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[–]JasonCarswellVoluntaryist 7 insightful - 4 fun7 insightful - 3 fun8 insightful - 4 fun -  (3 children)

I hope it was painful and I hope someone gave him COVID and Anthrax while torturing him to give up a death bed confession of what happened to the missing $2.3 Trillion.

[–][deleted] 7 insightful - 3 fun7 insightful - 2 fun8 insightful - 3 fun -  (2 children)

He died of bone marrow cancer. It was most certainly incredibly painful. Although thanks to the fake opioid crisis peons like me would just suffer, but I'm sure he actually got as many painkillers as he needed.

[–]MarkimusNational Socialist 1 insightful - 1 fun1 insightful - 0 fun2 insightful - 1 fun -  (1 child)

fake opioid crisis

What? You think it's fake that hundreds of thousands of white people have been murdered by opiate peddling jews? Why did the Sacklers particularly target poor white areas if it's just fake that these things kill people? And if it's not the opiates, then what else is the common denominator?

[–][deleted] 3 insightful - 1 fun3 insightful - 0 fun4 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Since the crackdown, now that it's almost impossible to get opioids, the deaths aren't going down, they're going up. The addicts are addicts whether or not it's easy to get painkillers from doctors, they just buy them illegally and they're contaminated purposely with fentanyl to make them cheaper, stronger, more addictive, and deadly.

Those pharmaceutical companies are pieces of shit, don't get me wrong, but the narrative that they create junkies is very overstated. It's estimated only 8-10% of people abuse their prescriptions, and that doesn't mean they're all addicts, just they're not following the directions.

What the pharmaceutical companies do have is lots of money, and junkies cost the state a lot. It doesn't make the news how many counties and states are suing right now to recoup that money from clinics, hospitals, and pharma they claim are responsible for over prescribing opiates.

The system now, doctors and organization have a quota. Exceedingly it triggers an automatic review from the DEA and doctors can lose their DEA numbers, their ability to prescribe controlled substances. So, unsurprisingly, they've gone from overprescribing to underprescribing.

People are suffering, I'm suffering. If tylenol and advil aren't cutting it, there are a few other things to try but they usually aren't as effective as opiates. And that's hurting people in chronic pain and people who need surgery. And despite this suffering, we're not saving lives.