Posted on 02/17/2018 11:20:08 AM PST by nickcarraway
Whille mass killers generally have guns in their hands, another commonality is that they often have psychiatric drugs in their blood. The difference, though, is that it isn't guns that have the side effect of "homicidal ideation."
If you develop digestive problems after a change in diet, do you look for the cause in foods you always ate or the new ones you started eating? While the answer is obvious, this common sense is painfully uncommon when analyzing the new phenomenon of continual mass shootings: Many blame the long-present foods guns in this case and ignore the new diet whose embrace coincided with the problem. And part of whats new is the widespread use of psychiatric drugs.
As a case in point, the Parkland, Florida, shooter (I wont use his name and help provide the fame he craved), who murdered 17 on Valentines Day, was on medication for emotional issues, his aunt related. This is now a familiar story, too. As WND.coms David Kupelian put it Thursday, the following is par for the course: As information about a perpetrator emerges, a relative confides to a newspaper that the troubled youth who committed the mass murder was on psychiatric medications you know, those powerful, little understood, mind-altering drugs with fearsome side effects including suicidal ideation and even homicidal ideation.
ULINE Shipping Supplies Huge Catalog! Over 31,000 Products. Same Day Shipping from 11 Locations www.ULINE.com Yet, Kupelian laments, the media have little appetite for exploring this issue. Politicians dont, either. Unlike with guns, legal drugs arent a sexy issue that can be used to scare people and win votes. Moreover, as The Guardian reported last year, Pharmaceutical companies spend far more than any other industry to influence politicians, having poured close to $2.5bn into lobbying and funding members of Congress over the past decade. This dwarfs the gun lobbys political contributions, mind you.
But what about pharmaceuticals contributions to mass shootings? Of course, correlation doesnt mean causation, but it can provide clues as to where causation may lie and the correlation between mass shooters and psychiatric drug use certainly exists.
Consider Newtown, Connecticut, killer Adam Lanza (I will provide the names of perpetrators of older incidents), who killed 26 at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2013. He also was on medication, according to family friend Louise Tambascio. Thats all we heard about it, however; as Kupelian points out, there was little journalistic curiosity or follow-up.
But there should be. As Kupelian also informs, Fact: A disturbing number of perpetrators of school shootings and similar mass murders in our modern era were either on or just recently coming off of psychiatric medications. He then provides some examples (all quotations are Kupelians):
Columbine mass-killer Eric Harris was taking Luvox like Prozac, Paxil, Zoloft, Effexor and many others, a modern and widely prescribed type of antidepressant drug called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs. Along with fellow student Dylan Klebold, Harris shot 13 to death and wounded 24 in a headline-grabbing 1999 rampage. Luvox manufacturer Solvay Pharmaceuticals concedes that during short-term controlled clinical trials, 4 percent of children and youth taking Luvox thats one in 25 developed mania, a dangerous and violence-prone mental derangement characterized by extreme excitement and delusion.
Twenty-five-year-old Patrick Purdy murdered five children and wounded 30 in a schoolyard shooting rampage in Stockton, California, in 1989. Hed been taking Amitriptyline, an antidepressant, as well as the antipsychotic drug Thorazine.
Kip Kinkel, 15, murdered his parents in 1998 and the next day went to his school, Thurston High in Springfield, Oregon, and opened fire on his classmates, killing two and wounding 22 others. He had been prescribed both Prozac and Ritalin.
WNDs Leo Hohmann adds to the picture, having reported in 2015 (all quotations are his):
Aaron Ray Ybarra, 26, of Mountlake Terrace, Washington, allegedly opened fire with a shotgun at Seattle Pacific University in June 2014, killing one student and wounding two others. Ybarra said hed been prescribed with Prozac and Risperdal to help him with his problems.
Jose Reyes, the Nevada seventh-grader who went on a shooting rampage at his school in October 2013 was taking a prescription antidepressant [Prozac] at the time .
