A Record Number of Drug-Related Deaths Shows the Drug War Is Remarkably Effective at Killing People
According to new CDC numbers, the death toll rose 15 percent last year after jumping 30 percent in 2020.

Three years ago, President Donald Trump bragged that "we are making progress" in reducing drug-related deaths, citing a 4 percent drop between 2017 and 2018. That progress, a dubious accomplishment even then, proved fleeting. The upward trend in drug-related deaths, which began decades ago, resumed that very year, and 2020 saw both the largest increase and the largest number ever. That record was broken last year, according to preliminary data that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) published this week.
The CDC projects that the total for 2021 will be nearly 108,000 when the numbers are finalized, up 15 percent from 2020, when the number of deaths jumped by 30 percent. Two-thirds of last year's cases involved "synthetic opioids other than methadone," the category that includes fentanyl and its analogs. Those drugs showed up in nearly three-quarters of the cases involving opioids.
Illicit fentanyl, which has become increasingly common as a heroin booster or substitute during the last decade, is now showing up in cocaine, methamphetamine, and counterfeit pills passed off as prescription analgesics or anti-anxiety drugs like Xanax. That phenomenon vividly illustrates the hazards of the black market created by the war on drugs that Trump thought the government was finally winning.
Joe Biden, a supposedly reformed drug warrior, is still keen on "going after drug trafficking and illicit drug profits," a strategy that has failed for a century but, he figures, might just work this time around. At the same time, Biden talks a lot about drug treatment and other forms of "harm reduction," including "key tools like naloxone and syringe services programs." He proudly proclaims that his drug control plan is "the first-ever to champion harm reduction to meet people where they are and engage them in care and services."
The New York Times takes Biden at his word, saying he is "the first president to embrace harm reduction." While it may be true that Biden is the first president to utter the phrase "harm reduction," his predecessors have adopted elements of that agenda.
Donald Trump supported sentencing reform. Barack Obama backed needle exchange programs as well as sentencing reform and drug treatment. Even Richard Nixon, who famously declared drug abuse "America's public enemy number one," was big on treatment, saying "enforcement must be coupled with a rational approach to the reclamation of the drug user himself" and urging "compassion, and not simply condemnation, for those who become the victims of narcotics and dangerous drugs." Nixon also criticized harsh penalties for drug users—unlike Biden in his decades as a senator, when he declared that "we have to hold every drug user accountable" and cited the five-year mandatory minimum sentence for possessing tiny amounts of crack as evidence that he was serious.
If we focus on substance rather than words, the real breakthrough will come when politicians understand and acknowledge the nature of the harm that needs to be reduced. It is not just the harm caused by drug abuse but also the harm caused by misguided and counterproductive efforts to address that problem. Prohibition itself is the most obvious example.
Consider one of the harm reduction measures that the Times mentions: the distribution of test strips that can alert drug users to the presence of fentanyl in a substance sold as something else. Those test strips don't tell you how much fentanyl a bag of powder or a pill contains; they just tell you whether there is a detectable amount. But even that much knowledge is an improvement in a black market where people routinely buy drugs of unknown provenance, composition, and potency.
The danger that fentanyl poses to drug users is not inherent in the drug itself, which can be used safely when you know the dose, as demonstrated by its various medical applications. I was recently given fentanyl, along with midazolam, as a sedative during dental surgery, and I was not at all worried that it would kill me. Patients who receive fentanyl injections in the hospital or use fentanyl patches, lozenges, or nasal spray to relieve severe chronic pain likewise are not dropping dead left and right.
In the black market, by contrast, drug users may not even realize they are buying fentanyl; hence the test strips. Even if they do realize that, they still don't know the concentration. That potentially lethal ignorance is entirely a product of prohibition. While the proliferation of illicit fentanyl has made drug use more dangerous by increasing variability and uncertainty, those problems are not new. They are inevitable when the government tries to prevent the use of psychoactive substances by banning them.
Given those long-recognized hazards, it was entirely predictable that cracking down on pain medication, in addition to depriving bona fide patients of desperately needed relief, would increase drug-related deaths by driving nonmedical users into the black market. And that seems to be exactly what happened: As the government succeeded in reducing opioid prescriptions, the upward trend in opioid-related deaths not only continued but accelerated.
