RiverDog wrote:Yeah, I know, the Washington Examiner is a conservative rag that promotes almost exclusively conservative takes. But this editorial is spot on:
Residents in Portland, Oregon, have continued to learn the hard way that the soft-on-crime approach they permitted their leaders to institute has consequences as businesses continue to depart the city.
Walmart is closing its last two locations in Portland just months after CEO Doug McMillon warned that rampant thefts would lead the company to raise prices or close stores in some locations. Residents in the neighborhoods of those two locations will have to shop elsewhere, and 580 employees will also be affected by the closures.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opin ... e-policies
To be fair, Walmart's official statement regarding the store closures did not mention crime as being one of the reasons, but it's almost certainly one of if not the major factor as it directly impacts their profit. And they're not the only business in the Rose City that has thrown up their hands and closed. Additionally, city leaders appear to have gotten the message as they're finally cracking down on at least some of the crime that's been causing businesses to leave:
Portland police are now finally taking this seriously. Officers are conducting anti-shoplifting “blitzes,” arresting 64 people in a December operation that led to 10 stolen vehicles being recovered alongside three firearms and almost $9,000 in stolen merchandise. A February operation led to another 40 arrests, with officers recovering $2,000 in merchandise and handing out 32 felony charges and 28 misdemeanors. Another of these operations was carried out on Sunday.
But the damage done by years of enabling criminals to do what they like can’t be erased so easily. Walmart is leaving, joining over 2,500 downtown businesses that moved out since 2019. The city has burned the trust of business owners and must now begin the long process of rebuilding that trust. Portland is now associated with riots, homelessness, and rampant thefts, and it will be for years to come. With fewer options for both shopping and employment, Portland residents will (quite literally) be paying the price.
Closing the barn door after the horses got out is an appropriate analogy. Businesses pay taxes, and fewer businesses means less revenue for the city and fewer resources for police and projects designed to address the homeless problem.
And Portland isn't the only city suffering from rampant crime and homelessness. Chicago's once popular mayor recently got soundly beaten in a recent election, primarily due to the state of crime and homelessness within their city.
Is it fair to blame liberal Democrats for the state of the big cities they manage? I certainly don't hear anyone talking about defunding the police anymore.
mykc14 wrote:Yeah it is fair to blame liberal democrats. Defunding the police and the whole BLM movement and CRT are actually taking us backwards in our steps towards equality/equity. Liberal ran cities are crumbling with Portland, San Fran, and Seattle among the worst. The rate at which these once beautiful cities have fallen apart is extremely alarming. Hopefully they wake up and look at real, lasting solutions to the drug, homelessness, and crime issues that are driving businesses and tax paying residents away.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The way Democrats are allowing these homeless drug addict camps to grow in Washington State is criminal in my opinion. Watching Seattle and Everett with these heavy drug addicted zombies wandering about is terrible when you have lived here long enough to know that were not there when you were young.
Where I live Everett is a mess as are parts of Seattle. It's seeping into the suburbs where I live where there have been some pretty nasty murders having to do with drug dealing in some of the local parks.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The Democrats answer to make it look like crime statistics are lower is decriminalize low value property crime and drug use, then claim the have decreased crime which is like getting rid of speed laws and claiming there is no speeding. Democrats are manipulating crime statistics to make themselves look better like we're all stupid. You can't designate certain crimes as no longer felonies or jailable offenses, then act like you reduced crime when the type of crime is still clearly occurring.
This is why when I look at the government, you can't trust them or those that follow them blindly. They don't care about regular citizens because if they call the police, they immediately come or provide assistance. Whereas regular citizens have to walk amongst the drug zombies hoping they don't get targeted by them.
The Democratic answer is decriminalize and force regular folks to deal with their presence whether robbing folks or acting in an insane manner. It's very sad.
RiverDog wrote:I'm not sure that I can blame the homeless problem on the Dems, at least not in its entirety. Spokane has a homeless problem. So does the Tri Cities and Walla Walla. It seems to have penetrated cities big and small no matter which party is in control. Some are more successful at dealing with than others, but I get the sense that all the successful ones are doing is chasing them from one place that won't tolerate them to another that will. They're not necessarily solving it.
