Omaha Shooter *Treated* for Depression and ADHD

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jjstar
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06 Dec 2007, 8:05 am

Omaha Shooter Robert Hawkins Had Been "Treated" For ADHD, Depression
Thursday, December 06, 2007 by: Mike Adams

(NewsTarget) America seems shocked that, yet again, a young male would pick up an assault rifle and murder his fellow citizens, then take his own life. This is what happened last night in Omaha, Nebraska, where the 19-year-old Hawkins killed himself and eight other people with an assault rifle. Those lacking keen observation skills are quick to blame guns for this tragedy, but others who are familiar with the history of such violent acts by young males instantly recognize a more sinister connection: A history of treatment with psychiatric drugs for depression and ADHD.

It all started in Columbine, Colorado, when Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold massacred their way into the history books on April 20, 1999 by killing 12 and wounding 23 people. The mainstream media virtually glorified the event, yet utterly failed to report the connection between violence in young men and treatment with psychiatric drugs. (Both Harris and Klebold were taking antidepressant drugs.)

It's a little known fact that antidepressant drugs have never been tested on children nor approved by the FDA for use on children. It is well established in the scientific literature, however, that such drugs cause young men to think violent thoughts and commit violent acts. This is precisely why the U.K. has outright banned the prescribing of such drugs to children. Yet here in the United States -- the capitol of gun violence by kids on depression drugs -- the FDA and drug companies pretend that mind-altering drugs have no link whatsoever to behavior.

Enormous evidence linking mind-altering drugs with violent acts
In 2005, I reported on this site that Eli Lilly had full knowledge of a 1200% increase in suicide risk for takers of their Prozac drug, a popular anti-depressant SSRI medication. (See http://www.newstarget.com/003086.html )

In 2006, we reported the results of a study published in the Archives of General Psychiatry showing that teens taking antidepressant drugs are more likely to commit suicide (and to be "successful" at completing the act). See http://www.newstarget.com/020643.html

On September 11, 2006, I reported on the link between antidepressant drugs and violent behavior yet again. (See http://www.newstarget.com/020394.html ) In that article, I explained, "If you're going to alter the brain chemistry of these children, you had better be prepared for the results. The result we're seeing now is mass killings. Elsewhere around the world, where children aren't doped up on all these drugs, we don't see this kind of behavior. This is what happens when you change children's brain chemistry; you get these results..."

The very next day, we published a report about the anti-depressant drug Paxil doubling the risk of violent behavior. (See http://www.newstarget.com/020406.html ) In that article, I stated, "This finding helps explain why school shootings are almost always conducted by children who are taking antidepressants. We also know that SSRIs cause children to disconnect from reality. When you combine that with a propensity for violence, you create a dangerous recipe for school shootings and other adolescent violence.

In April of this year, I also reported on the link between antidepressant drugs and the Virginia Tech shooting. See http://www.newstarget.com/021798.html

What I said in that article has urgent application right now, following the Omaha shooting:

A study published in the Public Library of Science Medicine (an open source medical journal) explored these same links in detail. (See Antidepressants and Violence: Problems at the Interface of Medicine and Law, by David Healy, Andrew Herxheimer, David B. Menkes)

The authors note that "Some regulators, such as the Canadian regulators, have also referred to risks of treatment-induced activation leading to both self-harm and harm to others" and the "United States labels for all antidepressants as of August 2004 note that 'anxiety, agitation, panic attacks, insomnia, irritability, hostility, aggressiveness, impulsivity, akathisia (psychomotor restlessness), hypomania, and mania have been reported in adult and pediatric patients being treated with antidepressants for major depressive disorder as well as for other indications, both psychiatric and nonpsychiatric'".

In other words, the link between antidepressants and violence has been known for years by the very people manufacturing, marketing or prescribing the drugs. As the author of the study mentioned above concluded, "The new issues highlighted by these cases need urgent examination jointly by jurists and psychiatrists in all countries where antidepressants are widely used."

That was last year, well before this latest shooting. The warning signs were there, and they've been visible for a long time. Medical authorities can hardly say they are "shocked" by this violent behavior. After all, the same pattern of violence among antidepressant takers has been observed, documented and published in numerous previous cases.

(Click the cartoon for the full-sized version.)

