Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Video:Temple Trees also has an 

underground bunker-MR 

2015-10-25
Former president Mahinda Rajapaksa said today that his government had to build a safety bunker under President’s House in Fort to shield VIPs from potential LTTE air strikes. 

He said the Defence Council met at President’s House during the previous regime when the war was going on and the bunker was built as a security measure to protect the defence officials from unexpected terrorist attacks. 

Mr. Rajapaksa said even the LTTE leader built and lived inside a massive bunker complex during the war to protect him from the military offensives. 

Therefore we also did the same thing to protect ourselves from terrorist attacks. This is not a new thing; Temple Trees also has an underground bunker for security reasons, he said. 

Justin Trudeau: Canada’s new Millennial Prime Minister 


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by Rajan Philips-October 24, 2015, 7:46 pm

On Monday, October 19, Canadians elected a majority Liberal government led by a handsome, young politician with a famous last name. Justin Trudeau, Canada’s new Prime Minister, is the 43 year old son of Pierre Elliot Trudeau (1919-2000), one of Canada’s better known world figures and a former Prime Minister for 16 years from 1968 to 1984. The young Trudeau has become a global celebrity in his own right almost instantly after his Party’s stunning electoral victory. His victory speech capped off a campaign of optimism and for change, promising "sunny ways" like Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Canada’s Prime Minister a hundred years ago, and invoking "the better angels of our nature" as Abraham Lincoln did fifty years before that.


At the U.N., Beijing Begins to Shift Away From Putin

Beijing and Moscow have long maintained a united front against the West. That’s changing as a rising China begins to chart its own course.
BY COLUM LYNCH-OCTOBER 21, 2015
At the U.N., Beijing Begins to Shift Away From Putin In late September, a Chinese foreign ministry delegation held a closed-door meeting at the United Nations’ New York headquarters with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin and gave him some good news: Beijing was prepared to vote in favor of Ukraine’s bid for a seat on the U.N. Security Council despite a campaign by Russia to thwart its adversary’s ambitions, according to U.N.-based diplomats familiar with the meeting.

World powers in the west and east with Arab tyrants

assad-putinputin-netanyahiran-westassad-putin-rouhani
Ganging up against Muslims worldwide
By Latheef Farook : 
logoUnder the pretext of bombing American sponsored, Israeli trained and Saudi financed ISIS fighters ,Russia began bombing Syria indiscriminately since 30 September 2015  killing civilians suffering in extreme misery due to the barbarity unleashed by Syrian war criminal Bashar Al Assad.

No end to Israeli-Palestinian violence despite Kerry proposal


October 25 at 12:50 PM
 Violence between Israelis and Palestinians showed no signs of abating Sunday despite a plan brokered a day earlier by Secretary of State John F. Kerry to bring quiet to the region, which has endured weeks of tit-for-tat killings.
Israeli police said they fatally shot a Palestinian woman in Hebron after she approached officers and pulled out a knife. The city in the Israeli-occupied West Bank is one of multiple areas across the region that have experienced a rash of Palestinian attacks, often by knife, and lethal reprisals by Israel.
Earlier in the day, Israel’s military said two Palestinians attacked an Israeli man near the Gush Etzion bloc of Jewish settlements in the West Bank. The assailants fled after the Israeli responded with gunfire, the military said.
Israeli security forces have killed dozens of Palestinians, and 10 Israelis have died in this round of unrest, which has raised fears of another Palestinian intifada, or uprising. Mounting international concern about the situation prompted Kerry’s snap visit to Jordan — the custodian of the Jerusalem holy site that has been at the center of the recent clashes — on Saturday.
After meetings with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and King Abdullah II of Jordan, Kerry announced a plan involving the installation of security cameras at the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem. Palestinians have accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of attempting to meddle with long-running prayer customs in the area.
On Saturday, the Israeli leader again denied harboring any intention of upsetting the status quo in the holy area. Jews are allowed to visit the compound but not pray there. Netanyahu did not explicitly say whether he accepted Kerry’s proposal.
The mosque is the third-holiest shrine in Islam, and the compound in which it is located is revered by Jews as the site of two ancient temples. Far-right Israeli officials who want Jews to be allowed to pray at the al-Aqsa site have entered the compound, angering Palestinians and officials in Jordan.
Palestinian leaders on Sunday expressed skepticism of Kerry’s plan.
Speaking to Voice of Palestine radio, Palestinian Authority Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki called the idea “a trap” and said that Netanyahu “cannot be trusted” to implement the plan.
Maliki, who is close to Abbas, expressed several misgivings about Kerry’s proposal, including concerns that Israeli security forces would use images from any surveillance cameras at the compound to arrest Muslim worshipers.
Israel already operates hundreds of security cameras in Jerusalem’s Old City.
“Who will monitor these cameras?” Maliki said.
In a news conference in Jerusalem, Ahmad Tibi, a prominent Palestinian Arab citizen of Israel and a member of the Israeli parliament, called Kerry’s visit “disappointing.”
He said visits to al-Aqsa Mosque by right-wing Jewish government officials have stoked Palestinian anger. He added that the unrest also is rooted in Israel’s military occupation of Palestinian territory and the expansion there of Jewish settlements, which most of the world views as a violation of international law.
Meanwhile, Israel’s military said Sunday that a 23-year-old Palestinian Arab citizen unlawfully used a paraglider to fly to Syria and join ranks with rebels battling the government there.
During his Sunday cabinet meeting, Netanyahu said he would attempt to revoke the man’s citizenship.
Israeli intelligence officials say that dozens of Palestinian citizens of Israel, who form about 20 percent of the country’s population, have entered Syria to join the Islamic State militant group.
Last week, the Islamic State released a video of a militant speaking in flawless Hebrew and vowing to eradicate Jews from the Holy Land. Analysts said the militant shown in the video — the group’s first one in Hebrew — could be a Palestinian Arab citizen of Israel.
Read more:
Hugh Naylor is a Beirut-based correspondent for The Post. He has reported from over a dozen countries in the Middle East for such publications as The National, an Abu Dhabi-based newspaper, and The New York Times.
Checkpoints stir Palestinian anger in East Jerusalem 