But other types of crime they absolutely are to blame. Seattle is still dealing with the aftermath of their Defund the Police initiatives:
The department is still losing more officers than it can hire. So far in 2023, 16 employees have left SPD for a variety of reasons. Only 10 have been hired to fill those vacancies. The goal for this year is to hire 125 total officers.
Even if that happens, staffing levels will still be far lower than where (Chief of Police) Diaz wants them to be to adequately patrol the streets of Seattle.
In 2020, Seattle's pack of baboons city council passed a resolution to cut their PD budget by 50%. Although they never got to that extreme, they still cut it by 17% at a time when crime was on the rise, so it's no wonder that they've seen such an increase. The open hostility towards the police shown by the city council was directly responsible for over 400 officers quitting SPD, and given the current labor shortage in all industries, they'll be playing catch up for years to come.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The way Democrats are allowing these homeless drug addict camps to grow in Washington State is criminal in my opinion. Watching Seattle and Everett with these heavy drug addicted zombies wandering about is terrible when you have lived here long enough to know that were not there when you were young.
Where I live Everett is a mess as are parts of Seattle. It's seeping into the suburbs where I live where there have been some pretty nasty murders having to do with drug dealing in some of the local parks.
The Democrats answer to make it look like crime statistics are lower is decriminalize low value property crime and drug use, then claim the have decreased crime which is like getting rid of speed laws and claiming there is no speeding. Democrats are manipulating crime statistics to make themselves look better like we're all stupid. You can't designate certain crimes as no longer felonies or jailable offenses, then act like you reduced crime when the type of crime is still clearly occurring.
This is why when I look at the government, you can't trust them or those that follow them blindly. They don't care about regular citizens because if they call the police, they immediately come or provide assistance. Whereas regular citizens have to walk amongst the drug zombies hoping they don't get targeted by them.
The Democratic answer is decriminalize and force regular folks to deal with their presence whether robbing folks or acting in an insane manner. It's very sad.
mykc14 wrote:They certainly are manipulating crime rates by decriminalizing lots of things but Seattle can't really hide the fact that they have reached a 15 year high in violent crime and the rate that it is increasing is scary. After the "defund the police" movement violent crime shot up 40%, but it was already on the rise. What we are witnessing first hand in San Fran, Portland, and Seattle is how to destroy a city in 10 years. If city leaders don't take some ownership and clean stuff up what will these cities look like by 2030?
mykc14 wrote:Here's a breakdown of the 10 States with the highest percent of homeless per capita vs. the 10 states with the lowest homelessness per capita and how these states voted in the last presidential election.
10 Highest homelessness per capita:
1- California- Dem
2- Vermont- Dem
3- Oregon- Dem
4- Hawaii- Dem
5- New York- Dem
6- Washington- Dem
7- Maine- Dem
8- Alaska- Rep
9- Nevada- Dem
10- Delaware- Dem
10 Lowest:
1- Mississippi- Rep
2- South Carolina- Rep
3- Illinois- Dem
4- Alabama- Rep
5- Virginia- Dem
6- Iowa- Rep
7- West Virginia- Rep
8- North Dakota- Rep
9- Indiana- Rep
10- Conn- Dem
There is a clear connection between Dem States and Homelessness issues.
RiverDog wrote:Kudos for doing some homework to illustrate your point. But simply using how a state voted in a POTUS election does not necessarily represent which party controls the state. Virginia, for example, has a Republican governor and one chamber of the Legislature is controlled by the Republicans yet it voted Democratic in the last election. Nevada and Vermont both have a Republican governors despite the fact that they fell to Biden.
One of the problems with trying to use the data you presented to draw the conclusions you're trying to make is that there are no reliable estimates on the homeless populations. From the op ed section of the New York Times:
We don’t know exactly how many people are homeless in America. We don’t even have a particularly good guess. But the federal estimate relies on local one-night-only head counts of the homeless population, conducted at the end of January, that seem almost designed to produce an undercount. A federal audit recently described the method as unreliable, which means that the government’s ignorance is impeding efforts to provide necessary aid to people in desperate need.