Not surprised at what happened in Omaha
The people of Omaha may be surprised at what happened there yesterday, but I'm not. Why? Because the shooter, Robert Hawkins, had a history of being "treated" for both depression and ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder). (Source: Associated Press)

And what is the standard American psychiatric "treatment" for these conditions? Mind-altering drugs, of course.

ADHD, for example, is treated with a drug that used to be an illegal street drug called "speed." It's an amphetamine, and recent research published in the August, 2007 issue of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry reveals that Ritalin and other ADHD drugs actually stunt the growth of children, causing their brains and bodies to be physically altered. (See http://www.newstarget.com/021944.html )

Depression, of course, is treated with SSRI drugs, none of which have ever been safety approved by the FDA for use on children or teens. In other words, the use of these drugs on teenagers is a grand, mind-altering medical experiment, and what we just witnessed in Omaha is one result of that experiment.

There will be more. I hate to be accurate about this grisly prediction, because I grieve for the families of those lost to pharmaceutically-induced violence, but the truth is that until we stop drugging our children with psychotropic drugs, the shootings are not going to stop.

Big Pharma is to blame for this one, not the manufacturer of the gun. That gun has a trigger, you see, and the trigger was pulled by a finger. The finger was connected via a series of nerves to a brain, and that brain was altered by psychotropic drugs. The brain wasn't functioning like a normal, healthy, well-nourished brain; it was functioning like a zoned out "zombie" brain permanently distorted by psychiatric drugs.

Sending a teenager out into the public doped up on mind-altering drugs that we KNOW are linked to violence -- and jacked up on junk foods (he worked at McDonald's) -- is a certain recipe for disaster. Big Pharma executives, drug reps and the irresponsible psychiatrists who dish these pills out to teenagers might as well have just walked right into the mall and set off a bomb themselves. These are the people ultimately responsible for the tragedy in Omaha. Hawkins may have pulled the trigger, but modern psychiatry drugged him with violence-inducing chemicals. The fact that such drugs promote violence isn't even disputed. It's printed right on the warning labels of those drugs!

And as sad as this tragedy is for all those affected by this medication-induced violence, the truly sad part is that America still hasn't learned this lesson. If you drug the children with chemicals that cause violence, you're going to see more shootings. It's as simple as that. And if you take away the guns, you'll see bombs, knives or machetes used in these attacks. When disturbed young boys are doped up on psychotropic drugs that promote violence -- and they're drugged by the hundreds of thousands -- it's like playing a national game of Russian roulette (with apologies to Russia). Sooner or later, another kid whose mind has been altered by Ritalin, Prozac or some other drug is going to walk into yet another school or mall and start killing people. This kind of behavior is a direct product of chemical-based psychiatric "treatment."

The criminals running modern psychiatry
In fact, I predict we'll see another such shooting in the next 30 days, if not sooner. And yet, even with the increasing frequency of these events, the unholy alliance between Big Pharma and the immensely evil psychiatric industry will continue. Yet more children will be put on mind-altering drugs that stunt their growth, alter their brain chemistry, and turn them into mind-numbed massacre drones who acquire dangerous weapons and open fire in public places.

The psychiatric industry, though, thinks that yet MORE children need "treatment" with drugs for ADHD and depression. In fact, an industry press release recently claimed that only one-third of those children "suffering" from ADHD are receiving appropriate "treatment" for the condition. Of course, those are just code words for "drugging the children with high-profit pharmaceuticals." When the psychiatric authorities say "treatment," what they mean is "more drugging."

Want to learn the horrifying, yet true, history of modern psychiatry? Check out www.CCHR.org - the Citizens' Commission on Human Rights. They have a documentary so downright shocking that I couldn't even finish watching the whole thing. It's called Psychiatry: An Industry of Death.

Also be sure to check out the shocking book by Kelly Patricia O'Meara called Psyched Out: How Psychiatry Sells Mental Illness and Pushes Pills That Kill. This book explains exactly why kids like Robert Hawkins who have been treated with psychiatric drugs end up shooting innocents.

