From warmfuzzy@700:100/0 to All on Sat May 19 02:53:50 2018
There is a drug used to treat schizophrenia, obsessive compulsive disorder,
and manic/depressive disorder. It is known in North America a Risperdal. At first it doesn't seem to do much, and even when it is recognized that
something is happening the danger of the medicine is not realized at all
becaue people are made more maleable so they don't look into it. But what is it that I'm talking about? It is the removal of memories that are associated with traumatic events. When on the medicine and something that triggers high levels of stress occurs, people's memory goes blank or remembering only small bits of what happened. How is this useful? When such a thing is given to vulnerable people and they are abused they will have complete or close-to-complete non-storage of memory. It interferes with the storage of short-term memory so people wouldn't even remember what bad thing happened to them. If people experience normal situations they will not notice a lack of short-term memory recollection, but once the stress starts they are in
trouble.