If you don't believe how serious this weapon of mass destruction against our country is, just visit MyDeathSpace.com once in a while. I do it regularly just to see. Every single time, a cluster of young dead people, fentanyl and heroin mixed, sometimes just fentanyl, sometimes Xanax and fentanyl, but the result is always the same, dead at 23, dead at 20, dead at 27, dead at 28, dead at 18. Young, American, and DEAD.
Comments (20)
sorted by:
People need to get a relationship and not need to do this to have company in their lonely lives.
Or, they need to learn that being lonely is not the end of the world. You can read a book or listen to some music or look at a movie on your tablet. How to be alone is a necessary life skill.
"Just don't let there be a first time" is something eight year olds need to memorize.
Some people have been saved by their innate anti-socialness, and their inability to stay up past eleven o'clock.
Nerds, geeks and other misfits survive.
Don't be so well adjusted. Don't like people and don't have friends. Then you can not use drugs.
We have met the enemy and he is us. (Walt Kelly)
"Drugs killed so and so," is a lie. "So and so killed himself," is the truth. The drugs, like guns, didn't jump into his hand. They are as inanimate as guns are.
Drugs have an actual addictive quality that affects the entire body and creates a host of effects both mentally and physically and psychologically. Guns do none of that. It's not a good analogy.
No.
But neither of them jump off the table by themselves. That's all I meant.
True, but in a society where it's pretty common for young people to experiment with intoxicants, Fentanyl was a pretty sinister chemical to cook up in a lab and unleash on America.
No, it's common for young people to use them. The word experiment has a hallowed, pure-sounding history of intellectual inquiry.
Using an intoxicant is not trying to find out something. It is simply using an intoxicant. There is nothing to find out. You know what it will do, or you wouldn't use it.
Yes, it was throwing a match into gasoline. But you are not supposed to walk around soaked in gasoline. Even without the match, you weren't fine.
Drug use is temporary, rented insanity. It is impossible to argue with insanity.
Life got bad way back when drug use became common, as you say, in the Sixties. Once that was in place, the US was sitting blithely on the railroad tracks, assuming no train would ever run it over. But you aren't supposed to be on the railroad tracks.
We were sitting ducks after the Sixties. Just ripe for the picking. Ripe for an attack of this kind, the fentanyl.