MEFLOQUINE: Is the US Army poisoning its own Soldiers with Malaria Drugs? | ENDEVR Documentary



MEFLOQUINE: The Anti Malarial Drug Investigation | ENDEVR Documentary

Watch ‘Toxic Tech: The Deadly Magic of Depleted Uranium’ here: https://youtu.be/mYgEQQir8I0

Developed by the US Army after Vietnam to combat malaria in troops, Mefloquine became available to the public in the 90s. In the following decades, it became known for its serious psychiatric side effects. Questions about why it has been so widely and easily dispensed have been raised for some time. The director’s personal investigation seeks to understand why those affected have been left in the dark for so long. In doing so he uncovers some surprising truths about the powerful players involved in this controversial drug’s story.

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20 thoughts on “MEFLOQUINE: Is the US Army poisoning its own Soldiers with Malaria Drugs? | ENDEVR Documentary”

  1. Developed by the US Army after Vietnam to combat malaria in troops, Mefloquine became available to the public in the 90s. In the following decades it became known for its serious psychiatric side effects. Questions about why it has been so widely and easily dispensed have been raised for some time. The director's personal investigation seeks to understand why those affected have been left in the dark for so long. In doing so he uncovers some surprising truths about the powerful players involved in this controversial story.

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  2. Technically when given a vaccine for somwthing your usually infecting yourself with said virus 🤷 in a general sense I really dont see the big issue considering American healthcare does the same thing.

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  3. So-called sovereign officers, cult enforcers, use psychotic drugs in most concentration camps commonly known as detention centers.

    Remember that a statement of sovereignty is not secular.

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  4. I was at Fort Bragg, North Carolina 2002. Deployed 2 times Afghanistan and Iraq with Ft. Bragg. I remember the Fort Bragg, North Carolina killing. I was also prescribed Lariam. I took it for only 2 or 3 days then was told to stop taking it. I had vivid nightmares. I join the Army 1988-2014.

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  5. 1:55 sign me up, sounds like an acid trip I had back in 1997😅 I'm just kidding actually, it's terrifying to experience true psychosis where you have hallucinations and delusions. It sounds almost like she was in a delirium but I only just started listening to the story, I feel bad for everybody who has been affected by any drugs including the massive amounts of failed trials.😊

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  6. I've taken Lariam for travel.
    Initially, there's no side effects. Within about three days, the three of us guys in our early 20s were waking each other up with the outward reactions to out ultra-vivid dreams.
    My brother spent a night hanging out near a creek where he received hundreds of mosquito bites (his exposed elbow area destroyed). So, while my buddy and I stopped taking Larium when we got home, my brother continued the regimen per guidelines to prevent malaria.
    This meant that he had to continue it for weeks after arriving home.
    Nobody wants malaria. But, the effect was that the vivid dreams progressed to a state of a sort of generalized intensity. Not anxiety….intensity. He called me telling me how horrible he felt and that he had this sense of, well, malignant intensity.
    Once the course was completed, he felt better within days.
    What were the long-term effects on his personality?

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