In 2017, for example, the government put the total homeless population at 550,996. That same year, school districts across the country, using a broader definition, reported 1.35 million homeless students, according to the most recent data from the National Center for Education Statistics. That number, it bears emphasizing, is just a count of homeless students — not their parents or other family members, and not the rest of the homeless population.
Cities generally rely on volunteers, and larger cities often sample rather than attempt a comprehensive count. New York, for example, divides the city into 7,000 zones, and then actually tries to count the number of homeless people in 1,500 of those zones.
It’s not uncommon — and, under the circumstances, hardly surprising — for jurisdictions to report annual swings of as much as 50 percent in the number of people reportedly living without shelter. These swings are almost certainly incorrect.
The government knows all this. A report issued by the Government Accountability Office in July 2020 concluded the counts “did not provide a reliably precise estimate of the homeless population.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/28/opin ... -data.html
So do we know that the rankings you presented were based on data that was using the same definition of homelessness, was done at the same time of the year, and using the same methodology? And even of the answer is yes, there's enough differences between those states to make an apples-to-apples comparison next to impossible. If the Federal government counts heads in January, would you honestly expect to get accurate numbers of the homeless in Alaska and North Dakota vs. Hawaii and Nevada?
mykc14 wrote:Also using school numbers to count homeless population is completely unreliable. They have very loose definitions of homeless and often inflate those numbers to get federal grants.
RiverDog wrote:Let's assume that you guys are correct, that the Democrats are responsible for the homeless problem. What, specifically, have they done to cause it? Higher taxes? More liberal drug laws? Soft on crime? And if mykc's ranking is anywhere near accurate, WTF is Alaska doing near the top of it? Why would Illinois be one of the top states in dealing with the homeless problem? Didn't they have a well-publicized issue with homeless at O'Hare International? Why would it have been a campaign issue in the recent mayoral election in Chicago?
My take is that yes, there does seem to be a worse homeless problem in large cities that happen to be run by Democrats. And Democrats have proven themselves to be wholly incapable of solving the problem. But are Republicans any better? If so, what solutions have they had? Or is their success due to the fact that they are tasked with a less dense area to police, a more educated population that is less likely to turn to drugs, and in areas that that are cheaper to live in? Are they simply chasing their homeless to areas with a larger population of all types? And lastly, what would you do to solve it?
I can blame the Democrats for a lot of things, but they are not the root cause of the homeless problem. IMO it's society in general that has caused it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Democrats have allowed the drug problem with heroin to reach a point of no return that it is no longer controllable. Between prescription drugs, heroin, fentanyl, meth, and several other drugs we can barely name and then toss in alcohol and real insanity, they have allowed the drug problem in America to reach a percentage that we can't sufficiently deal with growing crime and homeless it causes.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The lock them up Republicans are being called racist and the like because they want more prison funding, more police, and harder sentences on drug addicts and the associated drug problems.
Then there is heavy amounts of drugs coming across the border which gets lumped together with the anti-immigrant rhetoric which the Dems conveniently sell as a group of racist anti-immigrant Republicans like Trump even though there is legitimate problems with drug cartels and gangs in Central and South America with us being their number one customers. Do you think poor Latins are paying expensive prices for fentanyl, coke, and meth?
There's a reason Republicans and Democrats keep handing power back to each other. They are both caught in ideological BS that is absolutely terrible for this nation. Both sides are so busy garnering votes from villainizing the other side nothing gets done to really solve these very real issues.
I don't want immigration control at the Southern Border because I hate immigrants, I want control because of what comes out of that area including the insane drug cartels and gangs which are documented problems in the nations they come from.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ju%C3%A1rez_Cartel#:~:text=The%20Ju%C3%A1rez%20Cartel%20(Spanish%3A%20C%C3%A1rtel,border%20from%20El%20Paso%2C%20Texas.
It's not being hateful towards immigrants to want the Southern American border cleaned up and the unchecked crossings with drug mules and cartel and gang members stopped. Even they are 1% of the immigrants crossing, that is a lot of crime and drugs coming over. It doesn't take a large percentage of criminals and drugs to cause a lot of issues.
This is a lot of stuff that feeds the entire probem that is not being dealt with due to constant gridlock and constant villanization of political parties where many party members are asking for reasonable limitations on this type of behavior.
