Mexican Cartels Lure Chemistry Students To Make Fentanyl (nytimes.com) 127
schwit1 writes: Recruiters approach students with tempting offers, often after observing them for weeks. Promising salaries of over $800 per month -- double the average pay for chemists in Mexican companies, along with potential bonuses like cars or housing -- recruiters capitalize on the financial struggles of young professionals.
These "cooks" are tasked with improving fentanyl's addictive quality and finding alternative synthesis methods to mitigate supply chain disruptions caused by stricter chemical export controls from China and pandemic-induced bottlenecks. The Times interviewed seven drug "cooks," three university chemistry students recruited by the Sinaloa cartel, two agents, a recruiter, and a university professor -- all anonymously to avoid cartel retaliation. According to the recruiter, candidates must be passionate, discreet, and indifferent to the ethical consequences of their work.
The university professor highlighted a disturbing trend: students openly expressed interest in synthesizing illicit drugs during lectures.
These "cooks" are tasked with improving fentanyl's addictive quality and finding alternative synthesis methods to mitigate supply chain disruptions caused by stricter chemical export controls from China and pandemic-induced bottlenecks. The Times interviewed seven drug "cooks," three university chemistry students recruited by the Sinaloa cartel, two agents, a recruiter, and a university professor -- all anonymously to avoid cartel retaliation. According to the recruiter, candidates must be passionate, discreet, and indifferent to the ethical consequences of their work.
The university professor highlighted a disturbing trend: students openly expressed interest in synthesizing illicit drugs during lectures.
Non-paywalled link (Score:5, Informative)
https://archive.is/Qm7PV [archive.is]
Re: (Score:2)
Who I'd worry about (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, I would be worried about breaking the law and its consequences, but I would be even more worried about the Cartel as my employer.
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Seems like it would make more sense to address the issues which lead to drug abuse in the first place, rather than sending troops over to do battle with a Mexican cartel. Instead, well, we got the leadership we voted for. Off to the drug war with you, boys! May the odds be ever in your favor, or something.
Re:Who I'd worry about (Score:4, Insightful)
Seems like it would make more sense to address the issues which lead to drug abuse in the first place,
Demand for drugs. Catch the users and offer them a choice of jail or treatment. Catch the treatment graduates again and it's just jail the second time around.
It's just basic economics. Supply and demand. Going after the supply (cartels, distribution networks, local dealers) just creates a scarcity, drives up prices and profits and makes the business look more attractive. Want to put the cartels out of business? Drive the prices down by drying up the demand.
Re: (Score:2)
Socialist!
Why do you hate Capitalism??? /s
Re: (Score:2)
Yep, that worked so well for you in the past, its not like you have a huge prisoner population already. oh wait.
Re: (Score:2)
Demand for drugs. Catch the users and offer them a choice of jail or treatment. Catch the treatment graduates again and it's just jail the second time around.
American jails are messed up places and one of the big sources of demand for drugs. This doesn't solve the problem as long as you have a privatized profit making jail system that is motivated to extract maximum money from inmates rather than curing them.
Your basic premise of trying to reduce demand is sound though, but the treatment has to be more realistic and based around actual humans who can fail and sometimes be redeemed.
Re:Who I'd worry about (Score:5, Interesting)
1) Remove power, money, control from criminal gangs if it is just another industry.
2) All that drug money is now going into the economy and tax coffers instead of criminal empires causing suffering and misery.
3) Funding, acceptance and support to those with problems to provide decent help. Currently the only real solution for someone with a real drugs problem is more drugs.
4) A bunch of jobs I guess.
5) Decriminalise a whole bunch of people who haven't really done anything wrong apart from preferring something else to alcohol.
5) free up a whole bunch of prison space for actual criminals
6) No more (or at least a lot less) drug related crimes by people affected by all the above.
Re: (Score:3)
Do you remember the War on Drugs? We tried this get tough approach and it failed utterly. But yes, the solution is at home and not with military interventions.
An addict will not be detered by a single trip to jail. It's called an addiction because.. it's addictive.
Re: (Score:2)
The Chinese tried it. Twice, they failed due to their military capabilities vis-Ã-vis Britain. But today, just see how easy it is to buy opium* on the street there. We just need to maintain our focus on the problem.
