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tod evans
05-11-2017, 10:37 AM
No shit eh?

From Drudge;


The Heroin Business Is Booming in America

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2017-05-11/the-heroin-business-is-booming-in-america

On a drizzly May afternoon, a man in gray sweatpants and a black Bengals hoodie sold a half-gram of heroin for $70 inside a dingy market on the west side of Cincinnati. The buyer was a plainclothes police officer; the seller was promptly handcuffed. The bust was the first of two that a team of local police would make that Thursday and one of several heroin-related cases to cross their radios: Three people overdosed, and another was caught driving under the influence. Compared with some days in their district, it was pretty slow.

Heroin has become so pervasive in cities such as Cincinnati and so profitable for the cartels that supply it that even cops admit the sporadic arrests they make have little effect. “It’s really not going to make any impact out on the street,” says Detective Brandon Connley, speaking from the damp parking lot outside the market. “Everybody and their mom sells drugs these days. There’s always somebody right there to pick back up.”

Millions of Americans got hooked on pain pills during a prescription binge that started in the 1990s and peaked around 2011. As states have tightened monitoring and doctors have reduced dosages, it’s become harder for addicts to get prescription painkillers, driving many to get their fix off street drugs. Mexican cartels and big-city gangs have capitalized on the shift, extending networks of dealers across the U.S. and flooding the market with cheap heroin, according to law enforcement.

Cartels have begun lacing heroin with synthetic opioids including fentanyl, making a dose more addictive and cheaper to produce. Overdose reversal shots are helping addicts survive, often to use again, giving dealers a steady supply of repeat customers. With persistent demand and increasingly wide profit margins, 2017 is shaping up as the most profitable year ever for the U.S. heroin trade.

“We are seeing an unbelievably sad and extensive heroin epidemic, and there is no end in sight,” says Daniel Ciccarone, a medical doctor at the University of California at San Francisco who studies the heroin market. “We are not, in 2017, anywhere close to the top of this thing. Heroin has a life force of its own.”

Cincinnati has emerged as a center of the crisis. Dealers there are creative in marketing their product. Local police say they’ve seen them text their customers to advertise Sunday specials—two-for-ones and free samples, all set up on car hoods in a park. Some dealers have scheduled business hours. Others throw “testers” wrapped in paper slips printed with their phone number into passing cars, hoping to hook new business.

Making fentanyl in a lab costs about the same as producing heroin, $3,000 or $4,000 per kilogram, according to a Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman. Once it’s diluted and retailed, fentanyl brings in $1.2 million—more than twice the $500,000 a kilo of heroin commands.

To make heroin, cartels need to grow poppies in fields that can be hard to hide. All you need to make fentanyl is a lab, chemicals, and an able chemist. Cartels often bring in fentanyl from Mexico, though it’s also mail-ordered from China and shipped straight to the U.S. Police are beginning to worry that suppliers could manufacture fentanyl domestically. “With the potential that we’re going to see fentanyl labs popping up everywhere, I think it’s going to get worse before it gets better,” says Tim Reagan, a DEA agent in Cincinnati.

A lethal fentanyl dose is 2 milligrams, the weight of a few grains of salt, and addicts were wary of using it at first. Now many seek out what they call “the fire” for a stronger high, says Cincinnati Police Sergeant Frank Beavers, a plainclothes investigator. That’s made fentanyl into something of a success story for its sellers: It kills some customers, but those who survive end up with a more powerful addiction.

Mary Day, a 27-year-old from Cincinnati, noticed synthetics creeping into her heroin about three years ago. Her highs were suddenly more intense, her cravings irresistible. “I would get sicker quicker, and if I couldn’t get hold of one person and I got another person, their stuff wasn’t as good, and I didn’t get as high,” says Day, a recovering addict who says she’s been clean since April. “You have to chase it all day long.”

Cartels have begun experimenting with even more powerful synthetics. Among them are the elephant tranquilizer carfentanil, dubbed “rhino” on the street, and another powerful synthetic sometimes flown in from Hong Kong known as “pink.” Merely touching either can cause someone without an opioid tolerance to overdose as it leaches through the skin.

Carfentanil surfaced last summer, and police believe Cincinnati’s dealers were among the first to sell it. Cincinnati’s District 3 police began to find pink earlier this year, according to Beavers. The rise of various synthetics has increased the death toll. Surrounding Hamilton County saw a record 342 opioid-related overdose deaths last year and is on its way to exceeding that number in 2017, the county coroner says.

There’s no simple solution for heroin as long as it remains so profitable. Local governments are providing law enforcement officials and even addicts with nalaxone, a drug that can reverse overdoses. But the drug doesn’t deal with underlying addiction. What’s more, addicts of some new varieties of opioids don’t respond to the treatment. China outlawed carfentanil production in March, which U.S. authorities hope will cut down on the shipments.

