Opioid Crisis The Shocking Truth Psychedelics As The Cure
recovery"Was this just biopharma looking at profitability, or was it a concerted effort to bring about dependency, pull it back, and then flood it with heroin and fentanyl?" The pipeline: prescriptions in the 90s created the dependency, then when they pulled prescriptions back, the market shifted to street drugs. Psychedelics are the way out — they actually cure the brain instead of keeping it on a leash.
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We know that that started back in the late 1990s.
Now, with it starting back in the 1990s,
do you think that this was just biopharma
looking at the profitability of the United States of America,
of everything that was going on,
or do you think that this was a concerted effort
during that time by these institutions,
because that's how a lot of this infrastructure operates
in this deep clandestine network we're talking about,
to bring about that dependency, pull that dependency back,
and then flood it with actual heroin and fentanyl,
because we had the prescription,
and then it went heroin and fentanyl
after the prescriptions got pulled back.
What are your thoughts on this?
Well, you've got your basic consumerism
that has addiction issues, okay?
And a lot of that did start with the opiates.
I encourage everybody to watch the Netflix,
I think it's Netflix series, Dope Sick, with Michael Keaton.
There's a lot of true information in there.
I mean, that's a great illustration
of showing how pharma was causing these addictions,
and the US government was supporting it
through the different agencies.
And this is, honestly, the Sackler family and Purdue Pharma,
I would like to see them, you know,
endure a little bit more pain after all the recall.
But you saw the same thing with the crack wars, right?
I mean, that was pulling stuff into the country,
the finance operations for other things.
So it doesn't matter if it's the crack wars,
it doesn't matter if it's the opioids,
it doesn't matter if it's fentanyl,
it doesn't matter if it's heroin.
I remember when all of a sudden the VA said,
hey, we're gonna stop doing this opioid thing,
and they just cut everybody off.
And you are absolutely right.
At that exact time, the price for heroin went way down,
and I wasn't getting advocacy calls,
I wasn't getting calls.
I had, at that time, in like four years,
I had maybe one call, two calls about heroin,
you know, stuff like that.
And then after they killed the opiates
and they just cut it, I was getting calls on heroin,
people needing assistance to stop their heroin addictions.
That was happening several times a month.
So you've got the consumers, you've got the need, right?
The need is gonna try and get satisfied,
and people are gonna take advantage of that.
It's either gonna be the Sackler family,
it's gonna be the CCP, it's gonna be the cartels,
people are gonna take advantage of those needs,
and they're gonna monetize it for themselves
and for their own operations, whatever those might be,
maybe increase stock prices,
or it may be to degrade a society,
like what you're seeing with the CCP,
with the irregular warfare.
But it's always going to be there.
What we need to do as a society
is recognize who's doing it,
and also recognize what are the things,
now we're gonna go off topic here,
but if you really wanna get down to it,
what are the things that cause these addictions
that create the need?
A lot of times it's trauma.
How do we deal with trauma?
Because all trauma equals addiction at some point in time.
I've never seen a person addicted to anything
that it didn't stem from some sort of trauma
somewhere at some time in their life.
And there is a way to deal with that.
And again, that's why I'm an advocate for psychedelics,
because I have seen so many people who,
I mean, the hardest drinkers
that you've ever seen in your life,
one dose of Ibogaine,
and the next thing you know, they don't drink anymore.
They don't have any urges.
They don't wanna drink anymore.
They can walk past every bar and their life gets healthier.
So you're correcting those trauma clusters in the brain.
Now, you wanna break the fentanyl habit in the United States,
get everybody through Ibogaine treatments
that is on fentanyl, and then that stops the demand.
But we've gotta be open to this.
This is an entire ecology situation, a scenario.
We've gotta change the ecology of healthcare
to remove the paradigm that creates the need
that finances these types of covert operations.
100%.
I gotta ask the question that both you guys are aware of.
What is that stuff that you're talking about, Boone?
The ice?
Ibogaine?
Yeah.
Yeah, Ibogaine, it comes from the Iboga plant out of Africa,
but you've got different types of psychedelics.
You've got Ibogaine, you've got psilocybin,
you've got LSD, you've got MDMA.
There's different types of psychedelics.
They all pretty much work in the same way,
but when it comes to reestablishing serotonin, dopamine,
making your brain work right,
psychedelics is the only substance that you could take
that creates neurogenesis.
I mean, it actually makes your brain grow.
You can change your habits,
you can do all kinds of different things.
You don't have the same neural pathways
working in those negative ways that you do prior to that.
