The scale and darkness of this epidemic is a sign of a civilization in a more acute crisis than we knew.

Tragic – Andrew Sullivan on the Opioid Epidemic in America

 

I don’t even know where to start. I can say, you need to read this. We need to understand the terribly seductive and addicting properties of opioids. One things that stand out is overuse…

No other developed country is as devoted to the poppy as America. We consume 99 percent of the world’s hydrocodone and 81 percent of its oxycodone. We use an estimated 30 times more opioids than is medically necessary for a population our size.

A great history lesson on opioid use follows.

Who uses opioids now?

It’s telling that the drug has not taken off as intensely among all Americans — especially not among the engaged, multiethnic, urban-dwelling, financially successful inhabitants of the coasts. The poppy has instead found a home in those places left behind — towns and small cities that owed their success to a particular industry, whose civic life was built around a factory or a mine. Unlike in Europe, where cities and towns existed long before industrialization, much of America’s heartland has no remaining preindustrial history, given the destruction of Native American societies. The gutting of that industrial backbone — especially as globalization intensified in a country where market forces are least restrained — has been not just an economic fact but a cultural, even spiritual devastation. The pain was exacerbated by the Great Recession and has barely receded in the years since. And to meet that pain, America’s uniquely market-driven health-care system was more than ready.

How large is the problem….

It’s hard to convey the sheer magnitude of what happened. Between 2007 and 2012, for example, 780 million hydrocodone and oxycodone pills were delivered to West Virginia, a state with a mere 1.8 million residents. In one town, population 2,900, more than 20 million opioid prescriptions were processed in the past decade. Nationwide, between 1999 and 2011, oxycodone prescriptions increased sixfold. National per capita consumption of oxycodone went from around 10 milligrams in 1995 to almost 250 milligrams by 2012.

The quantum leap in opioid use arrived by stealth. Most previous drug epidemics were accompanied by waves of crime and violence, which prompted others, outside the drug circles, to take notice and action. But the opioid scourge was accompanied, during its first decade, by a record drop in both. Drug users were not out on the streets causing mayhem or havoc. They were inside, mostly alone, and deadly quiet. There were no crack houses to raid or gangs to monitor. Overdose deaths began to climb, but they were often obscured by a variety of dry terms used in coroners’ reports to hide what was really happening. When the cause of death was inescapable — young corpses discovered in bedrooms or fast-food restrooms — it was also, frequently, too shameful to share. Parents of dead teenagers were unlikely to advertise their agony.

I absolutely love this shot at AG Jeff Sessions…

Attorney General Jeff Sessions even recently opined that he believes marijuana is really the key gateway to heroin — a view so detached from reality it beggars belief.

There is mention of ending the war on drugs.

The problem is more than an addiction problem as the article concludes…

To see this epidemic as simply a pharmaceutical or chemically addictive problem is to miss something: the despair that currently makes so many want to fly away. Opioids are just one of the ways Americans are trying to cope with an inhuman new world where everything is flat, where communication is virtual, and where those core elements of human happiness — faith, family, community — seem to elude so many. Until we resolve these deeper social, cultural, and psychological problems, until we discover a new meaning or reimagine our old religion or reinvent our way of life, the poppy will flourish.

We have seen this story before — in America and elsewhere.
The allure of opiates’ joys are filling a hole in the human heart and soul today as they have since the dawn of civilization. But this time, the drugs are not merely laced with danger and addiction. In a way never experienced by humanity before, the pharmaceutically sophisticated and ever more intense bastard children of the sturdy little flower bring mass death in their wake. This time, they are agents of an eternal and enveloping darkness. And there is a long, long path ahead, and many more bodies to count, before we will see any light.

Read the whole thing.

A few comments. I am open to the idea of suspending the war on drugs. As a reader of this blog, which there is at least one semi-regular reader, you are aware I am very much against the use/abuse of Civil Asset Forfeiture. CAF is a creation of the war on drugs. The somewhat noble idea was to quickly choke of the supply of money to the drug lords when they got caught. Unfortunately, trickle down economics was quite successful, combined with perverse incentives that has led to innocent and small time plays getting their lives ruined. I invite you to read the story of Burt Wagner’s life being thrown into total disarray by the DOJ.

I have heard Burt speak. After hearing his story and the actions of the US DOJ, I realized that I would never be on a jury again. That I would never trust government thugs that can upend your life as easily as you can smash a flee with your boot. The damage these actions do to the heartbeat, the psyche of America aren’t easily measured and very hard to undo. I am open to the idea that this damage is worse than the actual problem of legal or illegal drugs. Then there’s the idiot AG Jeff Sessions who believes marijuana is a gateway drug to heroin and it gets even easier to believe that the war on drugs causes more problems than it solves.