What could have healed Robert Hawkins and saved lives
So what's the solution to all this? Robert Hawkins could have been healed with a radical change in diet that supports healthy brain chemistry. His parents or caretakers should have stopped the junk food, ended the medication and put him on raw, living foods and daily superfood smoothies, fresh vegetable juices, raw nuts and seeds and other wholesome, non-processed foods. Nutrition is the single most powerful factor determining healthy moods and behavior, and virtually all young men who commit violent acts (including the vast majority of those imprisoned in the U.S. today) suffer from wild nutritional deficiencies.

Robert Hawkins could have been a healthy, stable and normal kid with the help of some real food, real nutrition and real love from a supporting family. Instead, he lived on junk food, worked at McDonald's and took medication pills as directed by his psychiatric doctor. The results speak for themselves: This recipe of processed food and mind-altering drugs created a monster, and yesterday in Omaha, that monster exploded in a rage of violence.

If we don't learn from all this and stop drugging our nation's children, then those innocents in Omaha will have died in vain. And I ask the question: How many more innocent Americans must pay the price for medication-induced violence?

Ask yourself one question: Why does the FDA continue to allow these dangerous drugs to be prescribed to children and teens when 1) They have never been tested on children or teens, and 2) Other countries have already banned the prescribing of these drugs to children and teens?

Story Notes: The Associated Press originally reported Hawkins' age as 20 years old, but corrected it to 19 years old following a correction by local police. Hawkins was not reported to have been taking medications at the precise time of the shooting, but his caretaker, Debora Maruca-Kovac, said that "he had been treated in the past for depression and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder." We do not know exactly which drugs Hawkins had been treated with in the past, and we hope the names of those drugs will surface in future reports on this tragedy.

NewsTarget deeply regrets the loss of life witnessed in this event, and we commit to doing our part to end these medication-induced crimes that continue to be perpetrated by Big Pharma and modern psychiatry. You have permission to forward or reprint this article, with appropriate credit and a link back to this URL.

###

About the author: Mike Adams is a natural health author and technology pioneer with a passion for teaching people how to improve their health He has authored more than 1,500 articles and dozens of reports, guides and interviews on natural health topics, reaching millions of readers with information that is saving lives and improving personal health around the world. Adams is an honest, independent journalist and accepts no money or commissions on the third-party products he writes about or the companies he promotes. In 2007, Adams launched EcoLEDs, a maker of super bright LED light bulbs that are 1000% more energy efficient than incandescent lights. He also launched an online retailer of environmentally-friendly products (BetterLifeGoods.com) and uses a portion of its profits to help fund non-profit endeavors. He's also the founder of a well known HTML email software company whose 'Email Marketing Director' software currently runs the NewsTarget subscription database. Adams volunteers his time to serve as the executive director of the Consumer Wellness Center, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization, and practices nature photography, Capoeira, Pilates and organic gardening. He's also author of numerous health books published by Truth Publishing and is the creator of several consumer-oriented grassroots campaigns, including the Spam. Don't Buy It! campaign, and the free downloadable Honest Food Guide. He also created the free reference sites HerbReference.com and HealingFoodReference.com. Adams believes in free speech, free access to nutritional supplements and the ending of corporate control over medicines, genes and seeds. Known by his callsign, the 'Health Ranger,' Adams posts his missions statements, health statistics and health photos at www.HealthRanger.org

http://www.newstarget.com/022330.html


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richardbenson
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06 Dec 2007, 8:22 am

yah. i know, im shure anti depressants do some good for people but i defintly didnt feel like myself when i took them



girl7000
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06 Dec 2007, 9:27 am

'Lost puppy'

Hawkins is said to have suffered from depression in the past, and recently lost his job at McDonald's and broke up with his girlfriend.

He was living with a friend's family in Bellevue, an Omaha suburb.

His friend's mother, Debora Maruca Kovac, told the Associated Press news agency that when he first came to live with them, "he was introverted, a troubled young man who was like a lost pound puppy that nobody wanted".


Just read this on the BBC website.

Although I do certainly agree that care should be taken when prescribing anti-depressants or anti-psychotic medication, I do also resent the implication (as in the above article) in this and similar cases that depression or being 'introverted' are used to imply that it is only these types of people that commit these types of crime.

I know plently of people who are introverted and plenty who have clinical depression who would never in a million years do anything like this.