*And remember: During the Opium Wars, it wasn't even illegal in Britain. Sherlock Holmes was an addict and laudanum was popular.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Seems like it would make more sense to address the issues which lead to drug abuse in the first place,
Demand for drugs. Catch the users and offer them a choice of jail or treatment. Catch the treatment graduates again and it's just jail the second time around.
It's just basic economics. Supply and demand. Going after the supply (cartels, distribution networks, local dealers) just creates a scarcity, drives up prices and profits and makes the business look more attractive. Want to put the cartels out of business? Drive the prices down by drying up the demand.
That includes alcohol too, right?
Re:Who I'd worry about (Score:5, Interesting)
One harm-mitigation strategy I've seen would be to imitate England back in the days just after the phase where Heroin was legal and considered a superior alternative to Opium. Basically, like Oxycontin, it had its day as the "superior" opioid.
Anyways, they already had universal healthcare. It was determined to be impractical to try to get all the addicts to quit, many/most of whom had gotten addicted using legitimate doctor prescribed stuff and instructions. It was determined that most could remain functional so long as they had a steady supply. This was before methadone was developed either.
So, if you became addicted to heroin, you go to the doctor who'd diagnose you as addicted, and you'd get a prescription for free heroin.
The net effect of this was that anybody dealing heroin illegally went broke, because as soon as they got somebody dependent, off to the doctor and no longer paying them.
Under this, England only generated a couple dozen addicts a year locally, with most addicts returning from overseas.
Basically, I propose the same deal, because opioids can be dirt cheap. Addict shows up to doctor, doctor prescribes, they get maintenance doses of really pure medical grade stuff, in whatever form makes the most sense. Along with website/phone number/email/text to contact when they're ready to move to the next step.
In short: Stop the whole heroin/fentanyl market by ensuring they can't make a profit.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Who I'd worry about (Score:5, Insightful)
That's the point of the making official channels free.
It's really hard to compete with free.
Re: (Score:2)
As AvitarX mentioned, that's the point of "free".
Most illegal opioid users are addicts, at least the ones willing to pay "any price" are.
It's harder for prescription patients to sell their oxy in a highly competitive environment where any addict can score their own free oxy by going to the doctor, and there's "plenty" of addicts with prescriptions to provide competition to the point that, well, hopefully you'd have a hard time giving the stuff away.
Which a true addict isn't going to do. Ensuring a steady s
Re: (Score:2)
Then the opposition politicians start claiming the safe supply is being diverted to schools and kids as well as neighbouring jurisdictions where the drugs are still illegal.
Amazing how the "my freedoms" right wingers will blame all the problems on the safe supply and how they need to force others to not do what they want with their bodies, usually why going on about their freedom to not use vaccines.
Re: (Score:2)
If you catch people selling to kids, then toss them in prison. Make sure people know that improper sale of your prescribed meds means losing the meds, at least while you're in prison.
I figure that at that point it would be individuals acting as suppliers/dealers, not gangs and cartels. Still a better situation.
Re: (Score:2)
Oxycontin was a disaster almost by design. First marketing as less addictive, though it was essentially identical to oxycodone which has been around a long time (ie, as percoset and others), and there was inadequate testing of addictiveness. Second, the FDA should have caught this, but they were caught up in the politics of pushing out new drugs faster and with less bureaucracy (something the upcoming US government is also keen on). Third, probably most important, is that they marketed it for use with ch
Re: (Score:2)
There are 2 problems with this:
Re: (Score:2)
a: Addicts don't actually always want more, especially if they're managing their addiction with a doctor's assistance. Addicts selling to other addicts is still not "fund cartels with billions of dollars" level of drug black market. Besides, why would Addict B pay Addict A for drugs when they can just go to the doctor to get more?
You miss how cold welfare systems really are. Yes, if you sell your SNAP benefits, you can actually go hungry at the end of the month.
b: Clever entrepreneurs are finding the r
Re: (Score:2)
One harm-mitigation strategy I've seen would be to imitate England back in the days just after the phase where Heroin was legal and considered a superior alternative to Opium. Basically, like Oxycontin, it had its day as the "superior" opioid.
Anyways, they already had universal healthcare. It was determined to be impractical to try to get all the addicts to quit, many/most of whom had gotten addicted using legitimate doctor prescribed stuff and instructions. It was determined that most could remain functional so long as they had a steady supply. This was before methadone was developed either.
So, if you became addicted to heroin, you go to the doctor who'd diagnose you as addicted, and you'd get a prescription for free heroin.