Concrete blocks and partitions set up around Palestinian neighbourhoods disturb every day life 

A Palestinian man passes through concrete blocks put up by Israeli police in East Jerusalem (AFP) - 

AFP-Sunday 25 October 2015
Until recently, it took Abu Amr four minutes to drive his son to school. Now, because of security checkpointsaimed at combating a wave of attacks on Israelis, it takes 40.
Concrete blocks and partitions have been set up around his Palestinian neighbourhood of Jabel Mukaber, which came under the spotlight earlier this month when police said the killers of three Israelis were residents of the area.
To pass through these new obstacles in occupiedeast Jerusalem, Abu Amr must abandon his car and go on foot, but only after identity and other checks.
Men must lift their shirts to show they are not carrying a weapon or a bomb. 
Women must open their bags to be searched by police.
Responding to attacks in which eight Israelis have died so far this month, Israeli security forces have deployed into Palestinian areas and erected obstacles to control residents' movements.
The UN says that 38 barriers, including 17 checkpoints, have sprung up in nine Palestinian neighbourhoods, disrupting the daily lives of at least 138,000 Palestinians. 
On a recent day, Abu Amr, 34, needed to pick up the boy from school and take him to a doctor's appointment.
He was running late and fuming at "the collective punishment which is the manifestation of the racist discrimination" by Israel in East Jerusalem.
The mainly-Arab eastern sector was seized by Israel during the 1967 Six Day War and later annexed in a move never internationally recognised.
Since the beginning of October, Palestinian-Israeli unrest has spiked across the occupied territories but it is in east Jerusalem where Palestinians "pay the highest price," Abu Amr says.
The Israelis "believe that the solution will be imposed by force, but more force will only bring more violence," he adds.

Late for everything 

Abel Mukaber was home to three Palestinians who allegedly killed three Israelis in two separate attacks in Jerusalem before being killed by security forces.
Israeli authorities started building a wall there this week to create a buffer for an adjacent Jewish neighbourhood where "there is a history of stone and firebomb throwing at Jewish homes and cars," the municipality said.
Work on the barrier, which was to have run for 300 metres (yards), soon ground to a halt amid internal Israeli political squabbles but Palestinian residents remain fearful.
"What do they want to do with the wall if not to isolate our neighbourhood?" asks Tareq Auissat.
The 24-year-old bus driver says that the section already erected stops him taking passengers more than 500 metres.
"I drop them at a checkpoint then they take another bus," from the other side to east Jerusalem's city centre.
"Normally the journey takes 25 minutes," he adds. "Now with the roadblocks and searches you need to allow an hour or 90 minutes."
In the Issawiya neighbourhood stand identical concrete blocks and armed soldiers block all roads in.
"Every day we're late for university or school," says 19-year-old student Mumen Rabi.
"We're late for everything. It's a punishment inflicted on all the residents of Issawiya."
It comes, locals say, on top of decades of discrimination and marginalisation of Palestinians inJerusalem, where more than 300,000 of them live.
Construction is almost impossible because building permits are issued by Israel in a trickle, while demolition of unlicenced Palestinian homes increases.
Among them live 200,000 Israeli settlers, encouraged to build because Israel considers Jerusalem as its "eternal and indivisible capital".

