I didn’t say they’re the only ones but historically speaking, they’re the demo that has become addicted to it the most.
My point is 2 folded:
1. The way we frame drug addiction is so hypocritical. When talking about crack? It was framed by both politicians and the media as a failure of black communities. Celebrities like Bill Cosby, spoke out to shame their own people. Government intervention was seen as enabling (and still is) unless that government intervention was law enforcement and prison. In that case, government intervention was welcomed.
Yet with opioids, it’s the opposite. It’s a systemic problem, not a moral failure, that must be addressed by the government.
So which is it? Let’s pick a lane and stick with it. Is drug addiction the result of systemic failures that requires government intervention to correct, such as opioid addiction? Or is it the result of moral failures within the demographic in which case the addictions are the natural consequences of immorality?
2. Drug addiction needs to be decoupled from any talk about immigration or “dUh BoRdEr.” It’s clear that supply will follow demand no matter if we place crocs with lasers on their heads at every mile marker along every border. Therefore, talking about fentanyl along with immigration makes about as much sense as talking about cooper Flagg and Russia invading Ukraine; they’re two completely different issues.
Lastly, I think most Of you know where I stand regarding a robust social service net. But if we want to have a government that can aid with drug addiction, then we certainly can no longer empower dotards like Trump and Musk and RFK. These people aren’t serious about solving any problems, especially those complicated like drug addiction.
Btw, Trump’s Supreme Court ****ed over addicts by helping out Purdue Pharma last year. Again, we need to have memories longer than goldfish. This was the company that knew it was killing off Americans with its product. But they didn’t give a **** cuz it was so lucrative. And buying off Trump and the Supreme Court was so easy. So they got off, thanks to stupid people voting for Trump. It’s ironic, because how many of those impacted by drug addiction voted to empower Trump and this Supreme Court because they wanted a tighter border against drugs?
The U.S. Supreme Court has overturned the Purdue Pharma bankruptcy settlement that would have shielded the Sackler family from lawsuits over their involvement in the ongoing opioid crisis. With the agreement struck down, state and local governments that were slated to receive settlement money...
www.ncsl.org