Background Briefing: September 29, 2021
DEA Warns Fentanyl-laced Counterfeit Drugs Sold on Sites Like SnapChat are Killing Thousands of American Teenagers
We begin with the warning from the Drug Enforcement Administration that 2 out of 5 counterfeit pills of Oxycodone, Adderall and Percocet sold by dealers online through SnapChat and other sites popular with teenagers are laced with fentanyl and are potentially lethal having caused close to 100,000 overdose deaths last year. Joining us is Sam Quinones, a journalist, author and storyteller whose acclaimed books include Dreamland: The True Tale of America’s Opiate Epidemic and his latest, out in November, The Least of Us: True Tales of America and Hope in the Time of Fentanyl and Meth. We discuss how in fentanyl, traffickers found a painkiller a hundred times more powerful than morphine which they could lace with cocaine, meth and counterfeit pills and market over the Internet to teenagers who often don’t have the tolerance for hard drugs. With drug traffickers acting like corporations and corporations like traffickers, we explore the role of the Chinese Communist government in not stopping the manufacture of fentanyl and its precursors and Purdue Pharma’s Sackler family as the initiators of the gateway drug that led to this ongoing opioid epidemic.
The Growing Use of Religious Exemptions by Anti-Vaxxers