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Registered
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Long Beach CA, the sewer by the sea.
Posts: 37,601
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That's the problem. Many users are pretty good at managing not to die. That's for amateurs. Users cost us a lot of money.
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Banned
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: St Paul MN
Posts: 19,431
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Quote:
https://www.thecabinsingapore.com.sg/blog/despite-tough-penalties-drug-abuse-in-singapore-is-still-on-the-increase/ the obvious solution to me ... is we need to make a 'good' life worth living. because i think a lot of people are straight faced looking at the world, and going ... why would i care? no one else does. esp when caring is so much work, and all caring does is bring you more work. its not that being a homeless drug addict is so appealing ... its that not being one is so much work. its easy to sit here on our porsches, in our homes that we own, and forget that most of the country doesn't live like this. they live pay check to pay check, and working their asses off doesnt actually get them anywhere. there is no merit in our supposed meritocracy. and you know, i dont have a good counter point to that argument. Last edited by cockerpunk; 01-16-2024 at 11:15 AM.. |
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Southern Class & Sass
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(I know, AI couldn't possibly replace 'you'. You're brilliant. That's exactly what the guys doing manual spreadsheets back in the 70's told me.)
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Dixie Bradenton, FL 2013 Camaro ZL1 |
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Registered
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Quote:
There is a book, "Glass Houses" about what a hedge fund did to the city of Lancaster, Ohio. Anchor Hocking glass works was the economic anchor for the city. Generations of Lancaster's children grew up to work there, or were sent off to college for a better life on the money mom and dad made there. A hedge fund bought the company, bankrupted it, and suddenly a generation were told they weren't needed. "Find something else," they were told. They did - drugs and indolence.
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Banned
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: St Paul MN
Posts: 19,431
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Quote:
and we don't. we just don't. and we grow up, and watch the richest people in the world doing the dumbest possible things, and we watch nepotism trump merit every time, and we watch how the world problems aren't complicated, but the solutions inconvenience a few very rich and powerful people and thus will never get fixed ... and you go .... why? why would i opt into this system? its nice, being born into an upper middle class family, and fairly easy to be, upper middle class for me. but if you weren't born into the upper middle class, or even into the middle class ... why would you do it? and i think we are watching an increasingly large number of people, basically just opting out of the system .becasue the system doesn't care about them, so why should they care about the system? in the world we have, where merit means so little to the powerful ... why would opt in and try to merit your way up a system that doesnt care about merit? |
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Registered
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 2,385
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It is a very complex problem indeed. America's insatiable appetite for drugs is what
keeps the cartels in business. The cartels and violence associated with them in Mexico and latin America is one of the big reasons for the influx of people fleeing those countries and creating the problems we have at the border. The two are inexplicably linked. We need to take some responsibility for our part. No demand for drugs, the cartels would be minimized. I know wishful thinking. The problem is so big that there is no easy answer. We know what doesn't work. What might ? I also thought Jelly Rolls comments were powerful, yet as he described his own wife is an addict. Once someone goes down that path it just seems to take a miracle to reverse it. |
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Zink Racer
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Spokane WA
Posts: 3,977
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One of the points Quinones makes in his book is that the "modern" form of meth, and also fentanyl, are immediately addictive or deadly. There is no turning back for many.
I worked in social services, trying to help people on SSI/SSDI and vets on disability, manage their benefits. The goal was to make sure the money went to the right place. Rent and food. It was in many ways a futile effort. The most depressing days were when parents brought their kids in to sign up as they were exiting high school.
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Jerry 1964 356, 1983 911 SC/Carrera Franken car, 1974 914 Bumblebee, a couple of other 914's in various states of repair |
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Bland
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I grew up on Vancouver Island… it may still be the pot capital of Canada. Most kids in my high school smoked it, so did their parents. It was very accessible, free if you knew the right crowd.
On Facebook, nearly every month, I see posts from old friends who still live there grieving the loss of ‘so and so’… fentanyl. That is a place where there was next to 0 opportunities for those who stayed. I can go into any bar there and see someone from high school that I haven’t seen in 32 years and pick up a conversation as if I just went to the pisser. In a rare occurrence, I somewhat agree with cockerpunk on this. People, without opportunity, turn to drugs instead of brightening their futures by getting out of a bad economic situation or getting an education and moving on… it’s easier. I had fentanyl 10 days ago at the hospital when they temporarily reset my ankle. It’s pretty wonderful stuff, I can see why people would want that type of high. That being said, I have 3 pill bottles in my house with Percocet, OxyContin, and Hydromorphone from my knee surgery and my recent ankle surgery… I got off them as soon as possible (1.5-2 days). I really need to get this garbage out of my house but I keep it in case I need it for a bad farm or hiking injury in the back country. With respect to Jellyroll… I am not a huge fan of his music but between this interview and a recent interview with Storme Warren, I have tremendous respect for the man. He spent a big chunk of his life in prison and has truely reformed… largely because he wanted to. Respect to him.