Navy Yard shooter Aaron Alexis sprayed bullets at office workers and in a cafeteria on Sept. 16, 2013, killing 13 people including himself. Alexis had been prescribed [generic antidepressant] Trazodone by his Veterans Affairs doctor.
In 1988, 31-year-old Laurie Dann went on a shooting rampage in a second-grade classroom in Winnetka, Ill., killing one child and wounding six. She had been taking the antidepressant Anafranil as well as Lithium, long used to treat mania.
In Paducah, Kentucky, in late 1997, 14-year-old Michael Carneal, son of a prominent attorney, traveled to Heath High School and started shooting students in a prayer meeting taking place in the schools lobby, killing three and leaving another paralyzed. Carneal reportedly was on Ritalin.
In 2005, 16-year-old Jeff Weise, living on Minnesotas Red Lake Indian Reservation, shot and killed nine people and wounded five others before killing himself. Weise had been taking Prozac.
47-year-old Joseph T. Wesbecker, just a month after he began taking Prozac in 1989, shot 20 workers at Standard Gravure Corp. in Louisville, Kentucky, killing nine. Prozac-maker Eli Lilly later settled a lawsuit brought by survivors.
And there are many, many more examples.
Of course, also relating to correlation, theres a chicken-or-egg question here: Is it that taking psychiatric drugs makes a person more likely to go crazy and commit murderous rampages, or is it that crazy people who are candidates for committing murderous rampages are more likely to be prescribed psychiatric drugs? In reality, most likely its both.
The truth is that because the human mind is complex and not wholly understood, taking mind-altering drugs is a risky proposition. Drug companies acknowledge this, too, mind you just not very publicly. As Kupelian writes after relating the case of Andrea Yates, who drowned her five children in 2001 while on the antidepressant Effexor:
In November 2005, more than four years after Yates drowned her children, Effexor manufacturer Wyeth Pharmaceuticals quietly added homicidal ideation to the drugs list of rare adverse events. The Medical Accountability Network, a private nonprofit focused on medical ethics issues, publicly criticized Wyeth, saying Effexors homicidal ideation risk wasnt well publicized and that Wyeth failed to send letters to doctors or issue warning labels announcing the change. And what exactly does rare mean in the phrase rare adverse events? The FDA defines it as occurring in less than one in 1,000 people. But since that same year 19.2 million prescriptions for Effexor were filled in the U.S., statistically that means thousands of Americans might experience homicidal ideation murderous thoughts as a result of taking just this one brand of antidepressant drug. Effexor is Wyeths best-selling drug, by the way, which in one recent year brought in over $3 billion in sales, accounting for almost a fifth of the companys annual revenues.
Then, after mentioning the case of 12-year-old Paxil user Christopher Pittmans murder of his grandparents, Kupelian informs that Paxils known adverse drug reactions according to the drugs FDA-approved label include mania, insomnia, anxiety, agitation, confusion, amnesia, depression, paranoid reaction, psychosis, hostility, delirium, hallucinations, abnormal thinking, depersonalization and lack of emotion, among others.
In fact, as Ch 2 WCGH reported in 2009, One study shows a quarter of all children on drugs such as Paxil and Zoloft become dangerously violent and/or suicidal. Below is a 2011 news report on the subject by WCNC.COM 6 News; it includes the story of Christopher Pittman.
Of course, if these drugs pose such a threat, there should be a stream of high-profile lawsuits, right? Wrong. To avoid the bad exposure this would bring, drug companies spend hundreds of millions of dollars settling claims out of court and often cloak them with confidentiality agreements.
Having said this, its unlikely that psychiatric drugs are entirely to blame for mass shootings, for much has changed during the last many decades. Weve seen a decline in faith and rise in moral relativism/nihilism, which relates the notion that right and wrong are mere perspective; entertainment has become increasingly decadent and mindlessly violent (note that the Internets rise fairly closely coincided with the start of continual mass shootings); the family has continued to break down, and Americans today, immersed in electronics, are often more connected to things than people; and the fame committing a massacre brings can be alluring to lonely, disturbed people, thus breeding copycat crimes, to name just a few factors. Its a systemic problem.
