JFK- FINALLY, THE TRUTH PART 5: How JFK's Meth Addiction Brought Us To The Brink Of War
Ever watch the show BREAKING BAD? Then you know the disastrous effect crystal meth causes. A drug JFK was addicted to.
The Secret Service agents could not believe what they were seeing. They were on detail at The Carlyle Hotel in NYC when the President emerged from his suite completely naked. They were faced with a dilemma. How do you restrain a President of the United States who is having a psychotic break? They ushered him back into his room before anyone could see him and called for a psychiatrist to come immediately. The psychiatrist arrived to find a naked President babbling incoherently and realized he was having a drug induced psychotic break. He administered an anti-psychotic drug and the President responded immediately. His doctor, known as Doctor Feelgood, had administered an overdose of a strange drug concoction containing crystal methedrine, amphetamines mixed with goat’s and sheep’s blood.
Dr. Feelgood was Dr. Max Jacobson, a German Jewish doctor whom Hitler allowed to leave Germany with his wealth and possessions after he promoted the use of crystal methedrine for German soldiers. He had also made Hitler and Eva Braun addicts of the concoction and shown Hitler’s doctors how to make it. He was not the only Jew allowed to leave Germany with his wealth- the doctor who had attended Hitler’s mother was also allowed to leave. All other Jews, had to turn over everything to leave.
Photo: The drug given to German soldiers and pilots during World War 2. Crystal methedrine causes euphoria and stops sleep, but the crash often causes depression.
Dr. Feelgood had many clients including Marilyn Monroe, Truman Capote, Cecil B. DeMille, Yul Brenner and Peter Lawford among them, but it was Mark Shaw a photographer with LIFE magazine who first told him about the Doctor. JFK was getting cocaine from Peter Lawford but before his debate with Richard Nixon, Lawford was unable to supply him and sent him to Jacobson. At this point Eddie Fisher and Liz Taylor were also seeing the doctor, in fact, Eddie even wrote about the President being drugged by the doctor in his book!
Before the debate, JFK was injected with the concoction, and he just seemed more alert and youthful than Nixon. This debate is often credited with having JFK win the election.
Jacobson told his favorite patients about his trip to Vienna with JFK. One of those patients was Eddie Fisher, the ’50s pop singer now best remembered for his tempestuous tabloid marriage to Elizabeth Taylor. “Looking back,” Fisher wrote in a memoir, “it’s amazing how we all just accepted the fact that the President was taking Dr. Feelgood with him to a meeting that would affect the entire world.” Liz and his other patients didn’t know what was in the drug, so her marriages with Fisher and later Richard Burton would go from the highest of highs to the lowest of lows and repeat a pattern of bliss to arguments and misery. Until the next shot.
In May of 1961 Max was summoned to see Jackie Kennedy after she gave birth to John, Jr. and was suffering from post partem depression. The first shot chased her blues away and he would accompany her on her frequent shopping trips to Europe. He would leave doses of the drug at The White House to be administered to JFK.
Khrushchev wanted a meeting with JFK in Vienna- he knew the president was inexperienced and wanted to strike while the iron was hot. Khrushchev had insulted Ike Eisenhower to his face and hammered his shoe on a table at the UN which was ridiculed in the U.S. press but praised in the world press. JFK had Max travel with him and inject him right before the meeting.
This meeting has long been covered up by historians and the media who promote fantasies about the Cuban Missile Crisis instead. Until now.
This meeting was after the fiasco of the Bay Of Pigs “invasion” and here is what Presidential historian Michael Beschloss wrote in his book:
“Even in small doses, amphetamines cause side effects such as nervousness, garrulousness, impaired judgment, overconfidence, and, when the drug wears off, depression. What if Kennedy should display those qualities in Vienna, when Khrushchev would be scrutinizing every aspect of his behavior, assessing his capacity, mettle and judgment?”
High as a kite, JFK was easily baited by Nikita into a rambling hours long conversation about communism versus capitalism. JFK was often incoherent and talks which were supposed to be about peace degenerated into threats of war.
Now you know why the media hides this to this day.
JFK returned the next day high again as Nikita Khrushchev saw him as weak and in way over his head. He informed the President that by the end of the year, he would close off East Germany from West Germany. JFK threatened him. The threats however, were meaningless.
Dejected, Kennedy plopped down on a sofa next to New York Times columnist James Reston, and sighed loudly.
“Pretty rough?” Reston asked.
“Roughest thing in my life,” Kennedy replied. “He just beat the hell out of me.”
Back in Moscow, Khrushchev told his cronies that Kennedy was “weak.” “His low estimate of Kennedy’s leadership abilities,” wrote Beschloss, “had more than a little to do with his decision in 1962 to slip nuclear missiles into Cuba.
NEXT: THE FINAL CHAPTER ON JFK: How the CIA has been wrongly accused of his assassination and how that nonsense began, plus the Soviet created assassination industry that has undermined America’s image for decades and is completely false. There is no Soviet Union anymore, but its propaganda lives on. There is a lot more coming so be sure to subscribe. Be seeing you.