Stuck in the 15th century

The Israeli municipal council officially manages all of the city but its services actually stop at the edge of thePalestinian neighbourhoods.
The Palestinians living there are almost entirely designated as residents rather than citizens.
They do not have the vote in national Israeli elections nor do they hold Israeli passports, travelling instead on documents issued by neighbouring Jordan.
"We pay taxes... but no one is interested in us," says Abu Amr.
"Infrastructure in the east (of the city) is zero! We have no social care, no education, no development, no economy. We don't have job security either."
Mohammed Abu al-Homos, a member of the Issawiya neighbourhood council, points to the street sweepers busy at work in the neighbouring Jewish colony of French Hill.
"Here, they do nothing at all, while there, they clean the pavements." 
Palestinian cartographer Khalil Tufakji says the two sides of the holy city occupy parallel universes.
"West Jerusalem lives in the 21st century, but eastJerusalem is stuck in the 15th century,' he tells AFP.
To move from one side to the other, he says, is to cross "a cultural divide".
"One passes from one world to another which is totally different."
- See more at: http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/checkpoints-stir-palestinian-anger-east-jerusalem-2035237464#sthash.8i3WPLYz.dpuf

Get the Hell Out of Afghanistan Already

afghanistan_file
According to Statista.com, the total cost of the US war on Afghanistan is around $765 billion. The number of US military fatalities is (as of July 1, 2015) 2370. Other occupying forces have lost 1137 troops. The number of mercenaries and civilian contractors killed was 1582 by December 2013 (US Dept. Of Labor). Afghan deaths are unknown, but it is estimated that more than 92,000 have died, of which at least 26,000 were civilians (Watson Institute, Brown University).

by Ron Jacobs
( October 23, 2015, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) The US war machine scored another win. Not in Syria, but in Afghanistan. After lying about a prolonged attack on the Medicin Sans Frontiers hospital in Kunduz, a recent decision from the White House to leave at least 10,000 troops in that country for an undetermined amount of time seems to make no sense. However, when one looks at the justification from various politicians and think tanks, the reasoning is proven to be the same as it has been for years. Let me quote a certain Rand policy analyst named S. Rebecca Zimmerman:
“There have been numerous security losses across Afghanistan, despite the 9,800 troop presence, but the government is also facing challenges of erosion of authority. It’s so focused on factions within, and pressure without that it cannot effectively govern and strongmen on the periphery are growing in influence. The presence of U.S. troops cannot halt these trends, but it can slow their progress”(RAND website, October 16, 2015)
In other words, Washington can’t win but it can continue to keep those it opposes from winning. This is a cynical move almost on par with King David sending Uriah the Hittite into the front lines and certain death after David slept with Uriah’s wife. Arms will continue to flow into the ravaged nation that is Afghanistan, so will US troops and mercenaries; Afghan soldiers will die at an increased rate as will civilians. The captains of the war industry—from Lockheed Martin to General Dynamics and beyond—will reap billions of dollars in blood money while paid-off sycophant politicians promise them more. The relatively few citizens who are paying attention to the travesty will cry out alarms about the futility of the war and the costs their fellows ultimately bear in gold and conscience. And the war will drag on.
According to Statista.com, the total cost of the US war on Afghanistan is around $765 billion. The number of US military fatalities is (as of July 1, 2015) 2370. Other occupying forces have lost 1137 troops. The number of mercenaries and civilian contractors killed was 1582 by December 2013 (US Dept. Of Labor). Afghan deaths are unknown, but it is estimated that more than 92,000 have died, of which at least 26,000 were civilians (Watson Institute, Brown University). The war industry’s numbers, on the other hand show increases, not losses. If we look at the rankings of just three of the top defense contractors in the US, we discover that General Dynamics (which makes Stryker vehicles and many other implements of this particular war) went from being Number 180 in the Fortune 500 to Number 100 since the US first attacked Afghanistan; Northrop Grumman (which makes at least two of the helicopter gunships used in country) went from number 232 to Number 124 and Lockheed Martin (whose weapons systems are too numerous to list) went up only four rankings, from 69 to 64. These advances tells us almost all we need to know about who this war benefits. Besides the fact that these profits are made from the taking of human life, there is also the reality that the money these companies profit from is money taken from that which US taxpayers pay into the Treasury for government services—money many US residents believe should go to helping people, not killing them. Of course, in the military itself there are also plenty of military officers who are making their careers on the continuation of this debacle.
So, when all is said and done; when losses are calculated and profits pocketed the question remains: why are US troops still in Afghanistan? Unfortunately, the answer is too simple. US troops, spies and mercenaries are still in Afghanistan because the American people allow them to be. If one recalls the presidential campaigns of 2008 and 2012, Barack Obama promised to end the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The former is now a low-intensity conflict affected by the goings-on in Syria and Libya before it. On the other hand, the war in Afghanistan continues to founder along. The original reason for the war (as contrived as it was) no longer exists. Osama Bin Laden is dead. So is Mullah Omar. We are told the Taliban is taking back cities, but the greater truth seems to be that Afghans with different allegiances are fighting each other for land, religions, and plunder and opium profits. The everyday Afghan is just trying to maintain an existence for themselves and their family. There is no end to this war unless we demand that US troops, CIA operatives and their mercenary accomplices leave the country. It is quite obvious no politician is going to make that demand unless the American people force their hand.
With this in mind, what I find almost as depressing as the extension of the occupation is the lackluster response from US residents. While I expect the politicians to line up behind this idiotic move, the fact that most of the rest of us barely even note the news is symptomatic of how far along we actually are as a nation into George Orwell’s 1984 future where eternal war is peace.
(Ron Jacobs is the author of a series of crime novels and The Way the Wind Blew:A History of the Weather Underground. His new book is titled Daydream Sunset:60s Counterculture in the ’70s. He can be reached at ronj1955@gmail.com )

