I'd never heard of nitazenes, but apparently they're a growing threat to illicit drug users. They've even made an appearance in this part of North Texas, which is way out in the sticks compared to the big cities as far as drug dealers go. It looks bad.
While politicians and policymakers amp up calls for more brutal crackdowns on fentanyl smuggling, a “new” class of synthetic opioids has been showing up in overdose victims with the potential to make America look back on the fentanyl crisis as “the good old days.”
Chemists refer loosely to this category of drugs as “nitazenes,” even though the term is incorrect; it should be “benzimidazole-based opioids.” The Swiss drug maker CIBA, now part of Novartis, developed the first nitazenes in the late 1950s as potential pain treatments. However, none was approved because they were too dangerously potent.
In 2020, the World Health Organization reported that isotonitazene (which drug users call “iso” or “tony”) began appearing in forensic toxicology reports in six European countries, Canada and the United States. In 2022, the Tennessee Department of Health reported that overdose deaths from synthetic opioids classified as nitazeneshave increased fourfold in just two years.
. . .
These drugs are not only appearing in adulterated opioids. A U.K. drug testing service determined that, since September, nitazenes have been found in 20 samples of black-market benzodiazepines (common tranquilizers such as Xanax) taken from all parts of the country.
People who purchase benzodiazepines on the black market wouldn’t expect nitazenes to be a contaminant and could become overdose victims.
. . .
News reports about the growing presence of nitazenes among the mix of street drugs should come as no surprise to anyone familiar with what has come to be known as “the iron law of prohibition.” Drug policy analysts often phrase it as, “The harder the enforcement, the harder the drugs.”
Drug prohibition drives the creation of more potent drug forms to enhance business efficiency. Smaller drug packages simplify smuggling, enabling dealers to subdivide stronger forms into smaller portions for sale, improving their risk/benefit ratio.
The "iron law" explains the rise in THC concentration in cannabis, the shift from powdered cocaine to crack cocaine, and the progression from cracking down on black market prescription pain pills to the emergence of heroin and, subsequently, fentanyl.
There's more at the link.
The article appears to be written from the perspective that prohibition of drugs is bad; that the "War On Drugs" has not worked, and should therefore be reconsidered. I can't argue with the truth of the underlying premise. "Hard" drugs are cheaper and more easily obtained today than at any time in the past, and there doesn't seem to be any improvement in sight. What's more, an entire "industry" has grown up around the War On Drugs, with tens of thousands of people employed and millions of dollars spent every year in a (so far) fruitless effort to stem the tide of illegal narcotics flooding our streets.
The problem with abandoning prohibition as a policy is that it does have its successes - they just aren't publicized as widely as its failures. Without the laws making street narcotics illegal, and giving our law enforcement authorities the legal tools to crack down on them, I think the situation would be a lot worse. On the other hand, I also have to accept that "drug money" has corrupted many law enforcement personnel and agencies, to such an extent that we're no longer surprised to find officers on trial for distributing drugs and protecting drug dealers. Where there's almost unlimited money to be made, that works on both sides of the street. Furthermore, too many law officers have learned to "throw their weight around", to bully the rest of us because the law provides them too much protection from the consequences of their actions. That's as destructive to a law-abiding society as drugs themselves.
I come at the problem from the perspective of the victims. Being a retired pastor and prison chaplain, I've seen the effects of ruined lives and destroyed families that drugs leave behind them. I've seen the survivors of people killed while under the influence of drugs, or murdered by someone on drugs, and I know their anguish. I don't think we dare take off what restraints there are, because if we did, those problems would be multiplied instantly and many times over. We can't prevent them, but we can at least minimize them compared to what they'd be without anti-drug laws and actions.
What's the answer? I have no idea. I've heard many say that we should simply abandon Naloxone, the drug to "bring back" victims of fentanyl overdoses, and let them die, because that's the only way to solve the demand side of the "supply and demand" equation. Unfortunately, that won't stop the problem, because dealers and pushers will continue to distribute their product, and pressure or tempt people into trying it (the drug-dealer advertising stickers saying "First fix is free!" aren't a joke; they're real - I've seen them in more than one inner-city area). There are also those who say that mandatory execution for drug dealers would fix it, but it hasn't in the past. Where there's a demand, and there's money to be made from it, somebody will fill that demand. If it's costly or dangerous to do so, they'll simply raise their price until it's worth it to them to take that risk.
I wish I could see a way forward. The only thing I can realistically, practically counsel is to avoid using such drugs ourselves, and see to it that our kids are protected from their temptation until such time that they're mature enough to understand the dangers. Yes, that may mean taking them out of the school system altogether and home-schooling them. That's part of the price we pay for allowing things to get this bad over time.
Peter
Let the users overdose and die. Execute the pushers. Lock down the border. Inspect every single container from China, and add a 100% tariff to pay for the expense.
ReplyDeleteHonestly I don't care how you feel about drugs, the war on drugs, or any of the political/social nonsense that has sprung up...