The net effect of this was that anybody dealing heroin illegally went broke, because as soon as they got somebody dependent, off to the doctor and no longer paying them.
Under this, England only generated a couple dozen addicts a year locally, with most addicts returning from overseas.
Basically, I propose the same deal, because opioids can be dirt cheap. Addict shows up to doctor, doctor prescribes, they get maintenance doses of really pure medical grade stuff, in whatever form makes the most sense. Along with website/phone number/email/text to contact when they're ready to move to the next step.
In short: Stop the whole heroin/fentanyl market by ensuring they can't make a profit.
Erm, the whole reason that fentanyl is now a thing is that the US cracked down on oxycodone use. Oxycodone (Oxcontin) used to be called Hillbilly Heroin as it was being used for recreational use rather than pain management and was relatively easy to get a prescription for. As getting high is "wrong", a stop was put to it.
The problem is really the American attitude towards drugs, specifically the "drugs are baaaad M'Kay" people who continue to support the war on drugs, or maybe it should just be called th
Re: (Score:3)
Erm, the whole reason that fentanyl is now a thing is that the US cracked down on oxycodone use.
Well, obviously. Note how I specified Heroin when talking about the old policy, but switched to "Opioids" for the proposed modern version.
And absolutely huge amounts of people got addicted to Oxy via the legal medical system, see people like Rush Limbaugh. I'd rather treat the addiction as a medical issue than a criminal one.
The point is that if you remove the addicts from the demand, there really isn't enough of a market left of the non-addicts taking it recreationally to go through all this supply hassl
Re: (Score:2)
Dude. Excellent idea, but the moral brigade will fight in to the death.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Why did this stop in England?
The war on drugs.
There are a whole load of socio-political views on drug taking, but the prominent conservative one is that drugs are bad, anyone taking them (except for politicians, in private) is bad, anyone addicted to them is weak, and the way to 'solve' the problem is with a really big stick (jail time).
The fact that it's demonstrably made the problem worse over the past 50 years is no barrier to the conservative 'articles of faith': clearly the system wasn't implemented properly; the punishments weren
Re: (Score:2)
Why did this stop in England?
The war on drugs.
There are a whole load of socio-political views on drug taking, but the prominent conservative one is that drugs are bad, anyone taking them (except for politicians, in private) is bad, anyone addicted to them is weak, and the way to 'solve' the problem is with a really big stick (jail time).
The fact that it's demonstrably made the problem worse over the past 50 years is no barrier to the conservative 'articles of faith': clearly the system wasn't implemented properly; the punishments weren't severe enough; etc.
The conservative mantra in the west is simple. Punishment or profit! If you can find a way to do both? You've found yourself a winning formula. This applies to everything. Yes, everything.
Re: (Score:2)
War on drugs was insane in many ways. Ie, white kids on cocaine get probation only, black kids on crack (*identical* to cocaine) get jail time.
The whole addictiveness aspect gets overlooked. Addictiveness gets in the way of personal honor, moral integrity, self control. You're not going to pray that away. The two strongest biochemical forces in the brain are probably addiction and sex drive, both things that conservatives at the time thought you could control easily if only you were a good upstanding per
Re: (Score:2)
Hippocratic Oath: Remember, that's mostly just "doing your best for your patients". If providing them with the drug they're addicted to is the best way you can figure out to keep them from doing "bad things", then it is inline.
Complex area: No argument
Cartels: Raiding the Chemist. You mean they're going to raid Bayer, the holder of the original Heroin Patent? Or Purdue, responsible for OxyContin? That might involve SWAT getting involved, because they're legal enterprises. Still has the problem: Who
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Seems like it would make more sense to address the issues which lead to drug abuse in the first place, rather than sending troops over to do battle with a Mexican cartel. Instead, well, we got the leadership we voted for. Off to the drug war with you, boys! May the odds be ever in your favor, or something.
There's more profit in ratcheting up war-like relations than there is in addressing issues that lead to drug use. It's always about finding the profit.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, it makes more sense. But the drawback is that this has historically been labeled a "liberal" plan that is not sufficiently "tough on crime". Without blood, tears, and lamentaton of the women, Trump won't believe that enough is being done. Remember, he's going to solve all the problems, everywhere, on day one. Sensible solutions have no place in the modern world!