To the extent that fentanyl has compounded the dangers of the black market, that is also a predictable result of prohibition. Biden thinks that "going after drug trafficking" will help prevent drug-related deaths. But the pressure from enforcement drives drug traffickers toward more-potent products, which facilitate smuggling by allowing them to pack more doses into the same volume. Alcohol prohibition shifted consumption from beer and wine toward distilled spirits. Drug prohibition gave us heroin instead of opium, fentanyl instead of heroin, and sometimes even-more-potent fentanyl analogs instead of fentanyl.
Given the economics of the black market, interdiction has always been a hopeless proposition. That should be clearer than ever today as the government vainly tries to intercept little packages of fentanyl, each of which contains thousands of doses. But while "going after drug traffickers" has never been a cost-effective way to reduce drug consumption, that does not mean it has not accomplished anything. It has been remarkably effective at making drug use deadlier.
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You're supposed to post "Fuck Joe Biden" when you're first.
So Steny Hoyer, (D) Maryland just said the us is "at war" with Russia.
The adults are back in the room I guess.
Return to norms.
Glad to have civility back. Our life-long grifters were getting shorted when Donnie Boy was in there. We didn't start any wars, so who were they going to send all that sweet hardware to before selling replenishments for huge money?
In their world, civility means saying hello to someone before you hit them in the face with a brick.
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You can have no new wars, or no mean tweets, but not both.
I certainly don't like that. I will give him this though. That's a hell of a name. Steny Hoyer.
This article is taking a very real statistic and missing some major points.
Yes, the Drug war makes things about the drug black market awful in many varied ways. Few here on the forum would disagree with that. But if we're going to pinpoint a specific jump in an identifiable period of time, then simply saying "the drug war is killing people" is reductive.
There are certainly going to be people who will read my comment as an endorsement of the drug war. It is not. But what it also isn't, is an endorsement of "harm reduction".
The drug war is trucking along just like it always did for the last several decades, and even less so in some specific areas such as marijuana legalization, legalization of psychedelics and... AND right along with very public programs of "harm reduction" in the very places where drug overdoses are at their worst. This includes but is not limited to safe injection sites, decriminalization of possession for hard drugs coupled with a general policy of permissiveness surrounding open-air drug use in some of the most awful conditions in the country. Couple all of this with a two year period where literally millions of people were fired from their jobs due to either being declared "non-essential", working for a business that simply couldn't survive the lockdowns, or not being vaccinated enough. Throw all that into a crockpot and you've got a recipe for a sharp rise in drug deaths. Would there have been fewer deaths if we didn't have our current War on Drugs? Probably so. But ignoring the events of 2020-2022 and just noting that the drug war is killing more people than ever is bordering on dishonesty.
Don't forget sending out a couple of large stimulus checks, working from home, and telling people they can't go out and socialize for entertainment.
Not really, and here's why. Suppose we lived in a world with everything else the same, but no drug war. So when the pandemic hit, and all the lockdowns etc. ensued, in this world, would there have been more drug use? Sure, probably. But, would there have been more drug DEATHS? Probably NOT - because the drugs that people would be consuming in this world wouldn't be black-market knockoffs full of poison, people who are overdosing wouldn't deliberately avoid the hospital for fear of going to jail, and people who are doing nothing wrong wouldn't be murdered by cops trying to enforce stupid drug laws.
But, would there have been more drug DEATHS? Probably NOT - because the drugs that people would be consuming in this world wouldn't be black-market knockoffs full of poison, people who are overdosing wouldn't deliberately avoid the hospital for fear of going to jail,
I simply don't believe that. In fact, most definitely so is the likely outcome.
That's like saying "alcohol is safe because it's regulated, so no one ever dies from alcoholism, it wouldn't spike during the pandemic."
Alcohol deaths spiked during the pandemic.
A perfectly safe and regulated (narcotic) drug is going to see a spike in deaths during a time of mass despair and unemployment.
I'm not here to argue FOR the drug war, I'm here to say that the article is reductive, and I stand by that.
