If you have HBO, I highly recommend watching the latest episode of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (Season 9, Episode 5). It may be available on other platforms.
In this episode, Oliver takes on the misguided drug war approaches that have led to the massive number of overdoses due to fentanyl and advocates some serious harm reduction approaches.
Update: here is it on Youtube:
I have another idea. As a 20 year chronic pain patient who needs opiate medications just to function and have any kind of life outside of bed, my medical treatment for the last 5 years has been dictated by federal law enforcement. Due to the poorly written 2016 CDC Opioid prescribing guidelines, I am being punished for the actions of those who misuse and abuse opioids. The DEA decides what amount of prescription opiates my pain management doctor can prescribe. If they decide that a doctor is prescribing too much, he/she can be prosecuted and sent to prison. This certainly makes it easy for the DEA to look like it’s actually doing something, as all they have to do is search through state PDMP’s until they find a doc who THEY think is writing too many scrips. It’s like shooting fish in a barrel! I mean doctors only go through years of training in order to learn how to properly diagnose and treat medical conditions! So, of course, they dare not tempt the DEA to go after them, as they can lose their livelihood. But the REAL problem, as we all know, is the explosion of illicit fentanyl on the streets. It is not, nor has it EVER been, prescription opioids causing the exponential increase in overdose deaths in this country. (Read the reporting of Josh Bloom @acsh.org for the truth of what’s happening.) Since everyone knows that the WAR ON DRUGS has been a complete and utter failure since day one, why wouldn’t the DEA want to take the path of least resistance and continue to sit on its’ ass, looking to bust doctors who are only trying to help relieve the needless suffering of those in pain? Because it’s easier to do that than to go after street drug dealers, who are responsible for the breathtaking rise in OD’s due to the prevalence of illicit (NOT prescription) fentanyl in almost every kind of street drug.
Humans have a natural proclivity for drug use, and Congress should note the fact and go with the flow. For example, a new study supports the drunken monkey hypothesis, “that our attraction to booze arose millions of years ago, when our ape and monkey ancestors discovered that the scent of alcohol led them to ripe, fermenting and nutritious fruit.”
Pain relief from cannabinoids is safe in conjunction with opioids. Anyone familiar with combining both, as I once did recovering from a broken clavicle, can confirm the research findings. Cannabinoids win again:
Improvements in brain connectivity found in psilocybin therapy helps in treating depression, and may provide a therapy for anorexia and addiction:
John W. Whitehead, a constitutional law attorney, calls out no-knock warrants:
Hysterical police officers are in critical need of more medical science education regarding Fentanyl.
Science marches on nonetheless. There’s at least one possible explanation for this type of phenomenon.
The yin is called a placebo, in which medical research patients believe they’re under the effect of a wonderful pain relieving drug when in fact they’ve only consumed a sugar pill. It falls into the category of a hypnotic autosuggestion. The yang is called a nocebo in which the drug in question has a dark moral cloud hanging over it as well as alleged magical powers that adversely affect anyone consuming or coming anywhere near the easily available forbidden fruit. This ill effect is more a characteristic of radioactive materials than it is of weed. Fentanyl doesn’t do this, and neither does cannabis.
There was a story years ago of German police officers walking through a marijuana garden and being overcome by the fragrance of cannabis flowers that supposedly gave them a heady high. If only it were that easy—and economical.
I tried explaining this and the nocebo effect to a liquor store clerk. It was like talking to a wall because he had seen a video. In my neck of the woods law enforcement is bitching about open drug markets in San Francisco as the source of fentanyl in the Emerald Triangle.
Talking to a wall. That sounds about right. Certain segments of state public education, largely relegated to rural evangelical outposts located in more isolated parts of the U.S., have adhoc agreements with the government creating a sort of partnership in which evangelicals dumb down pupils and thereby society so that government can make people poor and thereby socially dependent, entranced or addicted to certain whacked-out evangelical support networks. Your liquor store clerk sounds like one of the isolated and disconnected victims of the battle for separation of church and state.
The way it works in the dystopian public school systems located in cult ridden areas of America is standard. First, the best type of propaganda is information that’s withheld. Government secrets in archives all over the world are littered with embarrassments that might bring down some corrupt political sucker. Information used to be easier to contain. The Internet changed all that. Pre internet schools in some areas of the rural hinterland were known to withhold science education from students in the K to 7 category, while making science studies optional to pursue thereafter. Some may still do it by trickier means. Traditionally, we’re talking about not allowing books about dinosaurs on primary school book shelves, because the 1926 Scopes Trial….
Another trick of the trade for dominionist evangelicals who’ve occupied public school positions as teachers and administrators is to make any subject, oftentimes history, so boring that few are willing to pick up a better written book on historically bizarre topics that turn out to be very entertaining. Students are thus expected to be discouraged from reading troubling and divisive topics like inquisition history, books that might contain really interesting and useful points needed for survival when one finds oneself pitted against modern day inquisitions.
Attacks upon or the abuse of intellectually promising students are common in schools riddled with dogma. Smart and imaginative kids are viewed like The Bad Seed from a tweaked out 1956 movie. Some children just seemed naturally possessed by demons (facts). Bright and inquisitive students in particular represent a potential threat to stupid, corrupt and evil cult status quos. Potential commies all. I’ve known many of them. One individual broke the chains of his community’s religious dogma by obtaining a medical degree and then fleeing the U.S. to live and work in Belgium. Before emigrating, he sublimated his frustrating experiences with cults and his cult hobbled teachers by developing a politically incorrect computer game he dubbed Mormonoids. He was featured for it in Wired Magazine.
I think the forced ignorance of science in public schools is America’s greatest problem at this time in its history. The very devices and methods needed for survival are being thwarted by people who don’t give a damn about their own survival or anyone else’s, and who refuse to live in the present reality because reality is too hard on their little brains.
Much of this topic has been covered before, in works like those of Richard Hofstader’s Pulitzer Prize winning book Anti-intellectualism in American Life, c. 1963, in which Hofstader illustrates not only anti-intellectualism but the persecution and belittlement of teachers whose duty it is to inform and educate in a way that can give their students an edge in the truly crazy world they’re about to encounter. The most recent episode of Bill Maher has a YouTube segment on the topic of deliberately bad public education. The video’s comments tell the same story.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6dMOfwUP0F0