(he was quite inspired by the Everything Everywhere All At Once movie, mostly because it featured large hands)
Re: (Score:2)
RFK Jr. seems very nervous https://www.yahoo.com/news/rfk... [yahoo.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe he'll be able to get Trump off of his Adderall addiction?
Re:Who I'd worry about (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Of course, they did: Theocracy wasn't enough to counter the US war-machine but guns and bullets and paying bribes aren't cheap. Now that no-one will do business with Afghanistan, that experience on scaling-up horticulture and distribution, must be really useful.
Re:Who I'd worry about (Score:5, Interesting)
Oh, don't be so flattering to the Zetas. Yes, the initiators were apparently military-trained. And they were used in counter-insurgency, not only for drug-busting.
But that's not the only attempt. We (I'm Mexican, lived in Mexico my whole life) had a president, Felipe Calderón, who had legitimacy issues. He became a president in December 2006, and a few weeks afterward... he declared war on drugs.
Before Calderón, you knew there was trafficking in Mexico, but it was mostly a calm country. I did my military service in 1999. During Calderón's term... well, thins went to hell, or further.
Calderón was the boss of Genaro García Luna, the Security Minister (basically, the guy in charge of stopping any internal disorder such as... well, cartel-induced violenc) who was found guilty of strongly aiding a set of cartels. García Luna was recently sentenced in a NYC court.
Calderón finished his term in 2012. After him, Enrique Peña and Andrés Manuel López Obrador have tried to contain violence, with very mixed results. We now changed president again, to Claudia Sheinbaum. My hopes are with her.
Anyway--- I must say life is *far* from hellish here. You hear a lot of ugly news reports, and I'm sure lots of very bad things happen. More people die due to gun-related violence in the USA than in Mexico. Yes, the USA has over twice our population, but it's still an interesting piece of statistic --- https://worldpopulationreview.... [worldpopul...review.com]
Re: Who I'd worry about (Score:1)
I don't think most cartel victims were down range of any guns. Has leido el blog del narco?
Re: (Score:2)
Spectacular executions are sad and sick, yes. But those are not the bulk, they are just what they want to publicize. Do you think they use those brutalities for fighting between gang members most of the time?
Re: (Score:2)
You hear a lot of ugly news reports, and I'm sure lots of very bad things happen. More people die due to gun-related violence in the USA than in Mexico. Yes, the USA has over twice our population, but it's still an interesting piece of statistic --- https://worldpopulationreview.... [worldpopul...review.com]
Your own link shows that only to be the case for "all causes", however when you take out suicides it's not nearly as nice a picture. The non-suicide gun related deaths per 100k (identified as "violence rate") on your link shows Mexico to be more than 4x the rate of the USA.
Re: (Score:2)
One thing I don't believe has been tried is a direct military intervention.
You mean like the war on drugs? You mean like US troops directly attacking opium production in Afghanistan and a million other examples.
You're never going to eliminate the demand for drugs, ever. What we need to do is accept that and bring it line with other legal industries like Alcohol and Coffee as completely unrelated examples. Take all the power, money and control the criminal gangs use and put it into the system. Instead of hiring chemists to make more addictive versions, make safer and better ones
Re:Who I'd worry about (drone warfare) (Score:1)
Re: Who I'd worry about (drone warfare) (Score:1)
You want to de-cartelize Mexico. Sounds good. It's OK when we do it, after all.
Re: (Score:2)
Trump's plan won't work, but that doesn't mean he won't try [yahoo.com]. And chemical labs will be a high target.
Your citation is excellent and informative!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
From TFA:
Over the years it has acquired a broad range of modern weaponry, including assault rifles, grenade launchers, drones, anti-personnel mines, anti-tank weapons and grenades.
....
There have also been documented cases of cartels using surface-to-air missiles while intelligence points to them having obtained anti-tank rockets.
But this is the perfect application of drone-launched Hellfire (AGM-114) missiles. Conventional warheads for the drug labs and the flying Ginsu (R9X) variant to go after the cartel bosses.
We don't want to capture and hold territory. We just need a scorched earth policy. No tanks or personnel need to be risked. And so what if we lose a few drones.
âoeOverall, while the cartels pose a serious threat, a military solution could lead to further instability and might necessitate prolonged US involvement with limited success,â
But instability is our goal. Or the Mexican government can get on our side and move in afterwards to keep the peace in their own territory (which we won't
Re: (Score:2)
Not an expert, and unlike some commenters I won't pretend to have expertise when I don't, but there are a few rather obvious questions raised by your post:
How do you plan to use missiles (whether Hellfire or flying-Ginsu) in densely populated urban areas without inflicting massive civilian casualties?
