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Title: NYT Shocked to Find That Opioid Dealers with Credentials Operate Like Opioid Dealers Without Credentials
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://dailystormer.name/nyt-shock ... d-dealers-without-credentials/
Published: Apr 18, 2019
Author: Andrew Anglin
Post Date: 2019-04-18 09:27:03 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 31

Meanwhile, in America…

It’s not surprising to any non-Jew that opioid dealers with credentials operate the same as opioid dealers without credentials.

Obviously, the entire purpose of OxyContin was to encourage recreational use and addiction. Otherwise, there would have been no need to invent it, because a significantly less addictive strong opiate already existed in the form of morphine.

There was no serious pain issue that couldn’t be dealt with using morphine. And OxyContin was being prescribed for things that had previously been dealt with using even lower forms of opioids such as codeine and Vicodin.

The entire thing was a self-evident racket from the point at which a pharmaceutical company decided to start researching more addictive painkillers. The fact that it made it through FDA approval and was then given to people with sore backs is just completely insane. Every step of this process was predicated on corruption.

And as we know, it was all Jews involved. OxyContin was invented by the Jewish Sackler family, lobbied for by Jews, and approved by the Jewish-run FDA. Most of the doctors that have been arrested for running “pain clinic” pill mills have been Jews.

So of course for the last ten years, the Jewish NYT wasn’t interested in covering the crimes of their cousins.

Now that they have to cover these crimes, because the whole thing has blown up, they are pretending to act surprised.

New York Times:

Last summer, a woman in northern Alabama who law enforcement officials said was a prostitute typed a message to a doctor: “Can u get any Xanax.”

The doctor replied: “What makes you think I know a Xanax source?” Just below, he added a smiley face, and then described his home as the “Fun House.”

The doctor was one of the scores of medical professionals across seven states who were charged by federal prosecutors on Wednesday with schemes to illegally distribute millions of pain pills. Opioid prescriptions were exchanged for sex in some cases, and for cash with an added “concierge fee” in others. One doctor was accused of routinely prescribing opioids to friends on Facebook.

Prosecutors said the doctor in northern Alabama “recruited prostitutes and other young women with whom he had sexual relationships” to become his patients. He also opened his home to people using heroin, methamphetamine, cocaine and marijuana, they said, in a criminal complaint, adding that police officers had been to the house several times concerning overdoses and other complaints.

Officials called the indictments, which were unsealed in federal court in Cincinnati on Wednesday, the “single largest prescription opioid law enforcement operation in history.”

The indictments accuse 60 people, including 31 doctors, seven pharmacists and eight nurses, of involvement in the schemes, which included prescribing opioids for gratuitous medical procedures like unnecessary tooth pulling. In some cases, prosecutors said, doctors simply handed out signed blank prescription forms.

“These cases involve approximately 350,000 opioid prescriptions and more than 32 million pills — the equivalent of a dose of opioids for every man, woman and child across the states of Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama and West Virginia combined,” Brian Benczkowski, an assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department’s criminal division, said at a news conference.

Most of the charges were filed against people in those five states; one person was charged in Pennsylvania and one in Louisiana.

Nationally, more than 70,000 deaths in 2017 were attributed to drug overdoses, with about one-quarter of them caused by prescription opioids. States wholly or partly in Appalachia recorded some of the highest rates of drug overdose deaths that year: West Virginia was first in the nation, Ohio second and Kentucky fifth.

Yes, it’s all white people.

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