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Image by Jessie Shaw

The Next Best Drug.

The diabetes injection Ozempic is "The Next Big Thing". On the pharmaceutical world market, it's the hot shot. Originally designed for diabetes patients, Ozempic doesn't resist the use from all those who want get fit for their bikini, a new pair of jeans in size 6 or to "balance" their crave for smudgy, creamy cakes with lots of fat and sugar.

The magic O was first, promising the perfect body… like once upon a time Viagra promised the perfect erection. Others have followed. After the opioid catastrophe, followed by the fentanyl killing, and the genetically manipulated "vaccine" against a "slip through the cracks lab GOF virus", it now seems to answer the prayers for many with what they consider, or what is in fact, overweight and obesity. Novo Nordisk, the leading manufacturer, has since risen to become one of the richest and most influential pharmaceutical companies in the world.

With the kind help of such a drug, it's supposedly very easy to lose excess weight and create your dream body – without having to change your diet and/or lifestyle in the slightest. What's though not even mentioned in the fine print is this:

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Like with "mRNA-therapy", the long-term effects of the wonderbodydrugs are communicated as salami tactics: one slice at a time.

The short-term effects are already horrifying. Injection once a week – for life! – is possibly a prerequisite for maintaining the weight-loss effect. For a non-diabetic person, the shot doesn't seem to alter your state of health in a positive way – quite the opposite. The drug, that promises to free you from diabetes, is said to paralyze nutrient absorption in the stomach and intestines, thereby regulating blood sugar, and what happens next sounds like another chapter from Franken-stein's textbook: The natural metabolism shuts down. The risk of depression and even suicide increases dramatically because the production of the so-called happiness hormone serotonin is also inhibited. The cost per patient (in the US) is $20,000 a year.

Image by Brooke Lark

PHARMA'S PROFIT: STAY SICK. GET SICKER.

This is just a small sample of what is already known. In the US, 80% of adults suffer from pre-diabetes, from overweight to obesity, and 25% of children are already following in their footsteps, due to extremely unhealthy eating habits and addictive food additives. That type of diet rather sooner than later leads to the so-called "metabolic syndrome," in which a healthy metabolism is severely disrupted and, in addition to increasing obesity, leads to high blood pressure, high cholesterol, more diabetes, more heart disease, and strokes, among many other things.

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For the sake of the pharmaceutical industry, they want to make believe that we have no control over our weight – because it's all a disease of the brain. Even Oprah Winfrey, the heroine of healthy problem solutions, is promoting the story. All of this is supported by that kind of science that once claimed that opioids only gets those patients hooked up with "a predisposition to addiction." Hundreds of thousands of people subsequently died from the supposedly completely harmless drug OxyContin.

Or the kind of science that claimed that mRNA injections to protect us from COVID-19, once and for all, were free from side effects and that only the injection alone could save our lives. At the same time, there were well-known drugs on the market, like Ivermectin, that were far more effective, but which were discredited by the government, media and vaccine manufacturers. A $100 billion profit lie that is currently being overtaken by the inventors of the next new drug against overweight.

Image by Etactics Inc
Tucker Carlson Ozempic

WATCH for yourself Tucker Carlson's interview with Calley Means, who exposes the business model behind unhealthy diets! The most shocking part: Those companies who once manufactured the addictive substances in cigarettes – after paying hundreds of billions of fines  –turned then to addictive substances that they could build into food, thus creating obesity and overweight... and the diabetes patients of tomorrow for the pharmaceutical industry. 

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