About 100 people injured in Hong Kong ferry collision

An injured ferry passenger is escorted by rescuers after getting onshore in Hong Kong, China October 25, 2015.  About 100 people were injured on Sunday when a ferry returning from Macau to Hong Kong collided with an unknown object, a police department official said.  REUTERS/Stringer
ReutersSun Oct 25, 2015
About 100 people were injured on Sunday when a ferry returning from Macau to Hong Kong collided with an unknown object, a police department official said.
The injured were treated in five different hospitals in Hong Kong, though the nature and extent of injuries were not immediately known, the official said. Local media group RTHK said six people had suffered serious injuries in the accident.
The incident occurred around 1850 Hong Kong time (1050 GMT) on Sunday, near the island of Lantau, the official told Reuters, adding that the cause of the incident was being investigated.
Hong Kong is one of the world's busiest shipping channels. While serious accidents are rare, the waters have become increasingly crowded with leisure boats and vessels that ferry passengers to the nearby gambling hub of Macau.
Macau is the only place in China where casino gambling is legal, making it popular with gamers and tourists to the city.
In 2012, 39 people were killed in a ferry collision in Hong Kong's worst maritime disaster in decades.
In Sunday's accident, the vessel was said to have taken in water and lost power after the collision, RTHK said.
It said passengers described chaotic scenes as people stumbled around in the dark, some bleeding and others with injuries to their arms and legs.

Hymns ring out over Uluru on 'bittersweet' handback anniversary

While the general mood was one of celebration, the issues still faced by Indigenous Australians were not ignored
Aboriginal women perform a traditional dance near Uluru on Sunday. Photograph: Dan Peled/AAP
Rita Jingo, from the Mutitjulu community, and her daughter pose for a photo near Uluru on Sunday. Photograph: Dan Peled/AAP
- at Uluru-Sunday 25 October 2015
As the sun dropped lower in the sky and a storm rumbled ominously overhead, the central Australian women’s choir gathered on the red dirt, Uluru forming their backdrop, and began to sing. Harmonised hymns, brought over by missionaries and translated into Aranda and Pitjantjatjara, rang out across the crowd.

6 Reasons I’ll Never Stop Believing (And, Neither Should You)

6 Reasons I’ll Never Stop Believing (And, Neither Should You)
In this series, professionals share how their beliefs have shaped their careers, businesses and the workforce. Join the conversation bywriting a response (please include the hashtag #Belief in the body of your post).
The picture above is of a ring I wear daily. Last year, while shopping with my two daughters in a small gift store, we spotted a bowl full of rings with words and symbols on them. Each one was different. The girls found this ring and said, “Mom, you should buy this one. It’s totally you.” My daughters know me well. I  bought it for $7 - and I've worn it ever since.

