result is a portrait of a dystopian trend that feels both alarming and challengeable. Historically, the ascent of big pharma began with the Flexner Report of 1910, funded by Rockefeller and Carnegie, which prompted widespread consolidation of medical training around drug-based approaches. The American Medical Association and the FDA emerged as enforcers of this new order, and countless schools were shut or aligned to patentable therapies. The hosts juxtapose this with wartime atrocities and postwar intelligence, noting Unit 731, the transfer of data to the United States, and the collusion that tied medicine to military aims. The narrative continues with the corporate-military axis after the war: Bayer’s ties to the Third Reich, its later absorption of Monsanto, and the spread of defoliants like Agent Orange and glyphosate into agriculture and health. The conversation recounts contaminated HIV-laced hemophilia products and outbreaks of environmental toxins. It then traces intelligence-driven medical experiments from MKUltra to the CIA’s office of research and development, and how a private sector arm eventually absorbed those programs as SURL and its successors, linking private pharma to covert science. Amid these histories, the episode dives into electromagnetic therapies, DNA as a potential antenna, and visions of hidden science. The speakers describe early 20th‑century devices and researchers who claimed to zero in on pathogens through energy frequencies, then recount modern anecdotes of refractive devices, biophotons, and radio‑like effects on cells. They connect DNA’s fractal geometry to possible cosmic signaling, cite panspermia and directed panspermia, and reference Nobel discussions around living software written in DNA, suggesting a broader science just beyond mainstream acceptance. Toward the end, the guests pivot to agency and reform. They argue for proactive, predictive healthcare that uses biomarkers, bone density, fitness metrics, and wearable data to extend health span. They advocate separating genuine innovation from profit-driven inertia, closing the gap between research and practice, and expanding access to preventative modalities. The conversation closes with optimism about political leadership, cross‑disciplinary inquiry, and the belief that open dialogue can reveal truth across health, science, and the UFO question.
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