NEW TRANSGENERATIONAL EPIGENETICS EVIDENCE SHOWS THAT:
CIA CRACK MAY HAVE CONTAINED A MORE DANGEROUS CHEMICAL
Which can alter genes leaving chemical scars that skip generations and resurface as tragedy and death across multiple generations.
The Lasting Impact of Crack: Will Your Grandchild Have SIDS?
What if crack was more than what it seemed?
What if its damage didn’t stop with the user—or even their child? What if the real cost was paid by a grandchild, born decades later, Gasping For Breath In A Crib?
In the late 1980s, Philadelphia’s hospitals were flooded with infants labeled “crack babies.” The media painted them as doomed—destined for cognitive delays, behavioral issues, and early death. But long-term studies revealed a more complex narrative: poverty and environmental stress may have just been the cover-up narrative.
The question that still lingers— Did crack leave behind a deeper, invisible legacy?
SIDS
SUDDEN INFANT DEATH SYNDRONE
THE
BLACK “BABY- BOY” KILLER
Today, Black Male Infants are disproportionately affected by Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).
In 2022, Black infants died from SIDS at over three times the rate of white infants. Medical Experts claimed the cause was: limited prenatal care, unsafe sleep conditions, and stress... but could deeper biological roots be part of the story?
Transgenerational Epigenetics explores how environmental exposures like BPA, DDT, or Vinclozolin can alter gene expression across generations without changing DNA. These effects, passed through methylation, have caused reproductive disorders in lab animals even four or five generations later.
SO, DID THE CIA PUT “DDT” IN THE CRACK?
The legacy of crack may not be just addiction or incarceration. It may be epigenetic fingerprints—chemical scars that skip generations and resurface as tragedy
Historical Context: Crack Babies in Philadelphia
During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Philadelphia was at the epicenter of the crack epidemic. One in six babies born in city hospitals tested positive for cocaine exposure. The term “crack baby” became widely used, often with sensationalized and stigmatizing predictions about developmental outcomes.
However, long-term studies, like the one led by Dr. Hallam Hurt at Albert Einstein Medical Center and later at CHOP, found no significant cognitive differences between cocaine-exposed children and their peers. Instead, poverty and environmental stressors were far more influential on developmental outcomes.
And this lie became the National Narrative:
“CRACK HAD NO IMPACT ON CRACK BABIES!”
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) and Black Male Infants
SIDS is the sudden, unexplained death of an infant under 1 year old, often during sleep. It disproportionately affects Black infants, especially males.
In 2022, Black infants were 3.2 times more likely to die from SIDS than white infants.
The SUID (Sudden Unexpected Infant Death) rate for Black infants rose sharply during the COVID-19 pandemic, reaching 244 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2022.
Medical Experts listed these factors as contributing to this disparity:
• Limited access to prenatal care
• Unsafe sleep environment
• Exposure to secondhand smoke
• Socioeconomic stressors, including housing instability and lack of maternal support.
In 2022, 244 Black infants died from SIDS - Most Of Them Boys - and the official explanation was... COVID 19. But in 2022 Infants were declared BY THE U.S. HEALTH DEPARTMENT to be immune to COVID 19!
YET, THE NEW National Narrative Became: “CRACK HAS NO CONNECTION TO SIDS BABIES!”
THE LASTING IMPACT OF CRACK!
Petition: Seeking Justice and Reparations for the Harm Inflicted on African American Communities by the Introduction of Crack Cocaine
To: The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Relevant Government Bodies
We, the undersigned, stand united in seeking justice for the devastating harm inflicted upon African American communities through the introduction and proliferation of crack cocaine in the 1980s—a deliberate act that mirrors the catastrophic impact of the opium epidemic in China but with even more dire, lasting consequences. The introduction of crack cocaine into Black communities led to:
The Birth of “Crack Babies”:
Generations of children born with physical, emotional, and cognitive challenges due to prenatal exposure to this dangerous drug. AND NOW THERE MAY BE SOMETHING MORE.