Nonetheless, adding mind-altering drugs to this equation adds up to nothing good, and this brings me to my story. I knew a good-natured man who was the epitome of even-temperedness, who had some problems and was prescribed an antidepressant by a psychiatrist (whod never treated him before). Well, he swallowed one pill and only one, ever. In his case, that was all it took. Fifteen minutes later, he flew into a rage and was never the same again. Mental instability, irrationality, and some violent episodes in a word, insanity would define the rest of his life.
Famed psychiatrist Sigmund Freud once believed that cocaine, legal during his younger days, was the best cure for depression thered ever been. Bayer Heroin was once advertised as a remedy for all sorts of ailments. Today, with one out of six Americans on some psychiatric medication, we ought to perhaps bear in mind that just because a drug is on the right side of the law doesnt mean it wont bring you to the wrong side of sanitys line.
Of course. The only surprise is that it’s being brought up in mainstream media. Disenfranchised drug-addled young men can’t distinguish their violent, values-starved fantasy world from the real world where they were ignored or marginalized. The start of a solution would be to provide them real world experiences they felt positive about. I agree with those who advocate for hands-on vocational education a part of the solution.
No, what I was saying is that many of the anti-depressents and psychotropic drugs say not for someone under 30, or under 25 or under 18 and they get prescribed anyway or when the person is just over the calendar age and Bam, big problems.
I am not against psychiatric medication, but too much it's prescribed sloppily and unscientifically. And it should never be prescribed without therapy.
For example, Serotonin reuptake inhibitors will not help people who have normal amounts of serotonin. Quite the opposite. But that's not how they've been prescribed.
More gun laws will take care of this.
Bad parenting and no God in home or school - that’s it in a nutshell.
This is the reason there is so much “mental illness”, leading to the use of so many drugs.
If you think of every problem our society has, following the teachings of Scriptures will rectify it, or at the very least give us instruction on dealing with it.
YOU are right. The lack of love (God), and attention at home has much to do with why children/teens do what they do.
As a former CJ Instructor, let me say this, there was a study done in Juvenile Detention Centers, with surveys on why those young people ended up there. One thing stood out, most felt no one would care if they were gone, and incarcerated. There was NOT one relationship...parent, grandparent, older sibling, or even community, that they felt close enough to, that would cause them to think about NOT doing the crime. Sad.
AS families we can miss the ability to connect with children or teens, because we do not realize how important their need for love really is, and making the effort to get close to them is usually abandoned; if they are too much trouble or their attitude offends us. Usually, there is a reason for their anger, attitude, or actions. Finding out what that is will not only help them stay out of system, but teach us that inside... there is a pain they would love to share, but can’t, unless there is close relationship that is safe!
Track the scripts and cross reference young males mentally deranged, making sure they have access to rifles and pistols ... a data base to tap when the oligarchy needs a diversion (criminal Mule-er and treasonous Hillary, anyone?) or cause for enslaving We The People (take weapons from law abiding citizens, so only government goon-squads and criminals have them).
Most of the drugs have “warnings that are supposed to be ignored” about how they “may cause feeling of depression/thoughts of suicide/going off the deep end in some tragic way” and we so much of the violence being done by those with the drugs in their system and yet they continue to be distributed like Pez used to be...
“We know nothing about his somewhat shady lineage,”
He was a Russian orphan. FAS is reported to be common among them, and Romanian orphans as well.
Is that definite, Pelham?
Bryan Suits was the source. He’s usually pretty reliable about sourcing his information.
But then I can’t find any confirmation of Suit’s claim regarding Cruz so it’s surely not ‘definite’. I don’t know where he got his information.
Thanks nickcarraway.
It’s a racket as well, as schools that can get their kids on psychotropic drugs can also obtain “special needs” benefits from the state and federal gov’ts.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.