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06 Cayenne Turbo S and 11 Cayenne S 77 911S Wide Body GT2 WCMA race car 86 930 Slantnose - featured in Mar-Apr 2016 Classic Porsche Sold: 76 930, 90 C4 Targa, 87 944, 06 Cayenne Turbo, 73 911 ChumpCar endurance racer - featured in May-June & July-Aug 2016 Classic Porsche Last edited by unclebilly; 01-16-2024 at 03:20 PM.. |
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Bland
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One other thing I will add is that it is my perception that Americans living in areas with poor economic conditions have the US military as a genuine opportunity whereas in Canada, it’s not the same… yes any kid can sign up but the opportunities seem to be fewer and less rewarding. I could be wrong.
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06 Cayenne Turbo S and 11 Cayenne S 77 911S Wide Body GT2 WCMA race car 86 930 Slantnose - featured in Mar-Apr 2016 Classic Porsche Sold: 76 930, 90 C4 Targa, 87 944, 06 Cayenne Turbo, 73 911 ChumpCar endurance racer - featured in May-June & July-Aug 2016 Classic Porsche |
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Leadfoot Geezer
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Santa Cruz, CA
Posts: 3,006
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The authorities have given up on that front. They're simply throwing up their hands, and instead, are doing things like pushing legislation here in CA requiring that NARCAN be available in schools for students who OD.
To me, this is basically admitting that they're simply powerless when it comes to controlling the flow of drugs into this country.
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'67 912, '70 911T, '81 911SC, '89 3.2 Targa - all sold before prices went crazy '13 BMW 335i coupe - current DD '67 VW Karmann Ghia convt. & '63 VW Beetle ragtop - ongoing projects |
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Registered
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 2,385
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Quote:
to pad their portfolio. Companies that are providing jobs and service's to there local community. Years later some CEO decides that, it's no longer relevant or a good fit. Shuts the company down. A loss of jobs and services to the community. Combine this with huge corporations going into communities across the country and paying cash for residential homes and property, undercutting families trying to purchase those same homes. Both are factors creating homelessness, drug use and people just giving up. Alot of this started during the 2008- 2010 recession. Banks foreclosing on homes and corporations going in with tons of money scooping up homes ,developments and property. This, along with other excellent points from everyone who has posted to this thread, has contributed to the problem. Money,profiteering and greed running roughshod over average people, with no means or resources to fight back. No wonder people self medicate. Last edited by serene911; 01-16-2024 at 03:16 PM.. |
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Parrothead member
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Monmouth county, NJ USA
Posts: 13,807
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Close to 75% of our non-health related cases in the ME's office are drug ODs.
The public really has no clue how bad it is. .
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Vinny Red '86 944, 05 Ford Super Duty Dually '02 Ram 3500 Diesel 4x4 Dually, '07Jeep Wrangler '62 Mercury Meteor '90 Harley 1200 XL "Live your Life in such a way that the Westboro Baptist Church will want to picket your funeral." |
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FUSHIGI
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: somewhere between here and there
Posts: 10,731
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Having seen users/addicts from all walks of life, most of whom arrived in that way primarily because they started as "curious" (aka bored), I'm not sure there is any putting the addiction genie back in the bottle. No different than anyone who starts smoking today, there is no saving people from themselves. The information is all there but people seem to think reality applies to others but not them. An unbelievable number of people today want to live in denial of reality. Whatevs but don't drag other people down when reality wins again.
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Cults require delusions. Last edited by pavulon; 01-16-2024 at 04:46 PM.. |
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....
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 18,618
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Quote:
Btw the blue m30 pills that the cartels bring across the border wholesale for $1.00-2.00 a pill. Very cheap fentanyl. Very cheap.
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dolor et pavor Copyright |
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Bland
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It’s cheaper to educate people so they can create their own opportunities than the cost on our medical system dealing with the fallout of these OD’s.
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06 Cayenne Turbo S and 11 Cayenne S 77 911S Wide Body GT2 WCMA race car 86 930 Slantnose - featured in Mar-Apr 2016 Classic Porsche Sold: 76 930, 90 C4 Targa, 87 944, 06 Cayenne Turbo, 73 911 ChumpCar endurance racer - featured in May-June & July-Aug 2016 Classic Porsche |
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Registered
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 2,385
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Quote:
the government spent there was a $7.00 return on it. Higher education and more opportunity's. |
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Registered
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: North of You
Posts: 9,160
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What percent of those people want to be educated? Drug addicts cross over the entire spectrum of society. Simply being educated is no guarantee of success. Especially once someone is addicted.
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"A machine you build yourself is a vote for a different way of life. There are things you have to earn with your hands." |
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Counterclockwise?
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This thread makes me sad.
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Rod 1986 Carrera 2001 996TT A bunch of stuff with spark plugs |
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Bland
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I think it’s kinda like the ‘get your daughter a horse so she won’t have time for boys’ theory. It works for most.
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06 Cayenne Turbo S and 11 Cayenne S 77 911S Wide Body GT2 WCMA race car 86 930 Slantnose - featured in Mar-Apr 2016 Classic Porsche Sold: 76 930, 90 C4 Targa, 87 944, 06 Cayenne Turbo, 73 911 ChumpCar endurance racer - featured in May-June & July-Aug 2016 Classic Porsche |
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Registered
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I know one thing AI can't be allowed to or won't be able to help with is addictive behavior.
God help us all if it does
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1980 911 - Metzger 3.6L 2016 Cayman S |
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