Posted on 08/28/2020 6:58:52 AM PDT by Kaslin
When it comes to Fentanyl, it is hard for us to think beyond the sheer human tragedy.
It is hard for us to think beyond the 32,000 lost to overdoses from this drug in 2018 up from 28,000 the year before.
It is hard for us to think beyond the suffering James Rauh of Cleveland has endured. His son, Thomas, injured himself in a roller blading accident and was prescribed opioids to deal with the pain. The son became addicted, turned to heroin and died when unbeknownst to him; he injected a dose of pure fentanyl that was provided by the drug dealer.
Its horrific to think Thomas Rauh died of a drug that was ordered from China over the internet and delivered by the US Postal Service. And most of the people who overdose, do not choose to take Fentanyl; rather, it is surreptitiously added to other drugs by unscrupulous dealers looking to make their product stretch further, as well as introduce the highly addictive synthetic opioid and increase their profits.
Its hard to think beyond the economic damage done by this drug the Council of Economic Advisers put the cost of the opioid epidemic at $2.5 trillion over the four years ending in 2019.
But think beyond the tragedy and cost we must because the threat is, incredibly, bigger than this. It has become in practice although not yet in legal force a weapon of mass destruction. It is being unleashed on our population now in tiny, controlled doses by those seeking to profit at others expense. But groups in the Middle East and elsewhere have expressed interest in obtaining weapons of mass destruction, and this drug has proven its viability.
When Chechen terrorists took over a theater in Moscow in 2002, authorities pumped a chemical through the vents. The chemical killed all the militants and 130 of the 850 hostages. The Russians never identified the substance they used, but it is believed to be Carfentanil, among the most dangerous of the 1,400 known analogues to Fentanyl.
Carfentanil is 40 times stronger than Fentanyl but 10,000 times stronger than morphine and 5,000 times stronger than heroin. Yet, heroin costs 15 times as much, which makes it almost an economic imperative for drug dealers to use Carfentanil, if they can obtain it, to cut their own drugs and deliver a more intense high to their customers.
A piece of Carfentanil the size of a grain of salt can be fatal. A kilogram could kill up to 50 million people roughly the population of South Korea. Developed as a tranquilizer for elephants and hippos, Carfentanil is so toxic zoo officials wear hazmat suits to sedate the animals because even one drop in a human eye or nose could be fatal. The 52,000 pounds of its less-toxic cousin Fentanyl the Mexican Navy seized off one ship in 2019 is enough to kill 11.5 billion people, or 1.5 times the worlds population.
Today, Fentanyl and its analogues are produced almost exclusively by small pharmaceutical firms in China. The Trump administration basically forced China to outlaw the production and distribution of Fentanyl, but the laws are not enforced and widely ignored. Drug cartels in Mexico also have begun to produce Fentanyl with help from the Chinese, and there is even evidence it is being produced in the United States with smuggled ingredients and equipment.
The Department of Homeland Security, which has issued a Material Threat Determination on Fentanyl, sees the drug as a potential mass casualty weapon whose high toxicity and increasing availability are attractive to threat actors seeking nonconventional materials for a chemical weapons attack, and the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission sees it as a form of chemical warfare.
These agencies have it right. Chemical weapons should be seen as weapons of mass destruction, and, given the definition in federal statute of a weapon of mass destruction any weapon designed or intended to cause death or serious bodily injury through the release, dissemination or impact of toxin or poisonous chemicals or their precursors Fentanyl and its analogues definitely qualify.
In honor of his son and the hundreds of thousands affected by this scourge, James Rauh has begun a petition drive to urge the US government to declare Fentanyl a weapon of mass destruction. This would enable the Department of Justice, Department of Homeland Security, Drug Enforcement Agency, Department of Defense and other relevant federal agencies to work together more effectively and produce the necessary administrative directives to eliminate this threat. I have signed it, and I hope you will too.
The US policy for use of nuclear weapons has two prongs it says we will shoot first if we perceive a threat and that we treat chemical weapons the same as nuclear. As James Rauh knows all too well, its too late for us to shoot first in the war on Fentanyl. But it is not too late to treat the threat Fentanyl and its analogues pose as the weapons of mass destruction they are.
