“Better to write for
yourself and have no public, than to write for the public and have no self.”- Cyril Connolly (1903 - 1974)
Big
Pharma Funds ISIS
Opinion Editorialist for
Posted October 20, 2017
Thanks for listening my friend. Now go do the right thing, pray and fight for truth and freedom.
Big
Pharma Funds ISIS
‘THE
BOTTOM LINE’
Posted October 20, 2017
Notice in the picture, the ISIS 'War Manual' sticking out of the ISIS soldier's front pocket. Its a Quran...
The disease of
greed has overwhelmed corporate patriotism.
The desire for corporate expansion takes precedence over God and
Country. I have been warning for years
about the infiltration of Islam into the fabric of America but this my friend
is a new twist on treason. Corporate
Greed is aiding and abetting those that have vowed to bury America.
And corrupt U.S. officials knew all about it and did
nothing
The ISIS Mahdi
Army was euphemistically called the “pill army” by
U.S. officials in reference to the fact that al-Sadr was known to pay his
fighters with drugs from U.S. drug companies that they could resell for their
wages.
A
group of U.S. military veterans and relatives of soldiers killed or wounded in
Iraq filed suit against five pharmaceutical and medical
equipment giants, accusing them of funding the Islamist terrorist militia
responsible for the deaths of hundreds of American soldiers in Iraq. This is a
civil suit but what about the criminal aspect of treason against the United
States of America in time of war?
As reported by FOX
NEWS, the lawsuit names the parent companies and subsidiaries
of AstraZeneca, General Electric, Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer and Roche
Holding.
These
companies stand accused of paying bribes to the Iraqi Ministry of Health to win contracts. The
ministry was known to be controlled by the ISIS Mahdi Army,
an extremely anti-American, Shiite terrorist militia backed Hezbollah, the
Iranian-funded Lebanese terrorist organization.
The suit charges that money from these bribes was used
to fund the ISIS militia – allowing them to buy weapons, train fighters and
conduct logistic support.
The “Defendants’ corrupt transactions aided and abetted Jaysh al-Mahdi’s
terrorist operations against Americans in Iraq,” the lawsuit
states.
The U.S. military suffered tremendous losses between
2005 and 2009 at the hands of the Mahdi Army. The lawsuit includes a 27-page
itemized list of U.S. soldiers killed or injured at the hands of the terrorist
militia, including claims of suffering by relatives.
The lawsuit documents the extent to which the U.S.
knew the Mahdi Army controlled the ministry. Inside the Iraqi Health Ministry
hung pictures of the Mahdi Army’s leader Muqtada al-Sadr. Banners reading
“Death to America” were hung in the ministry and AK-47 assault rifles could
readily be found in the Health minister’s office.
By the end of 2004, the office had become too
dangerous for Americans to even be inside the building. As the lawsuit claims,
the ministry “functioned more as a terrorist apparatus than a health organization.”
The suit claims the drug and medical equipment
companies were required by the Mahdi Army to pay a bribe of 20 percent of each
sale to the Health Ministry to obtain ministry contracts. The companies
acquiesced by providing “free goods” with every sale, which amounted to
millions of dollars in bribes per year.
The Mahdi Army was euphemistically called the “pill
army” by U.S. officials in reference to the fact that al-Sadr was known to pay
his fighters with drugs that they could resell for their wages.
In addition, the suit says the companies gave the
ministry money for after-sales support, effectively a “slush fund” that went to
pay off ministry officials – the same officials that supported the militia.
The companies are further charged with using the U.S.
banking system to channel these payments to Iraq to pay the bribes.
“Most of the defendants have a documented history of paying
bribes that supported terrorism as far back as Saddam Husain,” said Ryan
Sparacino, one of the plaintiffs’ attorneys.
For example:
In 2011, Johnson and Johnson was
accused of paying kickbacks to win contracts in Iraq as well as other
countries. They settled a lawsuit against them for $70 million.
In 2010, General Electric was
accused by the Securities and Exchange Commission of paying kickbacks to the
Iraqi health ministry for contracts under the oil-for-food program. GE paid
more than $23 million to settle that lawsuit.
Then it continued and was just swept under the carpet…
THE
BOTTOM LINE: So how deep into the corrupt Deep State does this
anti-American infiltration go? Under the Obama Regime my friend, it went all
the way to Whitehouse, the top of the greedy food chain. All this corruption is left over from the
Grand Muslim Mufti himself, Barrack Husseini Obammah. Even if Trump can have an influence on Draining
the Swamp of corruption that exists in the Federal Government, the effects of
this Shadow Government and its infiltration, is so far reaching that it will
take decades, if ever, to clean out the pollution and “Make America Great Again.” Thanks for listening my friend. Now go do the right thing, pray and fight for truth and freedom.
-
de Andréa
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