Oh, and for the record, even though I do rail against many 'harm reduction' schemes, I believe there are harm reduction schemes that can work, but they aren't very libertarian... at all.
Well, how many of those alcoholism deaths can be attributed to the fact that other potentially safer alternatives such as recreational marijuana are still illegal in most places?
Did you even bother investigating states that have legal Marijuana?
Not everyone likes fucking weed. Some like alcohol.
My recreational drug of choice is caffeine, which I prefer carbonated.
Then dont try crack. Caffeine and crack act the same way. They just have slightly differing levels of efficacy.
Legal pot is actually a manuver to reduce crime. States with low organized crime rates wouldnt really benefit much from legal weed. But that some people prefer booze to pot is just due to ignorance and being misguided to think, law = good. Any good person can follow the law. It takes either a true good person or an evil slime bag to challenge the validity of a law. Such laws lije anti pot laws likely inanely imposed only because the illegal act has no evil following to counter it. Pot has no addict cults of its own to smuggle it and challenge it's prohibition. Booze does. Pot is safer in every way than even booze or caffeine. Illegal weed only feeds every other kind of evil. The only thing that makes it a business at all is that it's mostly illegal.
"I simply don't believe that. In fact, most definitely so is the likely outcome." You're swimming against the current of almost all studies on this subject with this opinion although admittedly, the lock down is an unknown variable.
That's like saying "alcohol is safe because it's regulated, so no one ever dies from alcoholism, it wouldn't spike during the pandemic."
They are very different. Alcohol is pretty much poison that slowly destroys health over time for heavy users. Opiates are acutely deadly, but much less likely to damage health in the long term. Opiate users are dying from accidental overdoses. That is very rare with alcohol.
Alcohol is pretty much poison that slowly destroys health over time for heavy users. Opiates are acutely deadly, but much less likely to damage health in the long term.
^
If you survive 40+ years of heroin addiction, you won't be that worse the wear for it (William Burroughs and Ray Charles as examples of very long-term heroin addicts who were still fairly robust in old age). Peter Lorre and S. T. Coleridge also come to mind (although morphine and opium, respectively).
On the other hand, there's no scenario involving 40 years of drinking where you're not a decrepit near-vegetable at the tail end.
Hey, no sideways looks at sarc, ok.
The entire rat pack? Kelsey Grammer? And let's not forget
I manual kant was a real pissant who was very rarely stable
Hidegger Hidegger was a boozy begger who could drink you under the table
Peter Lorre died at 60. Samuel Taylor Coleridge died at 61. Those aren't endorsements. Ray Charles died at 73, not particularly great. Burroughs was the only one who lived to a ripe old age and he was kind of a nut job whose life I wouldn't recommend emulating, though one can conjecture about the effects of long term opiod use on his brain.
There are excellent reasons for avoiding opiates and their imitations. One is war. Contrary to what the Kleptocracy has told you all your life, the Boxer Rebellion, Balkan Wars and World Wars 1 and 2 were as much opium wars as the admitted opium war assaults on China from 1840 to 1857. Doping unsuspecting primitives with refined narcotics is taxation pure and simple, and anesthetists do NOT want junkies on the operating table for very practical reasons. Yet competition, psychedelic alternatives, made narcotics economically unpopular in the de-facto unregulated markets of San Francisco and Austin in the 60s. Freedom saves lives. Coercion kills. Drug nazis ALL pack heat.
The point is not to get in a tit-for-tat over the toxicity of one drug or another, the point is, the drug war is what it is, and it didn't take any radical changes between 2020-2022. In fact, if anything, it was relaxed in some specific areas.
If alcohol (the toxicity of which didn't suddenly change in 2020) go up dramatically during 2020-2022 (pandemic years) it would follow logically that so would overdoses and deaths from other potentially deadly drugs, regardless of the toxicity vector as it contributes to the death.
I merely postulate-- and stand by it-- that the dramatic spike in fentanyl/heroin/opioid deaths mirrors that of the spike of alcohol deaths. The drug war didn't materially change in 2020-2021, but something else did.