Saint Floyd died of a fentanyl overdose. Look how much that cost us.
I suggested 3 years ago that sanctions be placed on China for the production of fentanyl. Crippling sanctions.
It is costing our nation billions of dollars a year via overdoses and treatment of overdoses. The taxpayers pay for almost all of this one way or another.
It is not just a problem here in the US either. This poison has spread throughout the world.
I think you are saying the mere fact a thing can be abused is not an argument against its legitimate use. Is that right?
Fentanyl is just the tip of the iceberg. There are much, much worse drugs out there.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equianalgesic
(I strongly recommend bookmarking this link for future reference.)
This Equianalgesic table compares the relative strength of painkillers, using oral morphine as its baseline of “1”.
Oxycodone is just rated 1.5 (times as strong as morphine)
Fentanyl is rated at 50-100
Carfentanil is 10,000 times as strong. A dose for a human is *one microgram* (1.0 µg) (It is also very cheap, with a *kilogram* costing only $5,000 - $10,000. The RCMP estimates that just 50 micrograms will almost certainly kill an adult human. Two traffickers have been busted with it, one with a kilogram, the other with 4 kilograms.
Sounds to me like Fentanyl is too dangerous to prescribe to the general public. I can see using it in hospitals or clinics (or hospice) where it can be strictly controlled, but it sounds too potentially lethal to let people dose themselves with it for pain. There are other less lethal meds.
Ayup.
Except it’s a legitimately prescribed drug.
The reason the drug deaths are not politically important and will not stir action is the same reason the daily shootings in Chicago are ignored. They involve an “unimportant” crime subculture and not mainstream America. Sure, plenty of innocent people get hurt or killed, but they are not generally part of the tax paying populace. If software engineers and PTA members were dying through no fault of their own, you would hear a great cry for action.
China’s response to the Opium Wars, they have long memories
For those who need it, fentanyl is a gift from God. I was given a dose when I underwent a bronchoscopy, didn’t feel a thing and walked home less than three hours later.
Chuck Fina!
Fentanyl factories are fixed in place.
Tell the ChiComs to blow them up tomorrow, or we will the next day with cruise missiles.
I think you are confusing the son being legitimately prescribed pain medications for an injury with him buying an illegal drug Heroin after he was addicted, and it says something that if he turned to illegal sources his doctor wasn't a shyster pill pusher, and being sold illegal fentanyl which he OD'd on.
I get kind of tired of the demonization of opioids which many of us use legitimately for chronic pain, as I have for many many years, and never get addicted. The author does it in this story by setting up opioids as the bogey man despite the fact that the individual didn't get help for his addiction and turned to illegal drugs from illegal sources, and those are thee drugs that caused his death.
I fell for the parents but we only have one side here and that is from a grieving parent who wants something other than his son to blame.
Speaking from personal experience I can say that it is amazing when used for certain procedures. I didn’t feel a thing when they shoved a camera down my windpipe and scraped out the inside of my lungs, I have no memory of the experience, there was no hangover and I walked home less than three hours later as though nothing had happened.
Yes, the article led me to believe they had prescribed it to the injured young man.
I get kind of tired of the demonization of opioids which many of us use legitimately for chronic pain, as I have for many many years, and never get addicted.
I had a problem getting Tramadol refilled. I have taken it for years, but I do not take it often. My primary doctor was no longer allowed to prescribe it because it now has to be prescribed by a pain specialist. So, I mad an appointment with the orthopedic doc who did back surgery on me in 2012. He wrote me a new prescription which I filled in October. He wrote a bunch of refills for it, but I am not even a third of the way through the bottle. I only take it on bad pain days, and usually manage to subsist on celecoxib.
I don't understand why people get addicted to pain meds. I only take them if I have pain. Getting a euphoric feeling from meds has never appealed to me. But that's just me. If people want to get wasted, they can drink a picher of martinis or margaritas.
The worst thing about the Drug War is the fact that so many patients are being under-medicated. I have a friend who uses a morphine patch; it lasts for two days but his prescription is to replace it every third day. His daily activities revolve around “patch day” because he spends the day before in debilitating agony.
A lot of research has suggested that most people only become addicted if they continue using the medication after it’s no longer needed.
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