The Secretive Family Making Billions From the Opioid Crisis
Via Jonathan
You’re aware America is under siege,
fighting an opioid crisis that has exploded into a public-health
emergency. You’ve heard of OxyContin, the pain medication to which
countless patients have become addicted. But do you know that the
company that makes Oxy and reaps the billions of dollars in profits it
generates is owned by one family?
The newly installed Sackler Courtyard at
London’s Victoria and Albert Museum is one of the most glittering places
in the developed world. Eleven thousand white porcelain tiles, inlaid
like a shattered backgammon board, cover a surface the size of six
tennis courts. According to the V&A’s director, the regal setting is
intended to serve as a “living room for London,” by which he presumably
means a living room for Kensington, the museum’s neighborhood, which is
among the world's wealthiest. In late June, Kate Middleton, the Duchess
of Cambridge, was summoned to consecrate the courtyard, said to be the
earth's first outdoor space made of porcelain; stepping onto the ceramic
expanse, she silently mouthed, “Wow.”The Sackler Courtyard is the latest addition to an impressive portfolio.
In 1839, the Manchu Emperor ordered that it be stopped. He named the Commissioner of Canton, Lin Tse-hsu, to lead a campaign against opium. Lin seized 2,000 chests of Sassoon opium and threw it into the river. An outraged David Sassoon demanded that Great Britain retaliate. Thus, the Opium Wars began with the British Army fighting as mercenaries of the Sassoons. They attacked cities and blockaded ports. The Chinese Army, decimated by 10 years of rampant opium addiction, proved no match for the British Army. The war ended in 1839 with the signing of "The Treaty of Nanking." This included provisions especially designed to guarantee the Sassoons the right to enslave an entire population with opium. The "peace treaty" included these provisions: "1) Full legalization of the opium trade in China, 2) compensation from the opium stockpiles confiscated by Lin of 2 million pounds, 3) territorial sovereignty for the British Crown over several designated offshore islands.
The more things change, the more they stay the same. The war on drugs is a fairy tale.
I can see why JFK wanted to splinter the cia into a thousand pieces. Basically, they're just home-grown terrorists. A lot in this video pertaining to Vietnam:
In 1839, the Manchu Emperor ordered that it be stopped. He named the Commissioner of Canton, Lin Tse-hsu, to lead a campaign against opium. Lin seized 2,000 chests of Sassoon opium and threw it into the river. An outraged David Sassoon demanded that Great Britain retaliate. Thus, the Opium Wars began with the British Army fighting as mercenaries of the Sassoons. They attacked cities and blockaded ports. The Chinese Army, decimated by 10 years of rampant opium addiction, proved no match for the British Army. The war ended in 1839 with the signing of "The Treaty of Nanking." This included provisions especially designed to guarantee the Sassoons the right to enslave an entire population with opium. The "peace treaty" included these provisions: "1) Full legalization of the opium trade in China, 2) compensation from the opium stockpiles confiscated by Lin of 2 million pounds, 3) territorial sovereignty for the British Crown over several designated offshore islands.
ReplyDeleteThe more things change, the more they stay the same. The
war on drugs is a fairy tale.
I remember some of that now. Thanks.
DeleteI can see why JFK wanted to splinter the cia into a thousand
ReplyDeletepieces. Basically, they're just home-grown terrorists. A lot in this video pertaining to Vietnam:
http://www.renegadetribune.com/french-connection-us-government-flooded-america-heroin/
Thank you and watching now.
Delete