RiverDog wrote:Let's assume that you guys are correct, that the Democrats are responsible for the homeless problem. What, specifically, have they done to cause it? Higher taxes? More liberal drug laws? Soft on crime? And if mykc's ranking is anywhere near accurate, WTF is Alaska doing near the top of it? Why would Illinois be one of the top states in dealing with the homeless problem? Didn't they have a well-publicized issue with homeless at O'Hare International? Why would it have been a campaign issue in the recent mayoral election in Chicago?
My take is that yes, there does seem to be a worse homeless problem in large cities that happen to be run by Democrats. And Democrats have proven themselves to be wholly incapable of solving the problem. But are Republicans any better? If so, what solutions have they had? Or is their success due to the fact that they are tasked with a less dense area to police, a more educated population that is less likely to turn to drugs, and in areas that that are cheaper to live in? Are they simply chasing their homeless to areas with a larger population of all types? And lastly, what would you do to solve it?
I can blame the Democrats for a lot of things, but they are not the root cause of the homeless problem. IMO it's society in general that has caused it.
RiverDog wrote:Let's assume that you guys are correct, that the Democrats are responsible for the homeless problem. What, specifically, have they done to cause it? Higher taxes? More liberal drug laws? Soft on crime? And if mykc's ranking is anywhere near accurate, WTF is Alaska doing near the top of it? Why would Illinois be one of the top states in dealing with the homeless problem? Didn't they have a well-publicized issue with homeless at O'Hare International? Why would it have been a campaign issue in the recent mayoral election in Chicago?
My take is that yes, there does seem to be a worse homeless problem in large cities that happen to be run by Democrats. And Democrats have proven themselves to be wholly incapable of solving the problem. But are Republicans any better? If so, what solutions have they had? Or is their success due to the fact that they are tasked with a less dense area to police, a more educated population that is less likely to turn to drugs, and in areas that that are cheaper to live in? Are they simply chasing their homeless to areas with a larger population of all types? And lastly, what would you do to solve it?
I can blame the Democrats for a lot of things, but they are not the root cause of the homeless problem. IMO it's society in general that has caused it.
mykc14 wrote:I'm not saying the Democrats are causing the homeless problem. It is clearly multifaceted and is caused by both Republicans and Democrats and has deep roots in the drug epidemic and mental health. What the Democrats are doing is passing policies that lead to more drug use and make it really hard for people to get mental health help if they don't personally want the help- even if they aren't really capable of making that decision. The policies being passed by liberal democrats are extremely conducive to worsening these issues.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The Dems and Republicans competing agendas block any useful progress on drugs.
I know if I were dealing with the drug problem, I'd do the following:
1. Make the punishment fit he crime with forced rehabilitation.
2. Severely punish dealing and sale up to and including the death penalty or life imprisonment. Deaths associated with drug use would be murder charges attributed to dealers.
3. Start a military campaign against the cartels in South and Central America declaring them terrorists selling poison in America in an attempt to destabilize and harm America. I'd rip them apart. I'd Tombstone them as in when Wyatt Earp said, "I see a red sash, I kill the man wearing it." If there is a cartel or gang member around, I kill the man associated. The only way to take care of these types of people is harshly same as when the English defeated the Thuggee cult in India or how we've had to deal with terrorists: burn them down, accept the collateral damage, and end the problem.
4. Legalize marijuana federally to get that out of the way so we're not wasting law enforcement resources on a drug about the same level as alcohol.
5. Allow lawyers to use Tort Law to sue anyone making money selling drugs to citizens outside of a doctor's prescription and even doctor's who overprescribe pain medication.
I know none of this will happen due to political gridlock and the Democrats wanting to play the "spoiled child" soft game with Americans using drugs selling all of us they're just victims we must help.
My feeling is and always has been at certain points in time a problem reaches such bad proportions you have to burn it out the hard way. I have no such considerations for human beings that I have any trouble wiping a bunch of them out to save the ones that are worth saving while cutting away the cancerous humans that give us nothing.