CRACK: A LASTING LEGACY
Today, Black male infants are disproportionately affected by Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). In 2022, Black babies were over three times more likely to die from SIDS than white infants. The reasons are layered: unequal access to prenatal care, unsafe sleep environments, and systemic stress.
But could there be another factor, one buried in the biology of generations past?
Enter the Science of Transgenerational Epigenetics—the study of how environmental exposures can alter gene expression across multiple generations without changing DNA itself. Chemicals like Vinclozolin, BPA, and DDT have been shown to cause reproductive and developmental disorders in lab animals four or five generations after exposure.
These effects are passed down through methylation, a process where molecules latch onto DNA and silence or activate genes in ways that persist across time.
CRACK: A LASTING LEGACY
DID THE CIA PUT “DDT” IN THE CRACK IN 1980?
This isn’t science fiction. It’s a warning. If your grandmother was exposed to endocrine disruptors, if your mother lived through the crack epidemic, Your grandchild may carry the burden, in their lungs, their brain, their crib.
Humanizlng the Crack Era Beyond Stereotypes
They weren’t just “users”—they were young, vibrant, celebrating fashion, music, and Black pride.Their story includes joy, pain, hustle, and family— not just addiction or criminality.
Connecting
Generational Trauma to Modern Impact
EXHIBIT A: THE GREAT-GRANDMOTHER’S TESTIMONY
The great-grandmother’s hospitalization during pregnancy creates a direct line to potential epigenetic consequences. Her reflection on her choices and the haunting possibility that her great grandson’s SIDS’ diagnosis is tied to her past, is emotionally profound and socially urgent.
WHO’S TO BLAME?
WE BOTH SMOKED CRACK IN THE 1980’s
Now, we sit in an emergency room—watching a machine breathe for our great-grandson. And we whisper: “Was it us? Did crack leave something inside him… not visible, but permanent?”
1980!
“We Were Young, Black, and Free: Immersed in a collage of vibrant 1980s Black American culture: silk shirts, gold chains, boomboxes, basement parties, Black Love.
We were at the center of the Philadelphia Party Scene: a couple—young and stylish— laughing, in matching leather jackets, framed by neon lights and swirling music notes.
Our future: a courtroom for a drug bust and... a hospital bed.”
We were born in the ‘60s and Baptized in the Fire of Philly Soul and Civil Rights. By the ‘80s, we were grown—living, loving, laughing harder than our parents dreamed possible. We danced through basements and block parties, riding highs on new style music: Hip Hop Beats and Black DJ’s. “Prince played in our veins. Chaka moved our hips.
CRACK Was Our Currency And Communion.”
He hustled. I inhaled, too much, too deep, while carrying our second son. He got busted. I got hospitalized. Yet, somehow, we stayed together.
We built a home. Raised four babies into brilliant adults. We beat the odds. Or so we thought…
Now, we sit beside a crib in an emergency room—watching a machine breathe for our great-grandbaby.
And we whisper: Was it us? Did crack leave something inside him… not visible, but permanent?
By supporting the UNI PETITION, We aren’t seeking pity. We’re claiming truth.
We partied like royalty. But no one told us that we might be crowning a future full of grief. “DAMN THAT CRACK!”
“We wore leather pants and rayon shirts. We danced to Chaka, Prince, Run-DMC... Love felt limitless and... So did the lines we crossed.”
He sold dope. I took a hit too deep while carrying our second child.
Thirty years later, we hold a baby who may never wake up from his nap.
We ask ourselves “Did the CRACK Party ever stop?
Or did it just end up in my great-grandson’s lungs?”
SIDS
MY POOR GREAT-GRAND BABY!
FIGHT
THE CIA SAVE THE LIVES OF BABY BLACK BOYS JOIN US!
UNI Petition Outreach
Envisioned below:
Protesters outside CHOP holding signs: Protect Our Sons. Join the Movement. Demand Accountability. Support the UNI Petition.
Call to Action: Sign. Share. Break the Silence.
Legacy & Redemption
Healing means honoring the truth Past, Present, and Future.
“If crack was more than what it seemed… then our silence is more dangerous than the drug.”