Further, I don't question Reason's bona fides on the drug war. But whistling past the very unlibertarian response to the pandemic and pointing to the same-ol-shit as the 'cause' of a dramatic spike that... occurred during that other, you know, very unlibertarian thing is winning the 100 yard dash to miss the point. Perhaps we might do an article on the dramatic effects of lockdowns and firings by government fiat of a few tens of millions of people... that is... if it doesn't offend your "trust the scientism" sensitbilities.
Except for all of the alcoholic sponsors who discussed relapses during the lockdowns. Sure.
As long as you ignore all facts your assumptions will always seem plausible jeff.
A lot of needless effort goes into testing clandestine drugs. Bleach and water tests work for primitive concoctions, but subtler drugs are tested by walking dealers. That's as objective as it gets when the main purpose of the political State is to kick down your door with no warrant or warning, shoot pets and residents with literal sprays of deadly ammunition--all to make a crime of trade and production and enforce that fiat with deadly force at the bidding of ignorant brutes such as Nixon, Reagan, Bush, Willie, Bush, Obama, and Biden.
And with regards to harm reduction, there are good ways and bad ways to implement harm reduction, but the literature is pretty solid that harm reduction in terms of methadone maintenance for heroin addicts is successful in reducing heroin overdose deaths. They are still addicts, but they aren't dying. Here is one example:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1446673/
In my futile attempt to see what Switzerland's overdose rate was for 2020-2021 (statistics that I could find mysteriously disappeared after 2019) I came across this.
This is a broad, comprehensive 'harm reduction' plan that, at least in the Swiss experience, seems to work. Now, ask libertarians if they're good with it. At this point, I might not even be on board. Just give up, give everyone prescription heroin on the state's dime and call it a day. Overdose deaths: dramatically reduced.
Well, that harm reduction plan only makes sense in the context of the status quo drug war. Yes if you substitute legal heroin for illegal heroin, harms are reduced, because users get reliable doses of pure heroin instead of unreliable junk found on the street. But if there were no drug war at all, there wouldn't be unreliable garbage heroin on the street in the first place! (Or, it would be far far less than now.)
Now, ask libertarians if they're good with it.
Well, it depends on the type of libertarian you're referring to.
One type might be called "egalitarian libertarians". They believe that everyone deserves liberty equally. Sometimes called "left-wing libertarians".
The other type might be called "hierarchical libertarians". They believe that everyone deserves liberty, but not equally. Some deserve it more than others. Sometimes called "right-wing libertarians".
So an egalitarian libertarian might view that harm reduction strategy and applaud its goals, but question whether the government ought to fund it. A hierarchical libertarian might view that harm reduction strategy and oppose it, because the drug addict made a poor moral choice and therefore deserves liberty less than those who don't make those poor moral choices. In addition to opposing the government funding of it.
God youre so full of shit.
You advocated for masks and such for 2 years. Were fine with hospitals looking at vaccine status. Push CRT and other critical theories. Yet think you're the good guy.
Lol.
Huh. So you interpreted "left-wing libertarian" with "good guy". I think that says more about you than about me, frankly.
What specifically about my comment do you object to?
Oh wait you don't have a specific objection, you are just a snarling dog yapping against an intruder.
So your comment wasn’t intended to indicate “left-wing libertarian”, or “egalitarian libertarian” isn’t better than “right-wing libertarian”?
Nobody believes that Lying Jeffy.
Ignore the double negative.
“What specifically about my comment do you object to?” … oh, I’ll take this.
“…. because the drug addict made a poor moral choice and therefore deserves less liberty.”
Define “liberty”. Is it “free” (taxpayer funded) drugs? Ignoring property crimes and theft by addicts?
What “liberty” is your “hierarchical libertarian” judging addicts not worthy of? And what liberties are the “egalitarian libertarians” so compassionately defending? Do they involve other people’s money?
Yeah, yeah. People shouldn’t go to jail for a plant. And for the most part, they don’t. Theft, harassment and deranged behavior have to be dealt with however.
Too “hierarchical” for ya?
Actual Libertarians are not winged. Superstitious fanatics take orders from imaginary devils and angels and seek to infiltrate those mystical imaginings into the worsening of libertarian platform planks. Read both original platforms and there are no such things in them. The LP's Annunciation was more a cross between Ayn Rand's objectivism and Lysander Spooner's appeals to clear distinctions between personal preferences and rights-violating criminality. Compare: "Viable Values" and "Vices are Not Crimes" and observe that the ethical foundations are similar.