Junk Food

Junk_food

W
e all know that it takes time to build an effective and sustainable growth strategy, and for it to reap rewards. Both my examples – Coca Cola and MacDonald’s did not expect there to be quick fix. It takes time and good marketing. Both have established staying power.
by Victor Cherubim
( October 24, 2015, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) One of the main features over the past thirty to forty years around the globe has been the proliferation of junk food. We notice a profound change in our relationship with food. We seem most concerned “how we shop, what we eat, where we eat and how food is produced”. With limited time at our disposal, changing patterns of work and working hours, we are driven to rely more on convenience food. The mantra is why spend time cooking, why not “just eat” what you like and when you like? We have been conditioned to eating out, as if eating in at home, was not the thing to do?
Celebrity chefs, doctors, dentists and food technologists are all now calling for action on what we eat and how much we eat. Sugar reduction in food and drink, salt reduction in processed food, obesity, particularly child obesity campaigners are all demanding immediate and comprehensive action on diet related disease. Consuming too much sugar we are told can lead to weight gain and related health and dental problems. In England, almost two-thirds of adults, according a report by Public Heath England are overweight and almost a fifth of 10 to11 year olds are obese. Treating obesity and its consequences alone currently costs the NHS £5.1 billion annually. The fight against obesity can no longer be ignored.
The trend in the marketplace
Whilst smoking has been banned in public places, and e-cigarettes too will soon be banned, “two for the price of one” packs of 10 cans of beer, have also gone off the supermarket shelves; there is a new trend in food and drink available to the public.
Today, the marketing boys were releasing opposite London Bridge station, a new brand of diet Coca Cola, “Zero Coke” with zero calories. “While Diet Coke was created in 1982 as a sugar free soft drink, young adult males shield away from this beverage –identifying diet cola as a woman’s drink”, according to Huff Post. Coca-Cola Zero according to reports, we are told, has a lot less caffeine. The public are told to judge which of these two artificially-sweetened Coca-Cola beverages actually tastes better? Can anyone tell the difference? The advertisement outside read: “Choose Happiness?”
Another trend, MacDonald’s $79 billion fast food chain also announced their decision to serve breakfast – “the humble egg muffin” all day. This turnaround strategy has we are told increased US sales, the first increase in two years.
How effective is marketing in all this?
In business, a variety of pricing strategies come in to play when selling a product or service. The price can be set to maximise profitability for each unit sold or even increase market share. One certainty in business as we see both from Coco Cola and MacDonald’s, is constant change.
The message is: how can you add value to your product or service and how can you show that. It isn’t good enough to say that you provide better product or a cheaper price than others unless you can demonstrate this. Businesses may benefit from lowering or raising prices depending on the needs and behaviours of its customers in a particular market place.
Staying Power
We all know that it takes time to build an effective and sustainable growth strategy, and for it to reap rewards. Both my examples – Coca Cola and MacDonald’s did not expect there to be quick fix. It takes time and good marketing. Both have established staying power.
The new rules of the Game
Whilst obesity and other health concerns are making inroads in the change of relationship of food, how it is produced and consumed, let us not forget that the business to business landscape has changed dramatically in recent years and meeting sales targets is getting more difficult for those businesses that have not adapted to the changing needs of the customer.
An understanding of the motivation and behaviour of modern customers is needed to be able to achieve sustainable sales success. Sales and Marketing need to adapt and work together to maximise opportunities.
syringe pens Hopefully Target’s profits for Christmas shopping will reflect families outrage in all 50 states for mocking the prescription opioid/heroin epidemic — and the loss of the lives of children.
Marianne Skolek Global News Centre-October 20, 2015
(MYRTLE BEACH)  Target Stores have been promoting a “Spritz Halloween Syringe Pen” for sale in their “family” stores all over the country.  (Photo of syringe pens are shown).  When I learned of Target’s outrageous retail practice of profiting from a drug epidemic which is resulting in deaths and addictions in the tens of thousands, I emailed the following to John Mulligan, Executive VP:
Mr. Mulligan – we are losing a generation as a result of the prescription opioid epidemic now leading to a surge in heroin usage.  Target is selling a pen in the shape of a syringe.  Shame on you!
I received a reply from a “Terry” representing Target’s executive offices which is shown below:
hello Marianne,
Thanks for contacting Target, your email has been received by our Executive Offices and I have been asked to respond. I’m sorry to hear that you’ve been offended by the Spritz Halloween Syringe Pens.
Target welcomes everyone to shop in our stores and has a long history of offering a large assortment of merchandise to a wide variety of guests. Though we serve a significant number of families across the country, we also serve many guests with diverse tastes and interests. Occasionally, we carry merchandise that some guests may find objectionable, as was your experience.
Your feedback is a big help to us, so I’ll be sure to share your comments with our buyers. Thanks again for your thoughtful feedback.
Sincerely,
Terry
Target Corporation
“Occasionally, we carry merchandise that some guests may find objectionable, as was your experience”  — no Terry I don’t find it objectionable, I find it irresponsible and degrading to families who have lost loved ones to this horrific epidemic.  Offended?  You bet I am.
I sent the below email to John Mulligan as well as other executives from Target.  I don’t expect a response from any of them — but I do expect a response from parents all over the country who find the loss of their family members unbearable especially during the holidays.
Mr. Mulligan — this is the reply I received from your “Guest Relations”.  Shame on you!  There are parents all over the country who have lost children to the prescription opioid/heroin epidemic — in the tens of thousands.  Yes I find it objectionable and your lack of concern for the loss of life is inexcusable.
Email addresses for executives at Target are:
casey.carl@target.com