The government has too much power. I realize it’s the “in-thing” these days to believe in big government. Everyone wants the government to fix something. There’s a price to pay when that happens. Be careful.

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Job with fringe benefits, extra pay and sex! – Nashville Mayor Megan Barry’s lover Rob Forrest paid more than all other bodyguards combined Aren’t there names for this?

Posted in the weekend, you can't make this stuff up | Leave a comment

Boom! I wish the FBI was half as good at protecting school kids as they are at protecting Clinton and Obama

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If the justification is correct, The People’s Republic is not going to be their destination. WSJ: Tech Workers Leaving Silicon Valley | The Daily Caller

Such an underlying mindset and a potential exodus from non-liberals comes after months and months of claims from the right end of the political spectrum (and libertarians) that Silicon Valley as a whole, as well as the leadership of major firms, are hostile to their line of thinking, or have let a similar workplace environment fester.

So Boulder.

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Uh, NO! – Would you surrender your assault rifles for free martial arts…

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It’s Friday!

  • Glen Campbell – Galveston  (He can/could do more than write and sing……)

 

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Arrest of environmentalists justified by claiming reptiles collect “atomic waves.”

Paranoia combined with being dumber than a box of rocks leads to atomic wave collection by lizards: West sent lizards as nuclear spies, claims Iran defense official

You can’ make this stuff up.

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Can you recognize real Collusion when it’s staring you in the face? Hillary Fingerprints All Over FBI’s Investigation Into Trump’s Russia Ties

Her campaign is linked to at least three separate pieces of information fed to the FBI, including the dossier the FBI used to spy on the Trump campaign.

  1. Clinton ally Sidney Blumenthal funneled information to the FBI through a contact at the State Department.
  2. Steele was at that same time compiling a dossier paid for by the Clinton campaign and the DNC.
  3. A top DOJ official fed the FBI research on Trump from his wife also paid for by the Clinton campaign and the DNC.

In sum: To obtain a warrant to spy on a Trump campaign associate, the FBI relied heavily on a dossier that was never substantiated, put together by a former spy “desperate” to stop Trump. That dossier was paid for by powerful Democrats on Trump’s rival campaign, who also paid for opposition research the FBI received from a powerful couple inside President Obama’s DOJ. Separately, two Clinton allies worked together to funnel a second unsubstantiated dossier to the FBI through the State Department.

This is how you get more Trump.

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I recently became a crime victim for one of the few times in my life. My car was burgled while I was up in the Bay Area on my weekly sojourn to the Peoples Republic of Berkeley. I say ‘burgled’ rather than ‘broken into,’ because there was no smashed window, or picked lock, nor did I leave the car unlocked. Rather, I was the victim of a clever gang of

Yes, next question…  Is California Starting to Circle the Drain? | Power Line

Read the whole thing, it’s unbelievable. Run don’t walk.

Posted in you can't make this stuff up | 2 Comments

FIRE Two universities stop censorial outrage mobs dead in their tracks

It is notable what both UCF and CSUDH did not do. Neither university gave the typical platitudes of “we take these matters very seriously,” nor did either university publicly announce imminent investigations into the expression of its community members.

News most of the other Universities in America (and elsewhere) could use.

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Sales tax revenue stagnant in Boulder, booming in Longmont – Longmont Times-Call

Experts believe the burgeoning shopping districts of neighboring cities are siphoning shoppers from Boulder’s core. The trend, coupled with record rents and complaints over parking, has spurred the Downtown Boulder Partnership to action, hoping to halt the downward slide and bring locals back to Boulder.

Wow, what would would we do without experts? Perhaps use common sense?

Posted in So Boulder | 2 Comments

Who? Why should I care what he thinks? – Robert De Niro takes aim at Trump’s climate change policy

Hollywood star Robert De Niro took aim at the Trump administration’s stance on climate change, telling a packed audience in the Middle East that he was visiting from a “backward” country suffering from “temporary insanity.”

Hey Bobby, this is how you get more Trump. Keep on spouting off like the member of the ignorant Hollywood elite that you are. And inquiring minds would like to know how the hell you got to Dubai?

Posted in climage change, Get more Trump, MAGA | 2 Comments

It just takes awhile – Single Payer is Doomed Before It Starts

The Law of Subsidy has killed the NHS. It just doesn’t realize that it is dead.

Ya think? According to the article it’s due to common sense laws of economics.

The first is the Law of Rationing. In short, “Everything is rationed, either by price or by rule.” I can’t afford a private jet. Price rationing limits those to people of substantial wealth, and their high price acts as a signal in the market to balance the supply of private jets with the market of willing buyers.