One type might be called "egalitarian libertarians". They believe that everyone deserves liberty equally. Sometimes called "left-wing libertarians".
Egalitarianism and libertarianism are incompatible, by virtue of being all-inclusiveness. An all inclusive view of freedom destroys any kind of enumeration or restrictions on governments powers.
So yes, you are a leftist.
An all inclusive view of freedom destroys any kind of enumeration or restrictions on governments powers.
Only if "freedom" is defined as "everyone is entitled to anything they want" or some such positive rights nonsense like that.
But, do we all have the same right to free speech, the right to own property, etc.? We may not all have the same abilities to do so, but if you believe we all have the same *liberty* to do these things, then that makes you an egalitarian libertarian.
But, if you think liberty is conditional on some test of moral worthiness - that e.g. only those who "use speech responsibly" should have free speech rights, or that only those who "hire only citizens" should have association rights, then that makes you a hierarchical libertarian, someone who thinks that liberty is not universal.
Hahahahahahahahahahaha
Damn dude. Just wow.
right along with very public programs of "harm reduction" in the very places where drug overdoses are at their worst
In defense of "harm reduction," it semi-fulfills a need that's created by the Drug War in the first place, and "harm reduction" facilities being "in the very places where drug overdoses are at their worst" is a bit of a chicken-and-the-egg thing.
We had a bit of thing in my area recently when the City of Richmond (CA) tried to put a methadone clinic at the very tippity-tip of an annexation from way way back so that they could try to revitalize the part of town where all the drug addicts are by moving the drug addicts into our area.
It got shouted down, naturally, and the clinic is still in the drug-addict part of town (not that that's being very specific re: Richmond), but my point is that this fight only exists because there is a drug-addict part of town that's full of alienated, criminalized drug addicts who arguably wouldn't need to congregate in that part of town and wouldn't be so alienated and criminalized if drugs were simply legal and freely available.
Imagine, for example, if opium dens were like bars. Sure, you'll have parts of town where there are more of them, but they'll also be generally less concentrated and less skeezy because they'd all be able to operate openly and legally.
Lysander Spooner made exactly those same points in "Vices are Not Crimes" two years after mystical fanatics began enforcing antiabortion Comstock laws banning the mailing of "disloyal" Democrat agitprop. Sending ignorant goons with guns out to murder people as examples to enforce legislation rooted in superstition and pseudoscience is... well... Look at China. In 1837 their emperors began beheading people wholesale for smoking plant sap. Now look at the Paradise on Earth that is Red China. Do you want to move there?
Not sure I approve of opium dens, but I think that allowing prescriptions for heroin might be better way to address addiction. Doctors could work an addict down to a level that allows them to function in a reasonably normal way.
yes there are some drugs that have been causing quite a number of deaths and permanent lifelong harm.
Heroin, methamphetamines, opium, fantanyl, barbiturates, ethanol, covid injections...........
moderation in some cases may help, results may vary.
Tionico is the voice of ignorant, bigoted, force-initiating superstition. Yet after all, similar bleatings were abroad in 1957: "None of us knew just how the plan would work, but every one of us thought that the next fellow knew it. And if anybody had doubts, he felt guilty and kept his mouth shut—because they made it sound like anyone who'd oppose the plan was a child killer at heart and less than a human being. They told us that this plan would achieve a noble ideal. Well, how were we to know otherwise? Hadn't we heard it all our lives—from our parents and our schoolteachers and our ministers, and in every newspaper we ever read and every movie and every public speech? Hadn't we always been told that this was righteous and just?" Prohibition at gunpoint--"we"'re all in it together!
There is zero evidence that ending the drug war would reduce drug deaths.
Really?
https://www.cleveland.com/metro/2018/07/in_amsterdam_the_government_pr.html
Drugs aren't legal in the Netherlands; dealers and importers are prosecuted and punished harshly. The Netherlands still has one of the highest rates of drug use in Europe, and the trend for drug deaths isn't looking promising either. Furthermore, I was talking about deaths, not just overdose deaths. So, yes, zero evidence.
