There's a new drug causing havoc, acetyl
fentanyl mixed with heroin. It is killing people — and as usual
politicians, those who lack any vision, intuition or the ability to grasp
social change stick to the same old solutions and of course, those old
solutions just done work.
Maine Attorney General Janet Mills was recently
interviewed by NPR radio. She gave the same old
answer to the problems with the out-dated "war on drugs."
She told NPR that
prosecutors should seek the ability to make felony charges in fentanyl cases.
She wants that both to push users to roll over on their friends and dealers and
also forcing them into rehab.
"We want to have
a significant sentence hanging over them, Mills says, "so that we can
encourage them — force them, if you will — into treatment."
There is no question this is a dangerous mixture. Fentanyl
is almost 100 times as strong as heroin. It's affects are supposed to be similar.
The average addict could likely handle a grain or more of pure heroin. The
problem is that they usually shoot up street heroin, up to a gram at a time
because heroin gets cut with other powders from one drug dealer to the next to stretch
it out. The average gram of street heroin is about 2 to 10 percent pure. The fentalyn is being added by street dealers
to boost their drug and make their customers satisfied so they will buy more.
But a fentalyn high can be as much as a few grains of salt. It just takes a
little too much of it to kill a person.
But new federal penalties are not inline with movements to
stop the ridiculous jailing of people for petty drug charges. Such a movement
has been going on in Wichita :
"The real problem
is that locking up users of marijuana has filled our jails, and that has put a
heavy tax burden on our society. It should be clear to everyone by now that we
are locking people up for petty reasons.
The group JENI (Jobs
and Education-Not Incarceration) and the Peace and Social Justice Center worked
for months to gather the needed signatures to put this issue on the ballot in
Wichita. They are concerned about mass incarceration and are looking for ways
to reduce it. Keeping marijuana users out of prisons is a good first step".
Also there is the problem of freedom of choice.[1] We
can decide what people actually do, but do we have the right to force them to
change their minds?
Such tactics rarely work . There is evidence that drug
treatment works, but mostly with people who WANT to get off drugs. If a
person likes those drugs or feels a need to self medicate, they will only go on
to using them again. From -សតិវ អតុ:
Our founding fathers
called for “the pursuit of happiness.” And yet those who want certain drugs
that may help them to feel better are denied by a puritan society that believes
prayer and religion should be the only kind of self medication. The founding
fathers’ words are simply ignored. We live in a “one-size fits all” society
that believes we must all live the same, believe the same, act the same and
live in a restricted environment where our life style choices are heavily
controlled.
There is a the simple case that those who really want to
self medicate with narcotics, for what ever reason, have the right to refuse
treatment. They should not be forced into something they really don't want.
And there is the moral argument that those who fail
treatment and get a felony conviction, they will not find work when they are
released and they may end up permanently ruined.
We need to focus on reducing mass incarceration and
protecting our freedoms. Drug laws lead to fascism.
So the bottom line is—yes fentanyl is a dangerous drug. But
oppose taking our freedom away from us.
-សតិវអតុ
[1] Steve
Otto, Can You Pass the Acid Test,
(Publishamerica, Baltimore ),
2007, pp. 10-11.
Pix from www.storrscongchurch.org.
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