It's like when I watch Norwegians euthanize a walrus that has claimed territory near a human settlement and then leave Mark Brevik in jail after he murdered 70 children. It's the logic of the left and makes no sense whatsoever. You kill a walrus doing what is natural to it while pretending the life of a scumbag like Mark Brevik is worth preserving because they are human? Sorry, I'd rather spend the money to move the walrus and spend a few bucks on a bullet in Brevik's head.
But that's the left wing for you: always wanting to consider everyone special snowflakes and no harsh treatment of humanity. I just don't share that attitude. If I could take over for a short while supervillain style, I'd clean some things up and crush the opposition for a while including all the stupid ass lawyers manipulating the system to protect these scummy drug dealers. I think society could use a bit of harsh justice right now.
RiverDog wrote:I can blame the Democrats for a lot of things, but they are not the root cause of the homeless problem. IMO it's society in general that has caused it.
I'll agree with most of that. The Dems have horribly mismanaged their cities, especially Seattle and Portland, and their attitude towards law enforcement is a big driver of a range of problems that have gotten much worse, including homelessness, drug usage, and crime in general. But the way you worded your first comments, claiming that there is a clear connection between blue states and homelessness by using a rather hodge podge ranking of states by Presidental voting trends and percent of homelessness, indicated to me that you felt they were the cause and/or that the Republicans had a better grasp of the situation. Although there are exceptions, most of the homeless problems tend to be concentrated in urban areas, and that just happens to be where Democrats rule. Republicans are lucky because their task is much less complicated as there's significant demographical differences between urban areas where Democrats govern and suburban/rural populations that the R's manage.
One thing that I don't agree with is your statement that "people to get mental health help if they don't personally want the help'. It's a waste of resources trying to rehabilitate someone that doesn't want help. I'm not sure what the rate of recidivism for drug addicts is, but for those imprisoned for substance related problems and subsequently released, it's about 85%.
Homelessness has become an alternate lifestyle for many. I'm almost to the point where I think we should just start tossing them into concentration camps and tell them that the only way out is to accept treatment and prove that they're drug free and can safely re-enter society, give them a motivation to clean up. Sounds awful, doesn't it?
RiverDog wrote:Sorry, I'm not buying your argument. It's pointless to try to find reliable information on the number of homeless, link it with a particular political party, then produce a credible ranking. As you said, conducting accurate surveys on the number of homeless is next to impossible. Some rely on federal government statistics that are taken once a year at a specific time, ie January, that's certain to produce an undercount. Others might use advocacy groups that are motivated to over count so as to make the problem look worse than it is so they may obtain more funding. The same goes on the other end of the spectrum. Red states might want to intentionally undercount so as to make the problem not look as bad. There's also other factors that may dictate the extent of the homeless problem in one area vs. another besides which political party is in control.
RiverDog wrote:Forced rehab likely won't work for the majority of individuals, but it might cause some to make a personal commitment. I'm more inclined to give them whatever they want but keep them in some sort of prison camp and away from society. Except for those that accept that they have a problem and want to address it, I'm not concerned with rehabbing them. Just keep them from interacting with the rest of society.
I'm completely opposed to your second suggestion. If we could get countries like Columbia, Peru, Nicaragua, et al, to allow us to prosecute a war against drug cartels, then I'm good with it. But we can't act unilaterally as I think you're suggesting.
Your third suggestion is a moot point. I don't think there's any law enforcement agency that's pursuing marijuana law violations except as it is related to more serious crimes.
Most doctors are already extremely cautious about over prescribing drugs. And I'm not sure how much of the current drug crisis is related to MD's over prescribing meds.
But, you gave it a shot. I do agree that the problem is so large that something radical is going to have to be embarked on if we are to be successful.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I would act unilaterally. I think we need a tyrant like Rome used to vote in for short periods to take care of problems before returning to a Republic. Someone to bypass the legal game players and the whining citizens and all the problems that Democracies create that destroy them from within while the people halting problems from being solved destroy their own nation due to a lack of action.
I've listened to you for a while. Your understanding of heroin addiction and the harder drugs is very lacking. Heroin and opiates are destructive poison. You don't waste time coming up with friendly ways to deal with heroin and similar drug addiction. You don't worry about the addicts you can't recover, you just burn them down and be done with them.
