President Donald Trump kicked off Monday with a three-part Twitter rant. His message this time was quick and to the point:


The two fake news polls released yesterday, ABC & NBC, while containing some very positive info, were totally wrong in General E. Watch!

The Wall is a very important tool in stopping drugs from pouring into our country and poisoning our youth (and many others)! If

….the wall is not built, which it will be, the drug situation will NEVER be fixed the way it should be!

Trump’s tweets highlight one thing: He’s totally ignorant on how to actually fix the drug problem in America. (Oh, and that he still hates the media.)

In 2015, 12,989 U.S. citizens died from from heroin overdoses. Deaths from synthetic opioids, including fentanyl, accounted for 9,580 lost lives. And prescription painkillers, like OxyContin and Vicodin, killed 17,536 people.

These numbers, as CBS News reported, show that more Americans died as a result of heroin overdoses than gun homicides. Overdose deaths were higher in 2016 than deaths caused by car crashes and suicide. Because of the severe and sincere opioid epidemic in this nation, American’s life expectancy dropped for the first time in more than 20 years.

How then will Trump’s wall fix this? Simple, it won’t.

“Walls have not stopped drugs, especially heroin. It is the easiest drug to traffic in small batches across a border because it is so easily condensed—and easy to cut later,” Sam Quinones reported for The New York Times. “The rancher from Sinaloa told me he put a little more than a pound and a half of heroin in those shoes, clearing as much as $12,000 in a single trip to the States. You could never fit enough cocaine, meth, or marijuana into a shoe to make it worth the risk. ‘They’re too voluminous,’ he told me.”

But comparing small-time drug mules pushing miniscule amounts of heroin over the border in their shoes to the opioid epidemic is like comparing apples to asteroids.

Take the aforementioned fentanyl, for example. As the National Institute of Drug Abuse explained, fentanyl is a synthetic opioid. It very cheap, easy to make, and even easier to buy. It’s about 50 times more powerful than heroin and is regularly used to treat patients with severe pain or as a way to manage pain after surgery. But because of its popularity as a pain killer, it’s seen a huge rise in illegal sales as well.

“A lot of fentanyl comes through the U.S. mail and mailing services down to 100 or 200 grams,” Russ Baer, a spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Agency, told Wired. “They are able to cut out the middleman, order from the internet from the vendor, and two or three days later have those deadly substances on the front door.”

Beyond Chinese internet pharmacies, services like the Silk Road, which once allowed people to openly purchase their drug of choice over the internet, and the likely internet drug delivery copy cats to come, make it clear that fighting the drug war on the border between the United States and Mexico simply won’t suffice.

From planes to boats to shipping containers, one-way submarines, and the wonderful invention of the internet, the drug trade is far more advanced than any “tremendous” wall Trump could even imagine. But there’s still one perpetrator we haven’t discussed.

“Starting in the 1980s, doctors started to be told that opioids were effective treatment for chronic pain, and that treating patients long-term with opioids was evidence-based medicine,” psychiatrist Anna Lembke told NPR in 2016. “That was patently false and that was propagated by what I call ‘big medicine,’ in cahoots with Big Pharma.”

The prescription drug epidemic is fraught with complexity. It’s been blamed on overzealous doctors looking to make a quick buck, and on big pharma preyingon the weak and vulnerable by pushing their product to both the medical community and the media as a cure-all. But in reality, it’s a much bigger problem than people attempting to fix physical pain.

“Addiction rates are not spread evenly across the United States, as you would expect if chemical hooks were the primary cause,” Johann Hari, author of Chasing The Scream: The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs, wrote in an op-ed for the Los Angeles Times in January. “On the contrary, addiction is soaring in areas such as the Rust Belt, the South Bronx, and the forgotten towns of New England, where people there say they are lonelier and more insecure than they have been in living memory.”

When Trump makes sweeping declarations like he did to the Associated Press on Monday saying, “If we stop 1 percent of the drugs from coming in—and we’ll stop all of it,” he gives the American public the false idea, and for many more the false hope, of a simple solution made up of brick and stone. But as Hari also added in her op-ed, we cannot solve the real drug problem in America simply by blaming drugs and the people that sell them. Instead, we need to systematically look at why people turn to drugs in the first place, and radically change the way we treat them. One of the easiest and more effective things the U.S. government can invest more in instead of a border wall are state-run Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs.

