The Part I Like Best

About Harm Reduction programs are the harms they reduce.

Related: In an exclusive investigation, The Bureau delves into the U.S. government’s case, tracking the history of fentanyl networks infiltrating North America since the early 1990s, with over 350 organized crime groups now using Canada as a fentanyl production, transshipment, and export powerhouse linked to China, according to Canadian intelligence.

18 Replies to “The Part I Like Best”

  1. So … curing an addicts habit is feeding an addicts habit? I guess that makes sense to leftist losers who celebrate their loserdom

  2. And Trudeau and the premier lickspittles are all upset at the Trump Tariffs, because THEY have been called out for the YUGE fentanyl problem, emanating in no small part from Canada.
    Yet, the street drug and crime problem is clear to anyone that visits any city, small or large, in this country. This could be a win-win situation to stomp out an obvious problem, instead our own “leaders” having their little empires questioned for the obvious problems they turn a blind eye to and threaten retribution instead, on a country that won’t be affected by Canada’s self-inflicted harm (Hello Drug Ford!).
    The small mindedness of this country’s leadership class is clear to see.

    1. Can’t trust any weight measurements. Is that the weight of the fentanyl, the weight mixed with heroin and whatever filler, or the weight of manufactured pills? Are they counting the packaging?

      News loves to say “enough fentanyl to kill every American twice” when they make a bust. – obviously not, since the streets are still full of junkies.

      Of course Mexico is the bigger problem

    2. alla unDORK
      If we only had more IDIOTs like you, we could catch up to Messico, in no time.
      HCQ works against SARS 2, there was massive voter fraud in 2020, 2024 results prove that. now go doug EMOFF yerself

    3. “Why are we being treated the same as Mexico when there’s 400x more fentanyl seized on their border? ”

      Because ‘seized’ means very little when the US-Mexico border is half as long and has far better security than the US-Canada border. No one has any idea how much fentanyl is being successfully smuggled into the US via the far easier route from Canada.

        1. The Bureau delves into the U.S. government’s case, tracking the history of fentanyl networks infiltrating North America since the early 1990s, with over 350 organized crime groups now using Canada as a fentanyl production, transshipment, and export powerhouse linked to China, according to Canadian intelligence.

          At least one of these 350 groups has successfully shipped drugs across the border.

  3. It is amazing how the media only focuses on the tariff threat, not the reason why Trump is proposing this. He wants to stop the fentanyl at the border. No no don’t mention the real problem, just talk about tariffs. You are supposed to hate Trump and forget the drug problem.

  4. What makes anyone think this latest gambit in the war on drugs is going to succeed any better than all the other gambits over the last 50 years or so?

    The fentanyl problem could be solved by making it clear to fentanyl addicts that their medical treatment for overdosing will not be covered by medicare.

    1. “their medical treatment for overdosing will not be covered by medicare.”
      If you don’t treat it at all, problemo solved, one case at a time.

  5. Fentanyl is a problem in Canada as well. Common ground for all 3 countries.

    The Mexican president suggested the US is flooding her country with guns. The Canadian police say the same. There are issues all around, enough for everyone. Tariffs will not solve social issues. They have nothing to do with them.

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