“Heroin Documentary Video from the public domain. Heroin: The Next Generation. Viewers will learn about the different types of heroin being peddled on the streets of America, how heroin affects the users and hear first person accounts about heroin use from former users. Find out how the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office broke a major heroin trafficking ring that was selling the drug to young people in the affluent suburb of Scottsdale, Arizona. What goes around comes around — and Heroin is back! But the face of yesterday’s junkie is not the face of the junkie of today. More young people than ever before are shooting it, snorting it — even smoking it. And they’re getting more bang for their buck when buying their heroin on the streets today. One reason: The purity of this drug is the highest at the street level than it’s ever been — that means users don’t have to use needles to inject the drug into their veins. The new ability to snort or smoke heroin is enticing more young people than ever before to give it a try. Back in the 60s and 70s, heroin users primarily injected the drug into their bloodstream. The next generation of heroin users do not have to use needles to get high on heroin. Smoking it or snorting it is more appealing to younger and first-time users by eliminating the fear of needles and syringe-associated diseases such as HIV, AIDS and hepatitis — not to mention the stigma associated with the stereotypical “junkie” who “shoots up” the drug. Another reason heroin use is on the rise, according to James Hall, an epidemiologist for Up Front Drug Information Center in Miami, Florida is because prescription drug abuse is on the rise. “Young people who try prescription narcotic opiate drugs and like the effects of those drugs are turning to heroin because it packs a similar, yet more powerful punch than prescription narcotic opiates,” Hall says. “That’s why prescription drug abuse is becoming a stepping stone to first time heroin users.” Program Objectives: This program discusses, among other things, the following: Learn about the different types of heroin being peddled on the streets of America. Learn how heroine affects the users. Hear first person accounts about heroin use from a former users. Explore heroin trafficking trends and methods of delivery of the drug into the U.S. Find out how the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office broke a major heroin trafficking ring that was selling the drug to young people in the affluent suburb of Scottsdale, Arizona. Panelists: TBA. Sponsors: This program is sponsored the Multijurisdictional Counterdrug Task Force Training (MCTFT) with the technical support of the Satellite Education Network (SEN) at Ft. Lee, VA. Public domain video.”
Thursday, August 20th 2009, Joseph Moshe called into a U.S. radio station claiming to be an individual involved in government bio-weapons research: the information he provided, if not least subsequent events, appeared to corroborate this claim.
On air he alleged that a pharmaceutical company had been preparing vaccines as a bio-weapon (vaccines that essentially spread disease rather than contain it) in the Ukraine.
The following day his car was surrounded by twenty – or more – police on the grounds that he had made “threats to the Whitehouse”, was pounded with round after round of teargas (which, interestingly, he was immune to: as are most military personnel) and – after an hour’s standoff, all recorded live by CNN – eventually arrested.
He hasn’t been heard of since. There are rumours, among others, that he either was deported to Israel or that he now resides in a Californian mental institute.
Approximately two months later the Ukraine reported an unprecedented epidemic of a Swine Flu hybrid sweeping the nation, dubbed the “black lung” virus.
The mainstream media dropped the story immediately after his rather dramatic disappearance.
Robert Green, the man speaking in this video, has allegedly just been arrested. Mainstream UK media are refusing to pick up the story as it’s “too hot to handle”? Please pass this on and maybe we’ll get to the bottom of it.
I'm a software developer currently working at Oxford University, UK. I studied journalism in London. In my spare time I like to write fiction, music, and read current affairs.
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