Well, there's hundreds or thousands of research articles and books on the subject and other nations that have moved toward decriminalization and legal access and reduced overdose deaths. It's not certain, but to claim zero evidence...
And that doesn't even count the black market violence, gang wars and drug cartel killings and that you may count as drug deaths.
People can write as many articles as they want, you simply can't get the data to draw such conclusions: there is too much variability in the data, and countries are too different from each other.
You think that those criminals will just become law abiding citizens? They will simply resort to other forms of crime. And you have no idea what the long term consequence of legalized drugs is after a generation or two.
(I wouldn't have a problem with legalization of drugs in a libertarian society, but we don't live in a libertarian society.)
"People can write as many articles as they want, you simply can't get the data to draw such conclusions: there is too much variability in the data, and countries are too different from each other."
I could use this argument to claim socialism could work in the US. I argue in both cases there is a preponderance of evidence can allow you to predict a likely outcome.
"You think that those criminals will just become law abiding citizens? They will simply resort to other forms of crime."
This is market economics. If you remove the billions of black market dollars that fund these groups, they're not going to continue to fight over territory to pickpocket. So what crimes will they resort to?
"And you have no idea what the long term consequence of legalized drugs is after a generation or two." We can make educated predictions, but I agree for the most part.
"I wouldn't have a problem with legalization of drugs in a libertarian society, but we don't live in a libertarian society"
Fair enough.
In the case of socialism, we have dozens of long term natural experiments in many different cultures over more than a century and they all failed spectacularly. For drug legalization, we have none of that.
Prostitution, blackmail, kidnapping, robbery, etc.
I think the educated predictions are pretty dire, in particular in the context of our social welfare state, where the medical costs and disability costs are socialized.
In a libertarian society, at least, drug use would be self-limiting, as the consequences of drug use would be so dire.
I appreciate the responses, NOYB2. We have fundamentally different beliefs in the causes of drug crimes and likely outcomes of legalization and neither will ever change the other's mind about it. Whoever is closer to correct, one thing is for sure: The majority of every society in the world agrees more closely with you.
I actually simply don't know what the outcome of legalization would be; I suspect it depends on lots of other factors, time scale, etc.
But people who argue for legalization on the basis of utility are not libertarians, they are progressives.
There is zero evidence that ending the drug war would reduce drug deaths.
There cannot be evidence of things that haven't happened yet. Predicting the future depends on reasoning, not evidence.
Or perhaps you're asking the wrong question in the first place.
To a libertarian, whether it "reduces drug deaths" simply shouldn't matter.
The Haight-Ashbury survival guide was DeRopp's "Drugs and The Mind." The book was an Atlas-era doctor's rebuttal to a 1920s German book full of errors. It reports that sane people generally do not enjoy actual addictive narcotics, according to double-blind tests. And Sullum is right about the anti-life effect of prohibitionism. When Biden was pushing shoot-first, asset-forfeiture prohibitionism, overdoses from non-addictive cocaine were 900 a year, LSD zero, marijuana zero, mescalin zero, psilocybin zero. THOSE alternatives were stomped on with fanatical zeal!
How disgustingly disingenuous is it to credit a war on drugs having cause opiate overdoses to overtake all other forms of death as a leading cause.
Some of these writers should be shot.
Is the libertarian party really going to side with such slime bags as heroin trafficers over us and public safety?
Dont let these scum join your ranks. They'll only tear you down.
jHoe obiden cult's favorite substances.
Butt bois
And
Butt boi farmed dope
https://wgno.com/news/pentagon-denies-telling-soldiers-to-ignore-child-abuse/
So my only real question is, why when being demogogued over your handling of covid19"pandemic" would you then counterpoint about fking swine flu instead of citing your opponent's world wide afghan pederast heroin cartel's drug deaths?
A disease is an act of god no one can control and the other one is an act of jHoe. An act of jHoe that competes with hitler for highest kill count.
Srsly, what kind of alterboi catamite looking pense would do that? And what kind of orange shit gibbon would do it a second time?
Good news, Netflix is pushing back. Make of that what you will.
