Yesterday, I was at a local gathering, where I met up with independent investigative reporter Rosemary Frei (pictured on the left in blue), visiting from Toronto...
Rosemary and I originally connected online, way back in June 2020. We were two of the way too few people publishing articles online exposing the scamdemic in those early days of the COVID hoax. Much of Rosemary's research exposing the neglect in Ontario nursing homes is depicted in my novel, Much Ado About Corona.
On Saturday, however, Rosemary published a new piece of investigative journalism flourishing a bundle of red flags around naloxone — the drug used to treat opioid overdoses. I must admit, even I thought this was one of the few drugs in wide use that did more good than harm.
I even mentioned naloxone in my novel, when Vince notices Constable Mackenzie taking a few too many painkillers:
“Don’t worry,” Mackenzie said. He slid the bottle back into his jacket’s breast pocket. Before zipping back up, he patted a pouch on his police vest. “If I overdose, just spray a little naloxone up the nose. Works like magic. I’ve had to use it enough times this year, I should know.”
Did he mean he’d used it on himself, or on 911 calls? I’d heard that opioid-related deaths so far had killed an extra two hundred more people in Ontario than before the lockdowns.
Rosemary's article, however, presents evidence showing that naloxone may actually be causing more deaths than it saves. She also points out how it's being improperly used and mass-distributed at a scale that would only bring benefit (e.g. billions of dollars) to the pharmaceutical industry.
You can read all the details at RosemaryFrei.ca — starting with how Rosemary was threatened by a pharmacist for daring to even ask a few questions.
—John C. A. Manley