Aseahawkfan wrote:If the Central and South American nations are producing these drugs and violating our laws in shipping it into the nation, that is what I consider an act of war against us. They can no more handle their cartel problem than the Middle East could handle their terrorist problem. It has spilled over into our land for too long now and needs to be harshly dealt with.
It's another one of those things you don't read much about like when they had vote in an 18 year old young woman as sheriff in Juarez only to have her ask for political asylum because the drug cartels threatened her life almost immediately.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marisol_Valles_Garc%C3%ADa
They have lost control in Central and South America of their drug cartels. America sitting by and allowing this when they pose a threat to our stability with the drugs and problems they cause in our neighboring nations is willful neglect that will as it has done with the likes of Osama and Saddam cause a more severe problem down the line. These things should get taken care of before they get off the ground, but they don't. So now we should go in and clean it up because the Central and South American nations are not capable and are in fact allowing their governments, military, and police forces to be infested with cartel personnel.
This is nothing more than a dream on my part that won't happen while I'm alive. I'd support a leader that would do this myself. I get tired of listening to Republicans classify marijuana in the same category as heroin, meth, and other more dangerous drugs. Wasting law enforcement resources on MJ is wasteful and pointless. But I would welcome harsh treatment of heroin addicts and the harder drugs. Heroin and opiates and the like create drug zombies. People so addicted to the drug they would debase themselves and hurt their children just to get that heroin high. The heroin, fentanyl, and the like needs to be dealt with like the very real and dangerous problem that it is with very little sympathy or legal meandering we see in the political system to save future generations from this vile addictive poison.
Hawktawk wrote:This is personal. Both my older 2 have struggled with opiate addiction. My son is doing OK now and not sure about sarah as we dont speak much right now.
She went from a beautiful young woman capable of anything to living on the streets of Portland, dancing in strip clubs and even selling herself on the streets, Shes been in rehab 3 times. At one point she and her pos dealer boyfriend were breaking into vacant houses to stay warm in the winter.Sarah was the victim of molestation at the hands of one of my ex wifes BFs to be fair, its been a life sentence. Its hell as a parent , a gut ache that never goes away .
Portland is the heroin capitol of the world. It was when it was illegal and it is when its decriminalized. So its up close and personal. I have no idea the answer. Stiffer enforcement ? Fine .
your taxes will go way up to pay the extra law enforcement and feed and house them.
Same for government assistance. Dont help those scummy bums with my tax dollars. The same party screaming the loudest telling women what to do with their bodies have absolutely no plan for after they are born. Just a foil for class warfare.
Hawktawk wrote:This is personal. Both my older 2 have struggled with opiate addiction. My son is doing OK now and not sure about sarah as we dont speak much right now.
She went from a beautiful young woman capable of anything to living on the streets of Portland, dancing in strip clubs and even selling herself on the streets, Shes been in rehab 3 times. At one point she and her pos dealer boyfriend were breaking into vacant houses to stay warm in the winter.Sarah was the victim of molestation at the hands of one of my ex wifes BFs to be fair, its been a life sentence. Its hell as a parent , a gut ache that never goes away .
Portland is the heroin capitol of the world. It was when it was illegal and it is when its decriminalized. So its up close and personal. I have no idea the answer. Stiffer enforcement ? Fine .
your taxes will go way up to pay the extra law enforcement and feed and house them.
Same for government assistance. Dont help those scummy bums with my tax dollars. The same party screaming the loudest telling women what to do with their bodies have absolutely no plan for after they are born. Just a foil for class warfare.
Hawktawk wrote:This is personal. Both my older 2 have struggled with opiate addiction. My son is doing OK now and not sure about sarah as we dont speak much right now.
She went from a beautiful young woman capable of anything to living on the streets of Portland, dancing in strip clubs and even selling herself on the streets, Shes been in rehab 3 times. At one point she and her pos dealer boyfriend were breaking into vacant houses to stay warm in the winter.Sarah was the victim of molestation at the hands of one of my ex wifes BFs to be fair, its been a life sentence. Its hell as a parent , a gut ache that never goes away .
Portland is the heroin capitol of the world. It was when it was illegal and it is when its decriminalized. So its up close and personal. I have no idea the answer. Stiffer enforcement ? Fine .
your taxes will go way up to pay the extra law enforcement and feed and house them.
