Page 28 - The Dark Clan
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                                          The Dark Clan




                 invited onto talk shows and projected as rather quaint or in-
                 teresting rather than being subjected to any form of serious
                 critical scrutiny. All these serve the same purpose.
                      Prostitutes, thieves and drug users are the most valuable
                 "assets" of this propaganda machine and are therefore res-
                 olutely shielded and watched over. People thought to have
                 gone too far are subjected to mock criticism, but the signal
                 this transmits to the sub-consciousness of society is to the

                 contrary. These people are used by the clan to entice new
                 "sources of profit" and in return they can continue to be out-
                 rageously decadent in the belief that the clan will take care of
                 them under all circumstances, and that no harm will come
                 their way provided they abide by the clan's rules.
                      The negative effect of this alliance across the world be-
                 comes apparent when statistics are studied. The illegal drugs

                 trade, one of the main money-spinners for the dark clan, is
                 the cause for the daily increasing numbers of people falling
                 into the trap of addiction. Research reveals that the use, espe-
                 cially among youth, of illegal substances has been increasing
                 steadily over the past ten years and that the starting age has
                 dropped to secondary school levels. An inquiry into drug
                 abuse conducted in 1992 revealed that in England 50% of
                 youth were using drugs of which 30 % were addicts. Today,
                 these numbers are significantly higher.

                      Americans spent 57.3 billion dollars on drugs
                 between 1988 and 1995. UN research in the late
                 nineties set the number of drug users, aged 15 or
                 more, at 200 million, suggesting that 5% of the
                 world's population consumes drugs. The
                 same research suggested that in the
                 nineties 134 countries were faced by
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