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mikekle
Guest
Yes, I agree with you on most of this, but Im at the point where I dont believe law enforcement should have any involvement in this problem…addiction has been proven to be a literal medical disease, addicts are simply trying to treat their disease when they go seeking out drugs, many places may have drug courts, but police are still out arresting people that use or have drugs on them…I believe instead of people calling police when they see this type of activity, they really should be calling the CDC, I think they should have some kind of quick response team to go out and address these people when calls come in, I mean, we dont call police when someone really needs medical help, and they certainly dont arrest people who are having serious medical problems.I absolutely agree with you about this. We need better schools, not more prisons.
Further, if we funded and provided drug rehab instead of putting people behind bars, the U.S. would save literally $billions annually. That’s been proven and there’s bi-partisan, conservative-liberal, Republican-Democrat agreement on it.
Many jurisdictions are realizing this and are establishing specialized drug courts. Lots of people still go to jail for drug-related crimes, but they can earn a “get out of jail” card if they successfully complete rehab programs. The recidivism rate for these folks is much much lower than it is for addicts who don’t get rehab services while they’re incarcerated.
However, we can’t make it easier for people to get addictive drugs. The pain meds are legal now, and we can’t handle them. Imagine what would happen if the flood gates opened.
You mentioned pain pills, yes they are legal, but not really, there are lots of people who get arrested for having a single percocet tablet if they dont have the prescription to back it up, the problem here, is many people have serious pain, but cannot afford to see a doctor regularly, plus the cost of prescriptions, so in attempt to treat their pain, they resort to buying off the street, in reality, this should not be illegal, as that is what the opioid pills are made for, BUT, the pharmaceutical companies want people coming to a doctor, its all about the revenue, if people could treat their own pain without a doctor, this could devastate the industry, everyone would loose money.
I have heard the medical service and pharmaceutical industries have lobbyists to ensure certain drugs remain scheduled to ensure the level of revenue, basically there is not much money in a cure, but there is LOTS of money in TREATING the symptoms each and every month (doctor office visits, pharmacy filling prescriptions, drug manufacturers).