To prevent everyone from having private jets (Boulderites, this is a metaphor), a number of new rules crop up. Pivoting back to healthcare, for example in England’s NHS…

In England, this process is reaching a tipping point. A couple of years ago people were waiting many hours in the Emergency Department just to be seen by a doctor. So the NHS ruled in 2004 that 95% of all patients would be seen within four hours of arrival. In order to avoid breaking the rule, Emergency Departments refused to allow ambulances to unload their patients until the ED could meet the time standard. So patients were stuck in ambulances outside the ED door, and there weren’t enough ambulances left to answer calls. Now the rule has been scrapped. Predictably, the left-wing members of Parliament are calling for more money. And that brings us to the second law.

The Law of Subsidy says that “When you subsidize something, you get more of it and it gets more expensive.” In England, this happened a bit more slowly than in the U.S. It may be that the older generations of Britons were a bit more “proper” than us Yanks, and so tended to rely less on the dole than current generations. This slowed the growth of the NHS but did not change the ultimate outcome.

…..

The Law of Subsidy has killed the NHS. It just doesn’t realize that it is dead. But thousands of those it was created to care for are dead, because it simply cannot fulfill its promised goals. And the U.S. is headed down the same path. Fortunately for us, voices are starting to point out real fixes.

…. and the US has a not dissimilar problem with health insurance as  author Ted Noel explains.

I have repeatedly pointed out that government is bad for your health. Just as with the NHS, the U.S. population has been sold the lie that insurance is necessary for long life. In fact, all insurance does is increase cost, because it’s a subsidy for those who provide health care. (emphasis added) But there has been a conspiracy of silence over this fact. Further, the treatment of health insurance premiums as a non-taxed “fringe benefit” makes it easier to subsidize further. In short, Congress passes a pretty “benefit” that you actually pay for. And it ultimately ratchets costs higher.

…. and he offers some suggestions

President Trump has done a bit to reverse the trend, but private citizens are doing more. Medishare is a private cost sharing program that provides care at a fraction of insurance rates. Outpatient surgery centers such as the Surgery Center of Oklahoma operate at lower costs because they don’t have to wrestle with insurance companies. And many physicians are now providing concierge Direct Primary Care at drastically reduced costs.

What do these have in common? They are completely outside the government and insurance company umbrellas. (emphasis added) Patients see how much their care actually costs. Providers work to be competitive in order to attract patients. And patient satisfaction is much greater.

In closing, Noel takes a shot at the insurance company/Hospital/Medical group administration cabal…

I spent thirty-two years on the medical staff of a major metropolitan medical center. There was no incentive for the administration to ever negotiate with an individual on price. Instead, it was always a deal between the hospital and the insurance company. My medical group did the same thing. We negotiated prices with Blue Cross, Humana, and other insurance companies. They passed on the costs to patients via premiums, all the while lobbying for more and more mandates on coverage.

Could there be a system more devoted to screwing the public? No one is personally intending to cause harm to anyone else. In fact, my group worked hard to provide high-quality care. But the incentives are there for all to see, if they will look. The Laws of Rationing, Subsidy, and the Bureaucrat are laws of nature. Nothing will ever repeal them. Our only hope is to stop going down the roads to which they lead us.

Seems doubtful. That’s why I use a DPC (Direct Primary Care) and am also enrolled in a HCSM (Health Care Sharing Ministry) plan (not Medishare). My wife and daughter are part of the ACA. My wife may leave as we have a good understanding of her medical situation and would easily save money compared to standard insurance. Our daughter has had serious medical issues although she seems past most everything now. That said, I’m not willing to take the baby steps off the ACA with her. Of course, with her lower income and her no longer being a dependent, if she were to get seriously ill we could get her on Medicaid in a flash. Also, someone in our family finally gets a tax credit/subsidy! We get to work the system. Hooray!

Oh and before the ACA we had a plan with a nationwide network that paid out well over $200,000 in medical expenses for our daughter. Plus the plan had an annual max of well over $20 million and guaranteed issuance of a policy to my daughter when she would have to leave our plan. This was a feature that didn’t seem important at the time but would have become important if the ACA hadn’t intervened.

 

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Jeff Sessions dumber than a box of rocks, part II – Jeff Sessions to Pain Sufferers: Take Two Aspirin and Stop Whining | Trending

I was on opioids for about 18 months, off and on, and I knew all the horror stories about addiction. A guy starts taking painkillers for an injury, and then he can’t stop even after he heals up. Happens all the time. I worried about it happening to me, and I’m glad it didn’t. I hated the way I felt while taking that stuff — woozy, feverish, clammy, unable to concentrate — but I wouldn’t have been able to endure that ordeal without it. As bad as it was, without that relief from the unrelenting anguish, it would’ve been a thousand times worse.

