July 19, 2025

Pope Leo XIII’s Secret? Cocaine Wine Fueled the Vatican?
In a sobering revelation that shatters the sanitized mythology of power, a new book exposes the rampant drug use among some of history’s most revered icons—painting a troubling portrait of fallen greatness. At the heart of the scandal looms President John F. Kennedy, lionized as a youthful Catholic hope, yet shown here as a man virtually sustained by a toxic cocktail of opioids, amphetamines, antipsychotics, and even injected methamphetamine. Author Sam Kelly’s “Human History on Drugs” lifts the veil on how world leaders—from addicted Founding Fathers to intoxicated popes—led, ruled, and sometimes unraveled under the influence of narcotics. From Hitler’s meth-fueled delusions to Nixon’s drunken threats of nuclear annihilation, and from Pope Leo XIII’s cocaine-laced wine to Steve Jobs' acid-fueled spiritual awakenings, the book chronicles a civilization not guided by prudence, but often spiraling under the weight of its own chemically altered ambitions. For Catholic conservatives seeking moral clarity in leadership, this exposé offers both a warning and a wake-up call: without virtue, brilliance and power quickly become dangerous illusions.

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