So, I mean, it's a little bit complicated,
but at the end of the day,
it's still an underground thing in the United States.
It's not in the open.
The veteran community has an amazing underground network
to help each other.
There's places that you can go in Mexico
that are amazing, that did great work,
but most of it is outside the country.
You really can't do it inside the country yet.
So, Ibogaine, awesome.
I love this.
And also stem cells, you know?
I mean, if we can stop cutting the hell out of people
and start healing people with stem cell therapy,
you know, that takes another tool off the table.
But again, you've got insurance companies and pharma
who don't want psychedelics
because it actually cures people who don't want stem cells.
We're talking about stem cells derived
from an umbilical cord.
The baby's already been born.
No children have ever been injured
during any of the stem cell therapy I've had.
And I've been to Panama and I've done it.
I've done it in Mexico, too, at CPI.
I went to Reardon's Institute,
the stem cell institute in Panama.
I went to CPI, Cellular Performance Institute,
where you see all the MMA fighters and all those guys.
I've done that in Tijuana.
They're fantastic.
And it actually helps.
And so if you're not dealing with chronic pain
and you're not dealing with psychological trauma
that leads to addictions, then what do you have?
You have a healthy society
and you have a healthy society
that's not susceptible to the paranoid delusions
they see on social media.
And they're not susceptible to the addictions
that are coming across the border illegally,
or the drugs.
Yeah.
Ibogaine, as well as all psychedelic drugs,
one of the aspects that they do
is they reset the circadian rhythms of the cellular
and the neurological component of the human body,
which is also important because one thing that we've learned
from the trials of MKUltra through various Google patents
is the blue lights from your screens, from your cell phone,
from your computer monitor, from your TVs
actually suppress dopamine production within the body,
which puts you into a state of susceptibility
to manipulation from addiction, from information,
from drugs or whatever it might be.
So, to a certain degree,
I had a long use of psychedelic drugs
when I was a teenager, but that was not clinical.
Yeah, I tell people, because people do bring that up.
They're like, oh, I did acid as a kid and it was really bad.
Well, there's something called set and setting.
I mean, I've sat in ceremony down in Mexico,
up in the hills with the sham.
I mean, I've done the most outlandish,
fringe shit you've ever seen.
And I can tell you that psychedelics
are typically not something I would suggest people like,
okay, go take a bunch of shrooms and sit in your room.
It doesn't work that way.
It's gotta be in the proper environment.
It's gotta be overseen.
It's gotta be supervised.
It's gotta be done in a very healthy way
with knowledgeable people.
You just can't go score a bunch of ecstasy
and go sit in your backyard
and think that everything's gonna be great.
It doesn't work that way.
And you've gotta have a great integration program.
You've got 90 days of neuroplasticity
after you do one of these treatments
and people do nothing with it.
They're just like, well, I just did it.
Not me, but when I go down to Mexico
and I do one of these treatments,
I go down there with the intention,
okay, there are certain things I need to work on in my life.
And when I come back,
I start building those new habits immediately.
I've had guys go down there.
One guy, he was in a tremendous amount of turmoil.
And I said, okay, go down there.
I said, do you ever do MMA?
He says, no, he's healthy enough.
He didn't have any issues.
I said, when you come back, I want you to do MMA.
I want you to do it three days a week.
He's like, why?
I said, because it's gonna teach you how to,
it's gonna teach your brain how to act under pressure.
So you can deal with these other things.
It's gonna teach you how to escape things.
It's gonna teach you how to get advantage on things.
And these are all ways that we can change
how we think about situations.
So using those 90 days post-treatment
in that integration program to actually change yourself.
And it can be as simple as cleaning your house every day.
Now that becomes a habit.
You don't have the things getting in the way of that.
It can be working out.
It can be studying.
It can be writing.
It can be anything.
You'd wanna focus on, there was another guy,
I was like, he was having a problem
kind of prioritizing things, real TBI issues.
And I said, have you ever, do you build things?
He says, no.
And I said, okay, when you get back,
I want you to build your wife a gazebo in the backyard.
Because then you have to think through
the process of building that.
And that helps you focus on that prioritization.
That's what that guy needed.
So it depends, it's really need dependent.
But I am not the guy that suggests
people just do this type of therapy
and then do nothing with it.
You've gotta be with qualified, competent people.
And then you have to have a good aftercare program
for 90 days to really make that happen.
So it's a commitment.
It's not just something that you just decide to do
on a fun, lazy weekend in Coachella.
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