Why Medications and Supplements Are So Expensive

Drug PricingNearly 70 percent of Americans take prescribed medication daily, a recent Mayo Clinic study found. If this isn’t already bad enough, the pharmaceutical industry has such a vice-like grip on consumers such that nearly one in four Americans can’t afford to fill out their prescriptions. Drug pricing is a growing problem and warrants a closer look and possible solutions. We explore some of these below.

1. Drug Pricing

A majority of European countries have policies that allow governments (or relevant state agencies) to negotiate prices for every drug in the market. In the United States, however, relevant agencies such as the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services are prohibited by law from negotiating drug prices. Instead, the U.S. allows pharmaceuticals to set their own prices. Continue reading

Owning Your DNA …

dnaJoseph P Farrell – Regular readers of my books and of this site know that I have maintained there is a connection between the ideas of ancient interplanetary wars, ETs, UFOs, human and animal sacrifice, missing money (in the trillions of dollars), and the idea of a tribute or tithe.

The way I see it, these things are linked, and part of a very ancient “agenda” or “policy”, if you will. If these memes and ideas don’t seem immediately or intuitively related, then consider how some of them – UFOs and abortion, viewed as a sacrifice – for example, merge in the dubious “character” of Hillary Clinton, who like her husband, has an interest in the former and defends the latter. Then add to this mix something that I pointed out at the Secret Space Program conference in Bastrop, Texas in 2015: the proliferation of quick genome sequencing technologies, now taken to the point of allowing sequencing in the field to a certain degree, without having to send samples to labs and wait for the results.

As I pointed out then, the FBI has demonstrated a (understandable) interest in the technology. At Bastrop, I speculated that this interest might stem from a suspicion that our “extraterrestrial cousins”, if they exist at all, might be here and walking among us, and that the only way to distinguish them from humans would be genetically. In that context, I also pointed out – specifically – the rise of companies that do sequencing for a fee, and then based on comparisons with known haplogroups, tell you “where you’re from”, like Ancestry.com.

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