As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported, several states have seen overwhelming success with the program that allows both doctors and pharmacists to track prescriptions of painkillers and ensure patients aren’t seeking multiple doctors to feed a habit. In 2010, for example, Florida established its own PDMP and, by 2012, saw a 50 percent decrease in oxycodone overdose deaths. In 2012, New York state required prescribers to check the state’s PDMP before prescribing opioids and, by 2013, the state saw a 75 percent drop in patients seeing multiple prescribers for the same drugs. Currently, 49 states use some form of PDMP, with Missouri as the only holdout. As a 2016 Vanderbilt University-led study released in the journal Health Affairs found, “The implementation of state prescription drug monitoring programs was associated with the prevention of approximately one opioid-related overdose death every two hours on average nationwide.”

Perhaps equally as important, states that have implemented a PDMP have also seen a surge in addiction treatment as more doctors refer patients to treatment after discovering they are taking painkillers from multiple sources, The Pew Charitable Trusts reported.

And in the excellent news department, in early April, Health and Human Services secretary Tom Price announced that states will be getting $485 million in grant money for PDMP and further prescription drug treatment programs. However, it should be noted that this funding, which the Trump administration heartily took credit for on the homepage of the Department of Health and Human Services, comes from a piece bipartisan legislation approved by Congress last year and signed by former President Barack Obama, according to ABC.

Still, we’ll take the $485 million as an investment in returning our national life expectancy to what it once was, but we can’t end this story without noting it’s pennies compared to the estimated $20 billion plus that Trump’s border wall will cost.

  • Man’s dog suddenly becomes protective of his wife, Internet clocks the reason right away
    Dogs have impressive observational powers.Photo credit: Canva

    Reddit user Girlfriendhatesmefor’s three-year-old pitbull, Otis, had recently become overprotective of his wife. So he asked the online community if they knew what might be wrong with the dog.

    “A week or two ago, my wife got some sort of stomach bug,” the Reddit user wrote under the subreddit /r/dogs. “She was really nauseous and ill for about a week. Otis is very in tune with her emotions (we once got in a fight and she was upset, I swear he was staring daggers at me lol) and during this time didn’t even want to leave her to go on walks. We thought it was adorable!”

    His wife soon felt better, butthe dog’s behavior didn’t change.

    pregnancy signs, dogs and pregnancy, pitbull behavior, pet intuition, dog overprotection, Reddit stories, viral Reddit, dog instincts, canine emotions, dog owner tips
    Otis knew before they did. Canva

    Girlfriendhatesmefor began to fear that Otis’ behavior may be an early sign of an aggression issue or an indication that the dog was hurt or sick.

    So he threw a question out to fellow Reddit users: “Has anyone else’s dog suddenly developed attachment/aggression issues? Any and all advice appreciated, even if it’s that we’re being paranoid!”

    The most popular response to his thread was by ZZBC.

    Any chance your wife is pregnant?

    ZZBC | Reddit

    The potential news hit Girlfriendhatesmefor like a ton of bricks. A few days later, Girlfriendhatesmefor posted an update and ZZBC was right!

    “The wifey is pregnant!” the father-to-be wrote. “Otis is still being overprotective but it all makes sense now! Thanks for all the advice and kind words! Sorry for the delayed reply, I didn’t check back until just now!”

    Redditors responded with similar experiences.

    Anecdotal I know but I swear my dog knew I was pregnant before I was. He was super clingy (more than normal) and was always resting his head on my belly.

    realityisworse | Reddit

    So why do dogs get overprotective when someone is pregnant?

    Jeff Werber, PhD, president and chief veterinarian of the Century Veterinary Group in Los Angeles, told Health.com that “dogs can also smell the hormonal changes going on in a woman’s body at that time.” He added the dog may “not understand that this new scent of your skin and breath is caused by a developing baby, but they will know that something is different with you—which might cause them to be more curious or attentive.”

    The big lesson here is to listen to your pets and to ask questions when their behavior abruptly changes. They may be trying to tell you something, and the news may be life-changing.

    This article originally appeared last year.

  • Throughout history, women have stood up and fought to break down barriers imposed on them from stereotypes and societal expectations. The trailblazers in these photos made history and redefined what a woman could be. In doing so, they paved the way for future generations to stand up and continue to fight for equality.

  • ,

    Why mass shootings spawn conspiracy theories

    Mass shootings and conspiracy theories have a long history.

    While conspiracy theories are not limited to any topic, there is one type of event that seems particularly likely to spark them: mass shootings, typically defined as attacks in which a shooter kills at least four other people.

    When one person kills many others in a single incident, particularly when it seems random, people naturally seek out answers for why the tragedy happened. After all, if a mass shooting is random, anyone can be a target.

    Pointing to some nefarious plan by a powerful group – such as the government – can be more comforting than the idea that the attack was the result of a disturbed or mentally ill individual who obtained a firearm legally.


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