Ive never watched anything on netflix. Today wont be the day that changes. Nothing personal or business. Im just not moved by other people's causes and crusades. I dont need entertainment or inspiration. I prefer to take step on the battlefield rather than read about it or watch the news about it. One way or another, all that will just be some subjectivist spew i cant trust. And, id rather pirate than pay anyway (:
They took to long to offer single channles that interest me rather than charge crazy rates for a shotgun of shit with one or two redeeming qualities.
I fly the jolly roger, largly, and proudly now.
Yep, its retaliation. I dismiss it by the same mechanism they used to justify doing it in the first place. Netflix, fk you too.
The War on Drugs has killed MANY more than (de-criminalized) drugs would have.
Partialy True, yaknow completely overlooking obiden single handedly farmed 95% of the world's heroin from pederast afghanistan shimself fir 8 goddamn years.
Your point is partialy true but the drug war caused escalation is only partialy effective at killing the slimey scum who carelessly fund word wide terroism, pederast cults, and rampant criminality.
Id take it a step further where heroin is concerned. We need to wipe out a whole generation of human backwash.
Take a lesson from wood alcohol gin the Kennedys proliferated during prohibition. Even poison dope isnt going to hit the targets you're looking for. What we need is consensual lethal injection sites. Rather than safe injection sites, offer a guaranteed lethal dosage of dope for free.
These junky slime, when one of their friends or family members die from an overdose they go looking for the dealer that sold it. But they dont go looking for revenge or anything like that. They go looking for dope.
All these people want is to just vanish so they never have to worry about withdrawl ever again.
We should fund that. Full frontal honesty can fix this sht.
With no market for heroin, heroin dealers can be picked off safely with no safty net to back them up.
The hillbilery, frankenkerry, obiden wide berth funding heroin cartels deffinitly lead to more death. The world wide afghan pederast heroin cartel kill count challenges ww2 for totality. It wins hands down over hitler. And wins completely if you consider all the living(sic) junkies in the total.
Side note, we seriously need to have supervised random drug tests for congress, senate, the white house, and the judiciary. The results need to be public information.
Btw, ive heard my posts cause a large % of heroin overdoses. I think im becoming addicted to dead junkies.....
I think the problem is that people cannot talk about the issue. Like too many problems we have today everything is defined by the extremes. If a person talks about about drugs the response has to be the opposite. It would be nice to talk about the topic and find some middle ground. Even states that pass marijuana legalization referendums find politicians will not allow the changes. It is like one side has to take the opposite opinion, instead of just saying, yes that is a good point, they start arguing for the opposite opinion.
Well yah, weed should be legal. Besides the point it doesnt even fit tge legal definition of a drug, it's a scedual 1 most heinous substance? It's a plant that grows anywhere. You can buy it anywhere, you can smoke it anywhere, you can sell it anywhere. It's non addictive, non habit forming, generally kind of boring, amost imposible to abuse, and has never killed anyone. No one has ever robbed anyone to go get a bag of weed. It's the absolute dumbest shit to make illegal but there it is, scedual 1 most heinous substance... meanwhile, our own government funds afghan pederast heroin cartels and imports 3 billion dollars a year in dope.... south america doesnt even make the sht anymore, they do like the rest of tge world and buy it from afghanistan. Yaknow before smuggling it here. Weed is a necessary vitamin in a dope trafficers tool box. Again, they can grow it anywhere, they can sell it anywhere, and their users can smoke it anywhere. Everywhere it's legal the gangs are going out of business. And everywhere it's legal even the growers are going out of business. The only thing that made weed a sustainable business for anyone was that it was illegal.
Srsly, need to drug test the feds dope stream for afghan pederast heroin cartel dope.
The shit going on is un fking believable.
Who's bright idea was it to censor the public from publicly discussing jHoes afghan pederast heroin cartel habit? The election was a complete fraud in that the public had the right to know they were potentialy voting for a warcrimimal operating a sick and twisted coverup and who presided over the most heinous warcrimes the nation has ever committed.
Every single one of the boi butt pirates this fagot elect allied us wuth should have been every boi butt pumper we killed our own selves. And what does the filthy greaseball do? He fking imports them.
