22 Commentaires

  1. Methadone is just another addictive chemical it eats away at your liver and your bones over time. And most people on methadone or Suboxone / drug replacement therapy still are shady af and their brain never truly heals from opiates. I've never met one person who went to the methadone clinic and could actually be trusted and didn't look like death. Drug replacement therapy is good to lean off of opiates but if you keep taking them you're just hooked on government dope.

  2. Bottom line is an addiction is an illness. Just like CFS, fibromyalgia; lupus; MS, PTSD, CPTSD
    Brain scans of those in active addiction are very similar to those of patients with the aforementioned diseases. All these dis-eases generally stem from childhood trauma. They all have underlying PTSD and CPTSD
    Dr Gabor Mate, and other trauna and addiction specialists believe, and have great luck in treating the addict with palliative care, like we do a diabedic, or someone with a TBI, or i do with the devilitating illnesses i deal with.

  3. We stopped doing this because of pressure from the Nixon government. It was part of the war on drugs that was always designed to purposefully cause addiction within the working class to flourish & was used to great effect against the unemployed masses of miners when the pits were closed.
    It was put in enacted to prevent the workers of great Britain rising up in a soviet style revolution, which was something the Nixon era US government greatly feared & enabled the collapse of Britain as a potential threat to US imperialist intentions

  4. This idea of supplying and addict their drugs in a clean controlled environment is civil and helpful but it isn't addressing any program to actual help them quit. It is obviously good to reduce crime but likely not homelessness. And would it actually promote people to become addicts because they know they would be set up to be supplied with the drug for free? I'd like to know if the amount of users actually increased, decreased or stayed the same. Reducing drug use should be the goal and get results in that direction, not just support it.

  5. Yep. Stop the failing war on drugs, legalize, regulate and use those tax dollars we waste on the war on drugs for helping the community. If methadone wasn’t around I’d still be on the street struggling terribly, and In the USA methadone maintenance is AWFUL

  6. Wow 😮😮😮 even if we try that in America, there would be tons of antics that will still be using street drugs. We have to start at the border. How are these drugs getting into America and what are we gonna do about it? Social media doesn’t help it just fuels drug addiction.

  7. It never helped in the slightest helping drug addicts by giving them more drugs 😅 Where Im from addicts would go to the doctor for a free fix of Morphine twice day and still took Heroin, They need rehab to help them get off drugs

  8. Very bad idea. Just get rid of opiods outside of the emergency room. Just like morphine. All opiods should be highly tracked and regulated. This idea of heroin prescriptions is absolutely ridiculous

  9. They definitely was still getting some on the side. If I told you, you could earn $100 to get your fix, or you could earn $100 AND I give you a free $100 you gonna walk away with one, or two hundred?

  10. I used to agree with this helping drug addicts administer there drugs in a safe environment.

    By doing this though, you are enabling that person to continue using and destroying there body and lives.

    The only way to truly fix get an addict off heroin is abstinence. There’s no way around it.

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