Pain isn’t something you can explain to other people. Before my accident, I had heard and read countless stories about people recovering from painful injuries, and I thought I knew what it was like. I had no idea until it happened to me. That feeling of helplessness, wondering how you’re going to get through the next five minutes. Feeling trapped inside a body that does nothing but hurt. Just wanting some relief. You can’t think about the past or the future. You’re trapped in an endless, agonizing now. It does things to your mind and your soul, and in some ways I’m still dealing with it.

That which didn’t kill me did make me stronger in some ways. But in other ways, not so much.

And there are a lot of people out there who are worse off than I ever was. They need more than just aspirin. They’re not trying to get high. They’re not trying to pull one over on anybody. They just want their existence to be a bit less hellish.

Read the whole thing. No, really.

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It’s Friday!

February 3rd was the 59th anniversary of the “Day the Music died.”

Don McLean – American Pie

Back in the day:

No automatic alt text available.

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Glenn Reynolds ask the important questions – Instapundit » Blog Archive » “DO THE LETTERS ‘FO’ MEAN ANYTHING TO YOU?” Yale Student Warns Men Can’t Be Left Alone Unless They’…

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The phrase “dumber than a box of rocks” comes to mind – Jeff Sessions’ Advice to Pain Patients: ‘Take Some Aspirin’ and ‘Tough It Out’ – Hit & Run : Reason.com

The attorney general thinks people should suffer needlessly, just like John Kelly.

I have clients who are on opioids for pain. They don’t want to be on opiods, but that’s what works for them. Opiods may be dangerous and addicting medications, but they are very effective for most pain situations.

I’d like to see more about the cause of the opioid crisis. Opioid’s have been around for years, but their use has skyrocketed in the last 10 years (or less). Was it a philosophical change in prescribing medication, does Obamacare and Medicaid expansion play into this? To have an actual effective solution, we need a good understanding of the underlying causes. Attitudes such as those expressed by Mr. Sessions are not helpful.

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The U.S. has been a net energy importer since 1953, according to the Energy Information Administration.

Shocked face – US projected to become net exporter of energy by 2022 | TheHill

The study also found that economic conditions will be favorable to oil producers in the U.S., with expectations of rising oil prices to boost the industry until 2040. But EIA experts that following 2040, the industry will likely drop due to stalling technological innovations in the sector.

The report also expects that a growing push for increased energy efficiency in the U.S. will put a dent in energy demand. Additionally, the report predicts that a decline in cost in renewable energy production will lead new electricity generation after 2022 to be fueled mostly by renewable resources and natural gas.

Hey, predicting stalling technological innovations 22 years into the future, how do I get a job like that?

 

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U.S. Oil Production Will Exceed Its 1971 Peak This Year – Hit & Run : Reason.com

So much for peak oil doom!

Source: U.S. Oil Production Will Exceed Its 1971 Peak This Year – Hit & Run : Reason.com

Only a decade ago, the world was in the grip of one of its periodic “peak oil” panics. Dire predictions everywhere announced that humanity was on the cusp of a disastrous and accelerating decline in oil production. One prominent analyst declared in 2009 that global oil production had peaked at 82 million barrels per day in 2008 and would thereafter begin declining at a rate of 2.2 million barrels per day. Reaching peak oil would result in a “meltdown of society” and a “dying civilization” with a “landscape littered with the rusting hulks of SUVs.”

What happened?

Drill baby drill. Frack baby frack.

 

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Shocked Face – How The Media Buried Two Huge FBI Stories Yesterday

Two explosive stories about the FBI’s handling of the probe into Russia and the Trump campaign were downplayed by a suddenly incurious press corps.

Not interested in the truth.

In recent weeks, however, some official documents have come to light. These are statements made by elected members of the U.S. government on the record, not selective and political leaks from anonymous sources. So how have the media responded to these official statements regarding wrongdoing? Mostly by downplaying, mocking, and ignoring them. (emphasis added)

When the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence’s majority memo was made public last week, many journalists highlighted Democratic talking points against it or otherwise rushed to defend the agencies credibly accused of abuse of power. As soon as they could, they dropped the story, despite the dramatic claims in the memo.

Read the whole thing.

Author Mollie Hemingway concludes…

And if reporters at American newsrooms are so narrow in their thinking that they can’t even imagine lines of inquiry in a direction other than “nothing to see here” for politicians not named Trump, they should hire some people with more diverse viewpoints to help them.

They should replace themselves, the damage they are doing to their profession will take years to undo.

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