Anti-Love Drug May Be Ticket to Bliss

Started by jai_mann, June 09, 2009, 03:35:26 AM

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jai_mann

This would lower human behavior to match that of most animals.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/13/scien ... ?_r=2&8dpc

Don't think the kabbalists and masons aren't contemplating it. They need their mindless slave class to live out their dreams of utopia...Of course it's in the NY TIMES.

Jenny Lake

QuoteForced Oxytocin
Researchers are currently looking at how oxytocin nasal spray promotes harmony and trust (see, for example, Nose spray lowers stress during spats and Trust in a bottle). They have also been conducting experiments designed to use it in the treatment of autism and other antisocial disorders (Trust-building hormone short-circuits fear in humans). Results have been mixed in the short-term. And they are not yet looking at long-term effects, which past experience suggests can be quite severe.
from http://www.reuniting.info/science/oxyto ... th_bonding

...see what's already happening with the use of hormones.

Jenny Lake

One of the overseers of hormone drug development is 'medical ethicist' Jonathan D. Moreno, who I watched give a lecture on UCSD cable tv in 2007. It was chilling! Moreno seemed to take an enthusiastic delight in the nightmarish advances of mind-altering bioscience. He alluded to the research and experimental applications as unstoppable and that his role as an ethicist was to mitigate the politically charged environment but he was clearly a major supporter. At one point in his lecture, a man stood to ask the question on the potential for mis-use and suggested legitimate concerns, to which Moreno reacted coldly and dismissed the man as listening to conspiracy-theorists...it was creepy. Moreno went on to characterize the very nature of the mis-use just asked about in terms of present research!!

At the time, Moreno was promoting his book "Mind Wars"
here's more http://neurophilosophy.wordpress.com/20 ... mind-wars/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_D._Moreno
QuoteFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Jonathan D. Moreno is the David and Lyn Silfen Professor and Professor of Medical Ethics and the History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania. He is a Senior Fellow at both the University of Pennsylvania Center for Bioethics and at the Center for American Progress

In 2005, Moreno joined the faculty at Penn as part of President Amy Gutmann's Penn Integrates Knowledge (PIK) Initiative. [1]. Prior to coming to Penn, Moreno served as the director of the Center for Ethics and Emily Davie and Joseph S. Kornfeld Professor of Biomedical Ethics at the University of Virginia. [2] . He has also held full-time faculty appointments at Swarthmore College, the University of Texas at Austin, George Washington University, and the SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn.

Moreno received his undergraduate degree from Hofstra University in 1973 with highest honors in philosophy and psychology and received a PhD in Philosophy in 1977 from Washington University in St. Louis.
 
[edit] Academic work
"Moreno has been a senior staff member for two presidential commissions and has given invited testimony for both houses of Congress. He has published 17 books, monographs, anthologies and textbooks and more than 250 papers, reviews and book chapters, and is a member of several editorial boards. He is a frequent guest on news and information programs and is often quoted in the national press". [3]

"Moreno is an elected member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies of Science and has served on numerous Academies' boards and committees. He was co-chair of the Academies' Committee on Guidelines for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research. He is a past President of the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities. He is a bioethics advisor for the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, a Faculty Affiliate of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics at Georgetown University, a Fellow of the Hastings Center and of the New York Academy of Medicine". [3]

He was also a Special Expert in the Department of Clinical Bioethics at the Warren Magnuson Clinical Center of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland. He was a member of the National Human Research Protections Advisory Committee, a senior consultant for the National Bioethics Advisory Commission, and has advised the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. During 1994-95 he was Senior Policy and Research Analyst for the President's Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments. [3] He also recently served as the director of bioethics review on the transition team for President Barack Obama. [3]