So I repeat Target — what were you thinking?  A message of syringes to young children for Halloween?  Are profits that important to you?
Hopefully Target’s profits for Christmas shopping will reflect families outrage in all 50 states for mocking the prescription opioid/heroin epidemic — and the loss of the lives of children.
________________________________
skolek-new-photo-700
Global News Centre’s Marianne Skolek, is an Investigative Reporter who focuses on the Prescription Opioid/Heroin Epidemic in the U.S. and Canada. In particular, Marianne has covered the criminal marketing of OxyContin going back to 1999 and continuing to the present.
In 2002, Marianne lost her daughter, Jill to prescribed OxyContin which her physician referred to as “mobility in a bottle.” It was, in fact, death in a bottle. After doing extensive research on the maker of OxyContin, Purdue Pharma, Marianne began working with the Department of Justice in Virginia in their criminal investigation into Purdue Pharma and in July 2007 was asked by the U.S. Attorney John Brownlee prosecuting the case to testify against the three CEO’s of Purdue Pharma, Michael Friedman, Paul Goldenheim, MD and Howard Udell, Chief Counsel. The CEO’s pleaded guilty to misleading the medical profession about the dangers of OxyContin. Marianne also testified against Purdue Pharma at a Judiciary Hearing of the U.S. Senate in July 2007.
In addition, a dangerous and highly addictive opioid named Zohydro has been approved by the FDA against their Advisory Committee’s advice and Marianne continues to alert Attorneys General, Senators and Congressmen as to the FDA’s irresponsibility in the out of control prescription opioid/heroin epidemic killing and addicting in the tens of thousands each year. Zohydro has been referred to as “heroin in a capsule” and its lowest dosage (10mg) contains twice as much hydrocodone as found in a Vicodin pill. The highest single dose of Zohydro contains as much hydrocodone as 5 to 10 tablets of Vicodin or Lortab. Zohydro mixed with alcohol can be fatal and has no abuse deterrent built in which will make it easy to crush and deliver a fatal dose of the opioid.
Currently Marianne has been instrumental in calling for the termination of Margaret Hamburg, MD, Commissioner of the FDA as well as Bob A. Rappaport, MD and Douglas Throckmorton, MD for their lack of commitment to safeguarding the American public against the prescription opioid/heroin epidemic. Marianne’s research, writing and contact with government agencies and attorneys has also exposed the heavily funded pain foundations set up by the pharmaceutical industry and their paid physician spokespersons who convinced the medical boards in 50 states and Canada that dangerous opioids such as OxyContin were less likely to be addictive. These physicians — in particular Scott Fishman, MD, J. David Haddox, DDS, MD, Perry Fine, MD, Lynn R. Webster, MD, Russell Portenoy, MD also downplayed the risks of addictive opioids in books as authors. These books are still available for sale and promoted to the medical profession.
Here are links to Marianne’s involvement in exposing the national conspiracy of the prescription opioid/heroin epidemic, the FDA, the pharmaceutical industry, their pain foundations and paid physician spokespersons.