JuliansRum Profile picture
Don’t put me down. Ever.
Jun 29, 2024 6 tweets 2 min read
1. Michelle Obama may be a red herring. Remember this article from 2020?

“Obama could move into the vice presidential residence at the Naval Observatory—His only real task would be during the campaign, to push Hillary Clinton over the victory line.”
thehill.com/opinion/white-…
Image 2. “If Biden quits the race right before the convention, delegates would select a new nominee. If he drops out right after the convention, members of the Democratic National Committee would pick their replacement candidate.”
Feb 23, 2024 5 tweets 10 min read
The thread below is pulled from my most recent Substack article:

“Is Adrenochrome a Drug? Yup. Scientists Already Proved It (And Used It)”

For years, adrenochrome was one subject I was reluctant to take a public position on. Not because I thought it was fake. Adrenochrome as a compound is 100% real. I just wasn’t convinced it was really used as a drug by the global elite farmed from tortured children.

I knew they tortured children, but I wasn’t sure adrenochrome was one of their motivations for doing it. For whatever reason, it was much easier to accept that they did such abominable things simply for the purposes of sadistic enjoyment and blackmail.

But I began to realize my skepticism of adrenochrome as a drug wasn’t nearly as justified as I thought.

I started taking the subject more seriously in 2021 when Jim Caviezel mentioned the “adrenochroming of children” while he was promoting his film “Sound of Freedom.” He later elaborated on it in an interview with Steve Bannon, where he described adrenochrome as “an elite drug that they’ve used for many years. It’s ten times more potent than heroin. And it has some mystical qualities as far as making you look younger. ‘Ambrosia’ is the street term - well, the elite term.”

Then Tim Ballard, the former Homeland Security agent on which “Sound of Freedom” is based, touched on the underground adrenochrome industry in an interview with Jordan Peterson: “They’re taking children’s blood and devouring it. It’s very real, this witchdoctory. They take these children, they take their organs, they take their blood, they drink it.”
Whew. These were bold statements I couldn’t ignore.

So I started digging and eventually found what I was looking for: verified scientific research which documents experiments with adrenochrome as a hallucinogenic drug.

Before we dive into that eye-opening research, let’s establish what adrenochrome is and a brief rundown of its history.

-What is Adrenochrome?-

Adrenochrome is a derivative of the fight-or-flight hormone adrenaline which is produced in the adrenal glands above the kidneys as a response to perceived danger/trauma.

When the body is subjected to extreme stress, it releases adrenaline into the bloodstream. This rapidly increases the heart and respiratory rate, providing muscles with enough energy to quickly and powerfully contract.

When subjected to extreme trauma, the body suffers what’s called oxidative stress and produces negatively charged oxidants such as superoxide. During prolonged physical torture, the body produces an excess of both adrenaline and oxidants which interact to form the chemical compound of adrenochrome.

-A Brief History of Adrenochrome-

Since at least 1856, scientists have observed that fluids extracted from the adrenal medulla – the section of the adrenal gland which produces adrenaline – turn pink with prolonged exposure to oxygen.

In 1935, scientists crystalized this substance and dubbed it ‘adrenochrome’ – which means “colored adrenaline.” In 1942, adrenochrome was considered a potential remedy for high blood pressure.

During World War 2, Canadian field medics who were short on morphine would sometimes extract adrenaline from the adrenal glands of deceased soldiers, allowing it to degrade in the air before injecting its pink derivative into wounded soldiers. In addition to producing an anesthetic effect, the injection allegedly gave the wounded soldiers vivid hallucinations. In 1952, three Canadian scientists based in Saskatchewan proposed a biochemical cause for schizophrenia and a potential treatment, which came to revolve around adrenochrome.

These scientists were Dr. Abram Hoffer, a Saskatchewan-born biochemist; Humphry Fortescue Osmond, an English-born psychiatrist; and John Raymond Smythies, an Indian-born neuroscientist.

In 1952, Smythies and Osmond worked at the Weyburn Mental Hospital in Saskatchewan where they experimented on mental patients by administering high doses of psychedelic drugs such as mescaline and LSD (It’s worth noting that this facility had links to CIA-funded projects).

In their paper “Schizophrenia: A New Approach,” Hoffer, Osmond, and Smythies noted the similarity between adrenaline and mescaline. From their previous human experimentation and experience, they observed that the consumption of mescaline produced a change in perception similar to that of schizophrenia.

They proposed that schizophrenia was caused by the body’s inability to metabolize a substance which the body naturally produces. They later identified this substance as adrenochrome.

During the 1950s, Osmond, Hoffer, and Smythies conducted research into adrenochrome, with an emphasis on how it affects human behavior. They were able to manufacture adrenochrome themselves, describing it as “beautiful crystals which were purplish red and formed a bright red solution which turned yellow when oxidized by the oxygen in the air.”

They also experimented on themselves and their wives by injecting adrenochrome into their veins. They published their experiences in a research paper where they described adrenochrome as a “more insidious and longer-lasting drug than both mescaline and LSD.”

This is the research I stumbled upon.

In “Some Psychological Effects of Adrenochrome: Hoffer, Osmond and Smythies” Osmond documents his personal experiences tripping on adrenochrome as well as the experiences of other volunteers.

What follows are what I deemed to be the most notable excerpts pulled from the research paper where Osmond recounts his experience tripping on adrenochrome. The research paper can be read in full here (pg 37-42).

-Osmond’s Experience after Being Injected with Adrenochrome-

The fact that my blood pressure did not rise suggests that I was not unduly tense. After about 10 minutes, while I was lying on a couch looking up at the ceiling, I found that it had changed color. It seemed that the lighting had become brighter. I asked Abe and Neil if they had noticed anything, but they had not. I looked across the room and it seemed to have changed in some not easily definable way. I wondered if I could have suggested these things to myself.

I closed my eyes and a brightly colored pattern of dots appeared. The colors were not as brilliant as those which I have seen under mescaline but were of the same type. The patterns of dots gradually resolved themselves into fish-like shapes. I felt that I was at the bottom of the sea or in an aquarium among a shoal of brilliant fishes. At one moment I concluded that I was a sea anemone in this pool.

Abe and Neil kept pestering me to tell them what was happening, which annoyed me. They brought me a Van Gogh self-portrait to look at. I have never seen a picture so plastic and alive. Van Gogh gazed at me from the paper, crop-headed, with hurt, mad eyes and seemed to be three dimensional. I felt that I could stroke the cloth of his coat and that he might turn around in his frame. Neil showed me the Rorschach cards. Their texture, their bas relief appearance, and the strange and amusing shapes which I had never seen in the cards were extraordinary.