This boy obviously had a lot more wrong with him than just depression.

I am really fed up of the demonising of mental illness that goes on. The percentage of crimes committed by people with a mental health problem is actually very low!

But, sadly, the way in which stories like this are reported simply fuels and exacerbates the already strong prejudice that exists towards those with mental health problems.



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06 Dec 2007, 10:38 am

bet he'd been drinking that dihydrogen monoxide stuff too :evil:



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06 Dec 2007, 10:57 am

Where are the articles about how SSRIs actually help people? Or does that simply not get enough press?


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06 Dec 2007, 10:59 am

The guy who wrote that article is probably a gun nut. And taking drugs do involve risks. Just like driving a car to work, taking an airplane, etc.

How many people die in car accidents each year? How many from drug-induced suicides? If I am not mistaken, more people die from car accidents than from suicide or homicide (most probably not antidepressant induced) each year. Yet the idea of banning cars would be considered (and is) ludicrous.


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06 Dec 2007, 12:24 pm

jjstar wrote:
... Those lacking keen observation skills are quick to blame guns for this tragedy, but others ... ...instantly recognize a more sinister connection: A history of treatment with psychiatric drugs for depression and ADHD... ...Enormous evidence linking mind-altering drugs with violent acts...

All that I have to say is: BINGO!

Hah! I have more to say, and it is a personal opinion...

Revealing article, depicting an increasing problem around here, and I learned something new too; that our neighbors across the Atlantic in the UK have banned such drugs for children -- I think that is what I read.

For me, what I've learned about Depression / ADHD / 'it'. That it is simply a natural response to external stress, and a way of dealing with an unknown internal denial of sorts. My brain is simply forcing a change, or saying: take a rest, slow-down, change course, and find a better 'groove'.

Many of my depressive episodes were a much-needed 'reflective rest', not the image from an observer’s point of view though.... "Why can't you get out of bed!" , "Lazy ass", someone said to me... (If I could get up I would)...

So, pressured by those around me to do something, off to the doc I go with a desire to feel better... Pills? Tried them... made things worse mostly, and fortunately, I was aware enough to know when they weren’t helping…making things worse, even got spooky a couple of times. It still left me depressed, and took quite some time to rise out of it. Found a new groove…. I'm leaving the pills on the shelf....


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06 Dec 2007, 12:36 pm

The article is misleading. It takes its editorial opinion and applies it to a newstory with incomplete data. Calling it a medication-induced crime is premature and thus, dishonest. There are tons of assertions and no correlating information that Hawkins was taking or had taken any medications for depression or ADHD. There is also an indictment on Hawkins' parents concerning his nutritional status, though he wasn't living with his parents and was an adult at the time of this incident.
The article takes an authoritative tone, yet has no supporting evidence for its position, this is propaganda.



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06 Dec 2007, 2:15 pm

DivaD wrote:
bet he'd been drinking that dihydrogen monoxide stuff too :evil:


I've heard that monosodium chloride can cause problems, too. :lol:

BTW, this is the second news story I've seen that got Columbine, CO mixed up with Columbine High in Littleton, CO. There's a 190-200 mile difference. Just me nit-picking again.


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Last edited by MysteryFan3 on 06 Dec 2007, 2:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Beammeup
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06 Dec 2007, 2:24 pm

KimJ wrote:
... Calling it a medication-induced crime is premature and thus, dishonest.


I can agree with this.... Can it be that it takes two? The person, and the med? I don't like the way this article ties meds to violent behavior. I suspect the individual was pre-disposed to be such... I have had a direct experience with meds that relate very well to the idea of correcting depression (troubled youth) with meds may not be the right solution for some. And I know how meds can alter my thinking very negatively.

I'm not violent, and when I tried anti-depressants. I was not myself, and I was lucky enough to notice it and say: Whoa... that was spooky... seriously scary, I was frightened, really. So no thanks, I will deal with my own mind, thank you. I'd prefer to stay depressed.

I know folks that need assistance with such meds. I also know that it took careful observation and a concerted effort of varying the dose, and choosing the right type of med, for each of them. Nothing to take lightly, prescribe carelessly, without out a thorough DX.

It is an individual thing for me.


