Cocaine Mist Anyone? If You Bypass The Spritz You'll Definitely Want The Queen's Lace!
Leave it to Rothchild and the French...
The nasal cocaine spritzer is not that new, it’s only intended to hospital use in minor surgeries around the nose, The mist delivery system is semi-new 2020, but the cocaine hydrochloride has been around since ~2008. What is interesting is “Numbrino” by Lannett was given issued a new NDC# yesterday Oct 15th.
I’ve been on a little mini-mission building my cabal map that someday will look like blue prints to a shopping mall, but for now this thing looks ore like a Aztec pyramid. If you were a stocks and bonds I’d say jump on Lannett for the short term and ride the little wave. But as usual you are S.O.L. as Rothchild has taken Lannett private for this phase so they can scrape the cream off the top before they let the bottom feeders pick at the carcass for a while.
This is what Forbes said about Lannett back in 2014:
Lannett Co., Inc. develops, manufactures, markets and distributes generic versions of pharmaceutical products. The company sells its pharmaceutical products to generic pharmaceutical distributors, drug wholesalers, chain drug retailers, private label distributors, mail-order pharmacies, other pharmaceutical manufacturers, managed care organizations, hospital buying groups, governmental entities and health maintenance organizations. It manufactures solid oral dosage forms, including tablets and capsules, topical and oral solutions, and is pursuing partnerships and research contracts for the development and production of other dosage forms, including ophthalmic, nasal and injectable products. The company was founded in 1942 and is headquartered in Philadelphia, PA. America’s best small company (#8) 2014. C.E.O. is (was) Arthur Bedrosian.
Bedrosian was in some tax trouble for a long time, Linnett went into chapter 11, but has since emerged under it’s new Reorganization Plan (the “Plan) June 2023, with a few new front men including new C.E.O. Tim Crew. Here’s Businesswire’s recent blur HERE.
The short story is Bedrosian had some extra bank accounts in Switzerland and guess who his attorney firm is? Yup you guessed it, it’s Fox Rothchild, LLP.
Bedrosian’s tax story is kind of funny honestly, but let’s fast forward past Rothchild to all the French connections like Sanofi, Sanofi-Aventis, Sanofi-Synthélabo, Societé Belge de l'Azote ( SBA ) and down to Labaz Group.
The “Labaz” era will get us down to this character Georges Claude.
His wiki bio will tell you this was a pretty impressive dude, but it looks like he had a direct tie to 1930’s Cuba and I guess didn’t like democracy very much?
Per wiki:
Early life and career
Georges Claude was born on 24 September 1870 in Paris, France, during the city's siege by German forces.[2]
Georges Claude studied at the École supérieure de physique et de chimie industrielles de la ville de Paris (ESPCI).[6] He then held several positions. He was an electrical inspector in a cable factory and the laboratory manager in an electric works. He founded and edited a magazine, L'Étincelle Électrique (The Electric Spark); his important friendship with Jacques-Arsène d'Arsonval apparently dates from this time.[7] About 1896, Claude learned of the explosion risk for bottled acetylene, which was used at the time for lighting. Acetylene is explosive when stored under pressure. Claude showed that acetylene dissolved well in acetone, equivalent to storing it under 25 atmospheres of pressure, reduced the risk in handling the gas.[8]
Ocean thermal energy conversion
Main article: Ocean thermal energy conversion
Claude's mentor and friend was Jacques-Arsène d'Arsonval, the inventor of the "Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion" (OTEC) concept. Claude was also the first person to build prototype plants of that technology. Claude built his plant in Cuba in 1930. The system produced 22 kilowatts of electricity with a low-pressure turbine.[4][19]
In 1935, Claude constructed another plant, this time aboard a 10,000-ton cargo vessel moored off the coast of Brazil. Weather and waves destroyed both plants before they could become net power generators.[19] (Net power is the amount of power generated after subtracting power needed to run the system.)
Jumping ahead to Sanofi-Synthélabo era:
Sanofi was founded in 1973[4] as a subsidiary of Elf Aquitaine (a French oil company subsequently acquired by Total), when Elf Aquitaine took control of the Labaz group, a pharmaceutical company formed in 1947 by Sociéte Belge de l'Azote et des Produits Chimiques du Marly;[5] Labaz developed benziodarone in 1957.[6]: 146 In 1993, Sanofi made a move into the Eastern Europe market by acquiring a controlling interest in Chinoin, a Hungarian drug company whose 1992, sales totaled about US$104 million.[7][8] In the same year, Sanofi made its first significant venture into the US, and strengthened its presence in Eastern Europe, by first partnering with Sterling Winthrop and then acquiring the prescription pharmaceuticals business in 1994.[7][9] Sanofi was incorporated under the laws of France in 1994, as a société anonyme, a form of limited liability company.[10]: 18
Synthélabo was founded in 1970, through the merger of two French pharmaceutical laboratories, Laboratoires Dausse (founded in 1834) and Laboratoires Robert & Carrière (founded in 1899). In 1973, the French cosmetics group L'Oréal acquired the majority of its share capital.[10]: 19 In 1991, Synthelabo acquired Laboratories Delalande[11] and Laboratoires Delagrange, and through this deal picked up the product metoclopramide.[12][13]
Sanofi-Synthélabo was formed in 1999 when Sanofi merged with Synthélabo; at the time of the merger, Sanofi was the second largest pharmaceutical group in France in terms of sales and Synthélabo was the third largest. The merged company was based in Paris, France.[10]: 18–19 [14]
The merged companies focused on pharmaceuticals, divesting several businesses soon after the merger, including beauty, diagnostics, animal health and nutrition, custom chemicals, and two medical equipment businesses.[10]: 19
You can go down many rabbit holes from the above info but let’s zero in on the Benziodarone developed in 1957 by “Labaz”. Somewhere down the the rabbit hole I landed on The Queen’s Lace! Wow, from cocaine to the Queen’s Lace… that sounds like a wild night at Studio54, but this is really about AMMI- AMMI MAJUS AND VISNAGA and all it’s medicinal purposes. You can thank me later. God Bless.
See HERE: https://farmhouseandblooms.com/how-to-grow-ammi-ammi-majus-and-visnaga/
FYI: CDC has not dropped the new VAERS reports yet, should drop tomorrow but there is no good reason for this delay, not even the holiday we had last week. Complete bull dookie.
George Webb started talking about I.G. Farben yesterday and started to follow me on Twitter the day before that! He digs a lot deeper and a lot better than me, but I can’t help but think I somehow put a little gas in his huge gas tank. Hi George!
Webb’s wiki space on I.G. Farben and their connection to Wuhan Lab here:
https://twitter.com/RealGeorgeWebb1/status/1713612850382414113
https://twitter.com/RealGeorgeWebb1/status/1713599971344159033
https://twitter.com/RealGeorgeWebb1/status/1713915307100656097
Benziodarone - a vasodilator. Pass the popcorn and herbal remedies as the jabbeds' heart attacks and strokes case numbers keep going up. Thanks for prodding me to learn today about the vasodilator khella. https://www.herbal-supplement-resource.com/khella-ammi-visnaga.html.
FWIW, I find the plant remedies often have fewer side effects than their synthesized semi-cloned molecules, tweaked just enough in labs be legally patentable and thus very profitable.
Always said the corrupt make money and the honest get left in the mud