What good is it to ask "the Mexican government" (presumably you mean municipal, state and federal LEOs) to "move in afterwards and keep the peace", when virtually all the Mexican LEOs are hopelessly corrupt?
Eve
Re: (Score:2)
How do you plan to use missiles (whether Hellfire or flying-Ginsu) in densely populated urban areas without inflicting massive civilian casualties?
That's exactly what the R9X (flying-Ginsu) was developed for.
virtually all the Mexican LEOs are hopelessly corrupt?
The corrupt (by choice) officials get the Ginsu. Some are corrupt due to coercion (play ball with the cartels or else). They can live.
what's to prevent someone else from taking their place? Are you just going to start over when that happens?
Yes.
how much money are you willing to spend on this, and how many American casualties are you willing to accept?
Much money but few casualties. That's why this will largely be an AI war. Look at how much money has been proposed for UBI to keep a bunch of junkies fed and housed. That's a good figure to start from.
Re: (Score:2)
Are you aware that, according to one recent estimate, there are about 175,000 active cartel members in Mexico (making them the fifth-largest employer in Mexico)? There are also 331,000 police officers in Mexico. Based on what I've read, you'd need to kill a rather large fraction of those, too. That's a lot of RX9 missiles (the cost of each RX9 is classified, but the basic Hellfire platform they are built on costs $150,000 per missile).
Then, of course, you acknowledge that you'd have to kill all the peopl
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
the cops are on the take so we can just kill you and get away with it.
Re: Who I'd worry about (Score:1)
Re: Who I'd worry about (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Mexico isn't a particularly cheap place to live.
I'm most worried that chemists are making $5-10k/year
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, I would be worried about breaking the law and its consequences, but I would be even more worried about the Cartel as my employer.
The worry about putting food on the table overrides both of those by a huge margin. And I mean that literally, as in actual food on an actual table.
The cartels are offering twice what the average Mexican chemist gets, so probably over 3 times what a graduate is looking at.
If you want to solve the problem of fentanyl, you need to stop the demand for it. Try decriminalising more popular, less dangerous drugs like Marijuana, Cocaine and MDMA, or at least stop putting weed smokers in Federal PMITA prison.
Re: (Score:3)
Yes, I would be worried about breaking the law and its consequences, but I would be even more worried about the Cartel as my employer.
Yeah, I'd be worried about what they interpret "severance pay" to mean. You can bet they'd also be extra paranoid about employees sticking to their "NDAs." You know, a lot of severely punished false positives.
Re: (Score:2)
but I would be even more worried about the Cartel as my employer.
You think Bill Lumbergh is a unholy, disgusting pig of a boss.
Perfect timing (Score:4, Funny)
I'm sat here watching Breaking Bad.
Re: (Score:2)
Not to mention an episode or two of The Expanse.
High School Chemistry Teacher (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Bad decisions, and stubborness. That was kind of a subplot. He refused to take money from his former business partner, a plot point appearing in the first and last episode to book end the series.
Breaking Bad Effect. (Score:2)
Re:Breaking Bad Effect. (Score:4, Informative)
Have you seen the show?
Because (spoiler alert) by the end, it pretty much ruined the life of everyone who was involved, or even knew someone who was.
Re: (Score:1)
Have you seen the show?
Because (spoiler alert) by the end, it pretty much ruined the life of everyone who was involved, or even knew someone who was.
There are people who think Homelander is the good guy.
Re: (Score:2)
There was nothing glamorous about the bad guys in that show. Except maybe one rich guy in Mexico who didn't last long.
Why Fentanyl (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
it will likely get cut with fillers on the other end.
The bigger problem for the cartels is that the easy-bake chemistry of their current fentanyl depends on vast quantities of precursor chemicals shipped in from China. For a variety of reasons (better profit margins, supply chain risk, etc.), they want to wean themselves from that dependency.
Re: (Score:3)
Carfentanyl (Score:2)
I am somewhat confused as to why they are putting so much effort into "improving" fentanyl.
