sonoyta safety warning...

BeachyKeen

Well Known Member
The horrible reality of street drugs. We must do everything possible to minimize the usage. This kid paints a picture most people could never imagine even in their worst nightmare. Then multiply the suffering 10 times and you will be close. I know the truth because if you substitute my younger daughter for the article's author you will have us.
http://thoughtcatalog.com/nikki-murray/2015/03/this-is-what-it-feels-like-to-be-an-addicts-sister/
I will pray for your daughter, as a victim in which someone with an addiction to pills tore my family apart for years (even if that person is physically there, their true self is not) I know there is hope because after hitting their "rock bottom" and losing their family they chose to get help and I chose to help after that. I know methadone sounds scary and it is but if used correctly it can save life's and families. I don't know what type of drug anyone's loved one is addicted to because it only works for opiates but After a couple relapses, LOTS of work, lots of support (only after they were ready to truly try) and LOTS of prayer, by God's grace this person is stronger than ever from coming out of it and again the backbone of our family. Life is never going to be a perfect bowl of cherries but after going through that I feel like we have seen a glimpse of hell and I am grateful to hopefully never see that part again, so I truly empathize.
 

jerry

Well Known Member
The passage below talks about the truce Chaps Guzman engineered between The Memos and The Salazar...thank you Chapo for making our ratty little hell hole a bit safer.....Memos start young FB_IMG_1447811077438.jpg "SEDENA estaba ahí como seguridad. Era una junta para que las dos bandas de traficantes pudieron hacer un arreglo. El Joaquin Guzman ordenó que dejaran de pelear. En esa junta el pizo que los pelavaca y los salazar tendrían que pagar estaba negociado. El pizo quedo a 250000 dolares mensuales. Como no tenían permiso portar armas a la junta SEDENA era el proveedor de seguridad".
 

InkaRoads

cronopiador
This is patently untrue. Although violence may have decreased in Portugal a very short research detailed how there are more users in Portugal now than before drugs were decriminalized.
I am an advotcate of legalizing drugs but have no doubt that use, addiction and the social ills associated with drug use will increase.
This week I met with the Child Crisis Nursery in Phoenix and they state that a large majority of the abused and neglected kids in their care are due to drug using parents. This situation burns me and makes me consider the terrible consequences that the abuse of drugs causes. This may be one unintended consequence that would increase with the legalization of drugs.
The libertarian in me wants to legalize everything but I wonder if people are responsible enough to deal with that freedom. If you ask the people who run our social service agencies their answer would most likely be no.
I did go to far by saying that Portugal has NO drug problem, it does just like any other country, however now they have a better system to monitor as people are being more truthful responding about their drug intake, recreational or not (one of the reasons it might seems usage has increase)
The programs and services they have implemented definitely are helping, some mention by beachykeen, a lot of deceases and illnesses due to drug usage have gone down, specially Aids, and the gov. is helping people more with treatments than jail time and most importantly use of drugs between first time users has decline, that right there, IMHO, is a GREAT step accomplished by Portugal.

No matter what if it is ILLEGAL we humans will love to find out about it, legalize it and slowly but surely it will just drop by the side of the road!! unless it is alcohol!!!
 
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