President Trump pledged during his campaign to take on the opioid epidemic, but the House Republican health-care bill would slash funding to Medicaid—a crucial funder of drug treatment programs. Trump’s draft budget would also cut 95 percent of the funding for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, which coordinates much of U.S. drug strategy. On May 6, the Office of Management and Budget provided a list of federal drug prevention programs in several agencies, indicating that changes to the drug policy office may be part of a broader restructuring.

“Things are a little bit in chaos at the federal level,” says Jason Doctor, an associate professor at the University of Southern California’s School of Pharmacy. “I agree in principle with the idea that we need to do something differently, think creatively, or do something radical,” Doctor says. “I’m not confident yet that the administration is doing that.”

If there’s hope for the crisis, it may rest in people like Day, who committed to getting clean in April after watching a friend overdose on a small hit—“seven grains of salt.” She tried to revive him with a shot of nalaxone. It didn’t work. Emergency responders saved him, though she’s not sure how.

“Some addicts want that drug that’s killing everybody, because they want to get high or they hope they die,” says Day, who leaves treatment on May 21. “I wasn’t like that. It’s like a massive grave.”

Anti Federalist
05-11-2017, 11:45 AM
Millions of Americans got hooked on pain pills during a prescription binge that started in the 1990s and peaked around 2011.

Horseshit.

There have been numerous stories printed and posted about doctors that were terrified of being arrested and hauled off to jail because of over zealous DEA enforcement for prescribing pain killers for legitimate pain management. That's part of the problem, government sticking it's stupid fucking nose into health care again.

But more than that, there is a heroin epidemic, because the USG overthrew an anti drug government in Afghanistan and has been protecting a pro-poppy government for the last 15 years, resulting in a 10,000 percent increase in opium production, while at the same has pursued a foreign and trade policy that has been a disaster for us domestically and has led to the rise of a failed narco-state on our southern border which now has the highest violent crime rate in the world.

FFS...the bullshit piles up so fast in this country you need fucking wings to stay above it.

phill4paul
05-11-2017, 11:50 AM
Horseshit.

There have been numerous stories printed and posted about doctors that were terrified of being arrested and hauled off to jail because of over zealous DEA enforcement for prescribing pain killers for legitimate pain management. That's part of the problem, government sticking it's stupid fucking nose into health care again.

But more than that, there is a heroin epidemic, because the USG overthrew an anti drug government in Afghanistan and has been protecting a pro-poppy government for the last 15 years, resulting in a 10,000 percent increase in opium production, while at the same has pursued a foreign and trade policy that has been a disaster for us domestically and has led to the rise of a failed narco-state on our southern border which now has the highest violent crime rate in the world.

FFS...the bullshit piles up so fast in this country you need fucking wings to stay above it.

My VA doc mentioned on this when I visited Wed. Said it was a good thing I didn't go to the VA emergency room in Asheville when I blew out my back as they would not have given me Oxy like the urgent care doc did. Shaking his head he said, "For years they made us give them to everyone. The slogan was "No one leaves the VA in pain." Now," he said,"they won't even let us prescribe them to those that are in terrible pain."

tod evans
05-11-2017, 11:54 AM
My VA doc mentioned on this when I visited Wed. Said it was a good thing I didn't go to the VA emergency room in Asheville when I blew out my back as they would not have given me Oxy like the urgent care doc did. Shaking his head he said, "For years they made us give them to everyone. The slogan was "No one leaves the VA in pain." Now," he said,"they won't even let us prescribe them to those that are in terrible pain."


All the more reason to fully support the free (black) market for your pain relief needs....

dannno
05-11-2017, 12:11 PM
There’s no simple solution for heroin as long as it remains so profitable.

Maybe it wouldn't be so profitable if there was some legal competition :confused:

shakey1
05-11-2017, 01:45 PM
The Heroin Business Is Booming in America

Thanks to DEA & Big pHarma.

phill4paul
05-11-2017, 02:01 PM
All the more reason to fully support the free (black) market for your pain relief needs....

Agree. Also of note this doc actually prescribed some type of opiode for me (wasn't really listening to what kind as I didn't really need it, and it caught me by surprise, so I'll just have to wait until it arrives :)). Even though I'm no longer in pain. Said he could only give me 28 days worth instead of 30 because if he gave me 30 I might become addicted, and shook his head. "New guidelines." He said while rolling his eyes. He told me "You are a handyman and you've had back issues before. You never know when this might happen again and you might not get anything from another doctor. Just make sure to take the recommended dosage on the label."
So, as you can see he is thoroughly disgusted with the VA. He became my new doc at the VA about 4 yrs. ago. Said he was tired of private practice with all the bullshit insurance paperwork and thought the VA would just allow him to treat without the headache. 4 yrs. That's how long it took him to get disillusioned with the VA.