It's already been done: carfentanyl is 10,000 times more potent than morphine and 100 times more potent than fentanyl. It is used to sedate large animals like elephants. It is so potent that it poses a significant danger to law enforcement since exposure to even tiny quantities can prove fatal...and yes according to the news at least there are people with such an utter disregard for human life that they are making and selling it.
Something isn't right about this article (Score:5, Insightful)
That pay might be for the guys who mix the drugs but it's not for the guys who formulate them.
Whatever the case we could make all this go away tomorrow just by legalizing hard drugs and treating them as a medical condition. Just don't let private companies sell them. You have to have the government give them away in a controlled setting with treatment options and social services immediately ready. And here's the hard part you have to actually take care of drug addicts even though everybody hates them with a passion.
It's infinitely cheaper and more humane but it's absolutely no fun.
NYC has places for that. (Score:2)
New York City say the first government-approved supervised drug injection sites
Re: (Score:2)
Which is a good first step, but from what I've seen, it fails to address the "illegal dealer" and associated violence problems by still requiring the addicts show up with the stuff.
It should be more like methadone clinics, or over in the Netherlands. The government gives them medical grade heroin, so they don't need to find the cash to pay illegal dealers, and the illegal dealers and associated supply lines get their money supply cut off, the surest way to actually get rid of them.
Heroin, medical grade, sh
Re: NYC has places for that. (Score:2)
Don't believe everything shown in BreakingBad (Score:2)
Cartels don't pay their top chemists as much as is portrayed in BreakingBad.
Re: (Score:2)
Cartels don't pay their top chemists as much as is portrayed in BreakingBad.
The premise of Breaking Bad that Walter was able to create a better, higher quality methamphetamine than everyone else. He had to break into the market without the cartel.
Re: (Score:2)
Whatever the case we could make all this go away tomorrow just by legalizing hard drugs and treating them as a medical condition. Just don't let private companies sell them. You have to have the government give them away in a controlled setting with treatment options and social services immediately ready. And here's the hard part you have to actually take care of drug addicts even though everybody hates them with a passion. It's infinitely cheaper and more humane but it's absolutely no fun.
Sounds great in theory, but, so far, it’s been self defeating in practice. It turns out that addressing the problem not only requires carrots, but also sticks.
Oregon just tried exactly that, but with disastrous results. It recently reversed itself.
Similarly, California just voted in ballot initiatives to roll back its decriminalization statewide. It’ll soon be harder to loot without consequence (addicts are looting to “pay” for their “free” lifestyles), and the police wil
Re: Something isn't right about this article (Score:1)
Re: Something isn't right about this article (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Something isn't right about this article (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And here's the hard part you have to actually take care of drug addicts even though everybody hates them with a passion.
I thought that was politicians.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
It is everyone else's problem whether you want it to be or not.
Nope...if an adult creates a problem for themself...it's their problem. If their family members suffer the consequences...that's their problem. Family, is who should be dealing with drug addicts. It should be VERY clear to someone considering taking drugs...that it will be they, or their family, that has to deal with the aftermath.
Everyone deals with the consequences of rampant drug addiction.
Only because they are forced to by the government through legislation and taxation. Otherwise, someone with decent family structure, wouldn't have to even think about addictio
"stricter chemical export controls from China" (Score:2, Interesting)
Nice to see some mention of help from China on this issue, and implications that the fentanyl in question isn't actually made in China...contrary to what many people seem to be saying.
Why is this such a problem in the USA?
All the raw materials come from China (Score:2)
And you only need a few pounds of raw materials for a lifetime supply of fentanyl (as your life expectancy will be reduced to a single digit number).
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
...Republicans voted against additional funding for border and immigration issues, so don't pin this on Biden....
Uh-huh....what other bullshit was tacked on to those bills, that they were actually voting against?
Recruitment Post (Score:2)
What is this, a recruitment post?
What are the benefits? (Score:2)
401k and healthcare? Union membership?
Re: (Score:2)
I'd be more concerned about the annual performance reviews.
Great job, good pay (Score:2)
Until you become one of those headless corpses hanging on a bridge in full view to strike fear in the authorities and the general public.
Be stupid and greedy, accept a Darwin award.
Well... (Score:2)
...at least for some their college degree pays out in the end.
Mexicans speak Portugese (Score:2)
Everyone knows that.
Re: Make Fentanyl Great Again! (Score:2, Informative)
Iinm, the fentanyl isn't produced in China. The Chinese are on the USA's side, as mentioned in the summary.