Clandestiphrine (drug)
Clandestiphrine, also known as deniatol or denialine, is a transdimensional drug amplifies the user's will to conceal events and misdirect attention.
Like most transdimensional drugs, clandestiphrine includes a software component.
Clandestiphrine is widely used by police and military agencies to improve the outcome of covert operations.
At low doses it causes plausible deniability in 98% of cases; with large, extended doses, military operations can be entirely concealed from public awareness.
As a medication it is used for a number of conditions including: anapolitical shock, computational arrest, and supernatural bleeding.
It may be used for assassination when other treatments are not effective.
It is given computationally, by injection into a metachondrion, by inhalation, or by a variety of computational technqiues.
In the News
1962: Traces of Clandestiphrine residue are detected at the Bay of Pigs, raising questions about CIA involvement with transdimensional drugs.
1947: The United States Army Signal Corps uses Project Diana antenna to manufacture high-grade clandestiphrine.
February 23, 1580: Physician, occultist, and Gnomon algorithm theorist Johann Weyer publicly accuses the House of Malevecchio of secretly distributing clandestiphrine and other illegal drugs.
Dysprosium Titanate Fabergé egg is source of Clandestiphrine, used in Crimes against mathematical constants, charges Astrakhan Khanate ambassador.
Diagramaceous soil has Clandestiphrine fingerprints all over it, says Artist-Engineer Don Tasmian.
Clandestiphrine ring uses Spirograph as front.
Spin ice diagram tips off investigators, Dysprosium Titanate suspected of Clandestiphrine trafficking in Astrakhan Khanate.
Celebrated children's book The Little Petroleum Sample That Could is front for Clandestiphrine trafficking, say crime fighters.
Umbrella Man witnesses rubbed with Clandestiphrine, 73% die of stack overflow allergy. Witness Protection Program implements software patch to prevent recurrence.
Fiction cross-reference
Nonfiction cross-reference
External links:
- Epinephrine @ Wikipedia