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@jivasoul-666
Facts about the fentanyl overdose outbreak not readily shared with the public by mass media or included in the status quo's fentanyl narrative.
In 8 of the 9 total fentanyl overdose outbreaks in the US dating back to the 80's american chemists were identified as the source, one was a chemist from Calgon Carbon Corporation, who developed the activated carbon gas masks used by the US military, who was one of their earliest clients, CCC is actually owned by the Merck Company, one of the largest pharmaceutical companies in the World who's based in the US and Canada. There have also been chemists from Dupont, also a company with big government connections, and a chemist from the US Naval Research Laboratory who were identified as the source chemists in previous fentanyl overdose outbreaks. The following is a quoted disclaimer from the most recent research on the synthesis of fentanyl with the goals being a safer, less complicated, and higher yielding method compared to the most common methods used in the synthesis of fentanyl.
"Disclaimer:This document(LLNL-JRNL-656516)was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States government. Neither the United States government nor Lawrence Livermore National Security,LLC,nor any of their employees makes any warranty, expressed or nor implied,or assumes any legal liability or responsibilityfor the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that it suse would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference by here into any specific commercialproduct, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, or recommendation".
New Cards and always accepting new clients
A proper ten dollar sack I'd say.
As anyone can see, problematic drug use, or what some call addiction, is actually rare among drug users. Consistently only about 10% of drug users experience problematic use. If “addiction” is a brain disease caused by continuing drug use, it’s quite possibly the least aggressive disease in existence, effecting only a statistically insignificant portion of the population most likely to develop the brain disease. Maybe it’s because there is no brain disease, in reality no such thing as drug addiction at all. People use drugs because seeking pleasure has always been a fundamental driver of activity in human beings. A small subsection of drug users, the majority of which have suffered substantial trauma in their lives, use drugs in a way which can be unhealthy desperately trying to stem the flow of psychological pain from trauma. Ultimately this population of drug users are further traumatized by a system which criminalizes their drug use, stigmatizes their drug use, alienates and marginalizes them, then uses this forced criminality, stigma induced family and friend troubles, as indicators of their “addiction”. At which point they’re then offered “treatment” which for the most part is based on ideas about drug use from the 1930’s in which the offered cure is really nothing more than dressed up faith healing. The war on drugs started as a way to criminalize political and civil rights activists in the 1960’s and has continued to be used as a weapon to neutralize the people regarded as undesirable or a threat to the status quo by the state. Unfortunately the war on drugs propaganda machine has been so effective that many drug users question their own worth and demonize the substances they use to ease the pain of existence, staining what should be pleasurable experiences with shame and guilt which often lead to unhealthy outcomes and even death as evidenced by a constantly ballooning overdose death rate unprecedented in the history of drug use. We have to fight these waves of misinformation and stigma because if we don’t we’ll continue to watch our friends lives be destroyed, dying all around us. We have to look out for each other cause no one else is.
As anyone can see, problematic drug use, or what some call addiction, is actually rare among drug users. Consistently only about 10% of drug users experience problematic use. If “addiction” is a brain disease caused by continuing drug use, it’s quite possibly the least aggressive disease in existence, effecting only a statistically insignificant portion of the population most likely to develop the brain disease. Maybe it’s because there is no brain disease, in reality no such thing as drug addiction at all. People use drugs because seeking pleasure has always been a fundamental driver of activity in human beings. A small subsection of drug users, the majority of which have suffered substantial trauma in their lives, use drugs in a way which can be unhealthy desperately trying to stem the flow of psychological pain from trauma. Ultimately this population of drug users are further traumatized by a system which criminalizes their drug use, stigmatizes their drug use, alienates and marginalizes them, then uses this forced criminality, stigma induced family and friend troubles, as indicators of their “addiction”. At which point they’re then offered “treatment” which for the most part is based on ideas about drug use from the 1930’s in which the offered cure is really nothing more than dressed up faith healing. The war on drugs started as a way to criminalize political and civil rights activists in the 1960’s and has continued to be used as a weapon to neutralize the people regarded as undesirable or a threat to the status quo by the state. Unfortunately the war on drugs propaganda machine has been so effective that many drug users question their own worth and demonize the substances they use to ease the pain of existence, staining what should be pleasurable experiences with shame and guilt which often lead to unhealthy outcomes and even death as evidenced by a constantly ballooning overdose death rate unprecedented in the history of drug use. We have to fight these waves of misinformation and stigma because if we don’t we’ll continue to watch our friends lives be destroyed, dying all around us. We have to look out for each other cause no one else is.