Same for government assistance. Dont help those scummy bums with my tax dollars. The same party screaming the loudest telling women what to do with their bodies have absolutely no plan for after they are born. Just a foil for class warfare.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Hawktawks story is an example of what I'm talking about because most American's are not getting it about opiates. There are no half measures. There is no curing it with a government paid place and decriminalization. There is no winning with standard drug enforcement. You need to go absolutely nuclear on opiate addiction. Kill the dealers with no mercy shown and the addicts need forced rehab. You need to treat it like someone is selling poison to your children.
I liken it to watching movies about drugs that show the difference between the levels of problematic addiction. With MJ you get movies like Cheech and Chong or Harold and Kumar go to White Castle or Pineapple Express. With coke you might get a Bright Lights, Big City or some coked up party movie. With heroin you get Requiem for a Dream, Trainspotting, and Less than Zero. Heroin movies aren't funny forays hanging out with your buddies. Or even coked up business people at some party talking fast and not able to sleep. Heroin is a descent into self-destruction and depravity on a level no one that hasn't seen it or done it can imagine.
I originally thought all these heroin movies were exaggerations until I had a friend dot that stuff. I've been around drugs my life which I why I don't touch them. Seen coke use, lots of MJ, LSD, some meth, crank, alcohol, and the other crap. That stuff can be bad. But nothing is close to heroin addiction. When my buddy got into heroin, he fell into a pit. Sold off most of his stuff to pay for it. Had addicts sleeping in his living room if they gave him a fix. His home went from mildly cluttered to looking like he lived in an abandoned building with whinoes with shopping carts in his living room they used for daily thievery to pay for their heroin addiction. His dealer used to pay girls he lived with in heroin sex or having them turning tricks in his house to pay for their heroin. Heroin and other opiates are addictive poison on a level I've never seen.
I think continuing with these half-measures is a mistake. They need to burn down the dealers and treat heroin selling on our streets like an act of war on our society. Enslaving people to a drug as addictive as heroin is vile act and should be treated as such.
The heroin trade should be burnt down. I wish I could take control for a while because I would burn the heroin trade to the ground and start offing the dealers to dry up the supply treating them like some kind of terrorist trying to kill people with their drug. Not sure how long we have to continue to watch heroin do its evil whether it's killing people or turning them into drug slaves before we do what is necessary to destroy the industry. Heroin isn't coke or MJ or acid or any of the softer drugs. It's a drug on a whole other level and needs to be treated as such and absolutely wiped out.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Half measures are definitely not working. I wish we had the resolve as a nation to do what you say. Down here in Baton Rouge, fentanyl has reached near epidemic proportions. Lots of ODs are happening because they are cutting softer drugs with this stuff. Small children have also been ODing when they find their parent's fentanyl stash. To the local LE's credit, they've made a concerted effort to track it down and arrest people; they busted three houses in relative quite neighborhoods (my neighbor was one of them). These places had lots of fentanyl along with several semi-automatic firearms. Not even sure if that's going to stem the tide.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:It's just going to have to bottom out. A real shame, but they made their bed.
RiverDog wrote:
Yeah, Portland and Seattle are in the first half of the 21st century like Detroit was in the last half of the 20th. Lots of plywooded windows and graffiti resulting from businesses leaving, in Detroit's case, caused by the demise of the Big 3 auto makers. It's really sad as both Seattle and Portland were so vibrant and fun to visit. I used to take my daughter to Seattle, to the aquarium on the waterfront, Seattle Center, baseball games, boat tours on the bay. Now, they're open cesspools of human feces, blue tarps, and shopping carts filled with criminals, drug addicts, and an understaffed and demoralized police department that's been taught to worry about covering their asses first and protecting the community second.
I'm not going to blame the Dems/libs for all of Seattle and Portland's homeless/drug problems, but they damn sure didn't do anything effective to address it (anyone remember the $80k toilets for the homeless?) And I blame them for about 90% of the problems associated with their police departments, which is the really frustrating thing regarding this subject as so many of us could see that one coming.
c_hawkbob wrote:Decriminalized not legalized. Big difference.
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