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psychedelic
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06 Dec 2007, 2:49 pm

That dihydrogen monoxide is some serious stuff. I heard that it kills a countless number of people every year at almost every part of the globe.

Yet it is still perfectly legal and, in some places at least, you can buy and sell it with impunity.


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KimJ
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06 Dec 2007, 3:02 pm

I'm not saying that meds aren't dangerous, I'm saying that there is no evidence to support that this crime was induced by psychiatric medications or poor nutrition. It doesn't stop this so-called "reporter" from asserting those as factual reasons, all the while not including the documented facts that this young man had been smoking pot, drinking alcohol and had several possible life-altering events happen to him (losing his girlfriend, his job, his family at various times in his life and dropping out of school).



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06 Dec 2007, 6:31 pm

psychedelic wrote:
That dihydrogen monoxide is some serious stuff. I heard that it kills a countless number of people every year at almost every part of the globe.

Yet it is still perfectly legal and, in some places at least, you can buy and sell it with impunity.


You're quite correct and everyone should be aware of just how lethal dihydrogen monoxide is. It has been implicated in every single school shooting and apparently school staff admit they have no idea how much of this stuff is ingested by pupils on a daily basis.

Fortunately there is a growing movement to get dihydrogen monoxide banned, or at the very least highly regulated and prescribed. Find out more here.



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06 Dec 2007, 7:36 pm

Macallan wrote:
psychedelic wrote:
That dihydrogen monoxide is some serious stuff. I heard that it kills a countless number of people every year at almost every part of the globe.

Ahhh... I'm a gullable guy... can some please explain this Wiki entry to me? Thanks...

Dihydrogen monoxide hoax

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Water is made from 2 hydrogen and one oxygen atom, giving the name dihydrogen monoxide.Dihydrogen monoxide (shortened to DHMO) is a scientific name for water that is relatively unknown, used in hoaxes that illustrate how the lack of scientific knowledge and an exaggerated analysis can lead to misplaced fears. "Di" meaning two, and "Mono" meaning single, describes how water is made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom (H2O).

The hoax involves listing strictly negative effects of water, such as erosion or drowning, attributing them to "dihydrogen monoxide", and then asking individuals to help control the seemingly dangerous substance.

It was apparently created by Eric Lechner, Lars Norpchen and Matthew Kaufman, housemates while attending UC Santa Cruz in 1989, revised by Craig Jackson in 1994, and brought to widespread public attention in 1997 when Nathan Zohner, a 14-year-old student, gathered petitions to ban "DHMO" as the basis of his science project, titled "How Gullible Are We?"[1]


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07 Dec 2007, 1:11 am

Mike Adams also doesn't believe that AIDS is a virus and that it can be cured by water. Just another anti-psych/scientologist blowhard. Worse, he tries to sell product in his "news" article. Can we at least attempt to get some unbiased source material for posts or must we appeal to the lowest common denominator? :roll:


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07 Dec 2007, 7:09 am

I found an article related to ADHD at google news. Its below in this message.

The way that people live their lives in our competitive busy modern world looks like one of the main factors in contribution to mental disorders. Medications are just there to mask the symptoms. A more holistic approach which may even be open to temporary medication is towards a better ideal. Brain chemistry is not corrected with medicine. The medicine actually causes an imbalance: there are no physical tests for mental disorders and the only ones that are accurate are the ones that are actual neurological exams but these have to do with organic disease - not mental disorders. But people can easily beleive that medications makes them better so that contributes to the miracle cure of our phamaceutical mind-altering medications that we have in society: we rarely prescribed this kind of stuff decades ago. But culture has changed.

The brain is vulnerable to mental impairment when drugs are administered - Depending on the drugs effect on ones particular brain chemistry. At that, other drugs are given to mask the untoward effects of the other medicine.

Stimulant/amphetamine drugs may be combined with anti-depressants or anti-psychotics. But this may give unpredictable results. Many people may stop there medications because of the untoward side-effects of medications. Being over-medicated can obviously also cause problems. This is the thing that is abusive about it at the least.

This article should illuminate the truth in this: http://www.breggin.com/spellbinding_psy ... tract.html

The author of the article below gives us an idea of the kinds of cultural influences are out there:

:arrow: http://www.thestranger.com/seattle/Content?oid=453073