Putting their heads in diplomic pouches for an unsolicited transport to the hague to face warcrimes is too good for these slimy scum fks.
Let the nuclear rain begin.
Individual Liberty and Justice......
Complete Drug prohibition doesn't FIT either one. It takes away Liberty and doesn't instill any Individual Justice for anyone else. Except Power-Mad Nannies (i.e. Nazi's). Stick to the Crime's of others not 'sins' some Power-Mad Control freak wants to tyrannically shove onto someone else with a GUN (Gov-Guns).
it is stunning that a writer could produce this piece and completely ignore a huge source of illegal drugs: the open border to mexico. these drugs are pouring across a wide open border along with the millions of illegal aliens. does sullum support the democrat's open border policy?
Surely the massive economic and cultural benefits of open borders would outweigh some drugs getting in.
I do believe the article went into the fact that the policies of prohibition incentivize smuggling. The question is not can we do more to stop smuggling at the border, the real question is would better drug policies disincentivize smuggling while also making central and south American countries more stable. Increased stablity would reduce people fleeing to the US border.
the only thing that will reduce people fleeing to the US border is a secure border. period. stability is irrelevant. the only thing to disincentivize smuggling across the border is strong law enforcement. there needs to be cost to breaking the law. the reason we have people from everywhere on the globe illegally crossing the border is because there is no penalty. brandon has no respect for the rule of law and he believes there should be no borders.
My wifes immigration papers have been held up for six fking years on a typo. My daughter just dued in a third world shithole hospital. And this catholic greaseball fagt monkey wants to just let his catholic fagot cult just walk right in with tge dope. This bastard gotta be stopped.
hire an immigration attorney. you can move things along with the right legal pressure.
Oh, those things the writer missed
https://wgno.com/news/pentagon-denies-telling-soldiers-to-ignore-child-abuse/
Turns out some fagot thinks condemning afghan pederast heroin cartel foreign policy constitutes "homophobia". It does not. At that point "homophobia" is meaningless. Instead there is only a "healthy concern." Censoring condemnations of pederasty constitutes an admition of guilt that homosexual means "boi pumper." Guilt by "Aiding and abetting."
[Quote]Aiding and abetting is a legal doctrine related to the guilt of someone who aids or abets (encourages, incites) another person in the commission of a crime (or in another's suicide). It exists in a number of different countries and generally allows a court to pronounce someone guilty for aiding and abetting in a crime even if they are not the principal offender.[/quote]
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aiding_and_abetting
Literally installing a whitehouse foreign policy guy who aided and abetted a pederast heroin cartel makes us all a pederast heroin cartel warcriminal.
Srsly, i call for heads in diplomatic pouches to be delivered to the hague to face warcrimes and to be put on public display on top of pikes, just as it legally should be, by the end of the month.
All the manufactured outrage and pearl clutching and theater over drug companies and doctors and prescription opioids was a complete farce.
Sorta, they did fkup too. That it was the whole enchilada? Oh hell no. The same dope dealer ring obiden made was the same junky conspiracy that re-installed him.
Politicians permanently installed up other politician's asses.
Hillbillary, frankenkerry, obiden.
The single achievement of the war on drugs is that it has generated a huge body count, and of course the media LOVES that. Since this war was declared, we have spent somewhere between $5T and $10T to erase this scourge. Surely you've noticed the positive impacts, right?
War or Jihad, Crusade... aptly describe the fanatical initiation of deadly force to counter some real or imaginary vice that violates nobody's rights. Back when it was Plutocrats and Jews that got Christian National Socialists frothed up into a killing frenzy. Nowadays it is powdered happiness. One suspects it is the happiness rather than the powder that is nominated as the "enemy" that cannot even surrender. Superstition is not pretty...
How or in what way does having to coexist with junkies not violate everyone's rights?
They'd kill ya for a fix. They burn cities while suffering withdrawl symptoms. Obiden literally put them on disability for being chemically dependent on his dope. How and in what way is that not a taxpayer circle jerk?
Next you have to fund their rehab they're not going to get better from?
The only thing you can do to fix this many junkies is to offer them cold turkey or a lethal injection of seized dope.
Trust me. That want the lethal injection. They'd suck your dick for it.