ReplyDeleteALLLLLLLLL of our problems with that whole sphere, come from shit cooked up in a laboratory (that goes for Moonshine and alcohol, too, have you SEEN what a still looks like and how it functions? Twice as complex as any chemistry experiment in high-school)
If a plant grows in the ground from a seed, fuck you, I can smoke it if I want to.
90% of our problems would go away, but Nooooo.... There's money to be made. Fuck your health, soldier, Take this pill instead. A guy in a white lab coat gave it to you, so it's OK if you get hooked on it. Shades of the Milgram experiement...
If the CIA wasn't benefiting from all this we could do something like tasking them with destroying the cartels with extreme prejudice.
ReplyDeleteA society that has done everything it can to remove God from the picture, while at the same time working to turn people into helpless peons that have no hope of a better life, should not be surprised when things start falling apart.
ReplyDeleteWhat McChuck said.
ReplyDeleteFirst require drug violations to be charged to the fullest extent of the law, with no plea bargaining, no probation after the first violation, no pussy-footing.
Users? Nail them. Hard. If they OD, f-them, okay, give them one free life and tattoo their hairy butts. If they OD again, screw them.
Charge the dealers and distributors with all the lives connected to their drugs. Murder is murder is murder.
And quit treating drug abuse as a 'disease.' It isn't. Not at all. It's a choice. Like smoking or drinking. The user can stop. Or die. Who cares.
And secure the Southern Border, treat the Cartels as the terrorist organizations they are, and the Cartels' suppliers as terrorist organizations also.
People think Prohibition was a failure. It wasn't. Before Prohibition, alcoholism and deaths by alcohol or caused by alcohol were increasing at an incredible rate. Drunken factory workers were a real issue. For all the bad about Prohibition, the nation did 'dry out' during it to a great extent. And it started a slow pull back from day drinking.
Sir,
ReplyDeleteI would note that there is a real, concerted move to decriminalize drugs possession & use, to reduce the difficulty of obtaining & using by providing safe supply, and to minimize the dangers associated with street-level drug culture.
I had always thought that the use of hard drugs incorporated an unintended benefit, that of their lethality being a self-limiting feature.
I further note the efforts of my government, in the guise of 'compassion', seeks to reduce that lethality which in the past served as a disincentive to use. Hard drugs are dangerous; this is why we do not use them.
Seems simple enough.
As a human being, I realize that sometimes things happen. You wake up from a coma following a serious car crash and find that you are now addicted to the painkillers being used during your treatment. Fair enough. I will personally fund your rehabilitation.
Becoming addicted to such because someone at a party gave you your first dose and you thought it would be fun to try it is a very different conversation.
As a taxpayer, I am not at all happy that my taxes are being used to remove risks from something that should be left in its hazardous form, and I am further not impressed that the consequences of personal, albeit poor, decisions are now things that people are to be insulated from.
In the name of 'compassion'.
Here is a hard truth: Not Everyone Makes It. I vividly recall the names and faces of friends and acquaintances that didn't survive high school, or the fun we had in our twenties, because of this mishap or that bad choice. Shit happens, and sometimes it happens to people you care about.
Frankly, I don't care what people do to themselves. Have at 'er. Do what you want. Go get 'em, tiger.
Just don't make me pay for your stupidity. It's expensive, and you won't learn anything that way.
Safe Supply is ridiculous on its face. Have a look at Vancouver for more details.
Mike in Canada
Ever wonder how much risk an illegal drug user will tolerate? It's not like what they intend to take isn't already deadly enough. So if there are even more deadly contaminants, will they be dissuaded? I doubt it.
ReplyDeleteMaybe we should just go ahead and let Darwin select out the traits that make someone a druggie. Eventually the human gene pool will adapt. Evolution is messy, so it will tend to over-select. Maybe that will breed some caution into our youth.
The Drug Problem is a consequence of Urbanization, the splintering of people from their families and tribes, the atomization of society.
ReplyDeletePeople unmoored from their familial (and social) bonds, moving around in cities, living and moving in close proximity with strangers all day. They become much more stressed. Which has epigenetic effects on their children. Who grow up in the unmoored urban environments from birth, and magnifies further epigenetic consequences on their own offspring.
This manifests in the mental health epidemic and the Drug epidemic as well. And the materialistic culture. The three of them feed back and enhance each other. Doom Loop ensues.
Border security. 70% of stolen vehicles are leaving the country via intermodal containers, 90% of drugs come in via the same method. If we searched 100% of all entering and exiting containers we would significantly reduce the problem.
ReplyDeleteBack in 2020 during the lockdowns and shipping crisis, the cost of hard drugs skyrocketed as the amount being shipped in was drastically cut back.
If we actually protected our borders we would be better off
Exile1981
Beans is correct...Prohibition was a huge success. The organization that was implemented to supply the illegal hooch has only flourished since the 1930s. I also think halfdar has a great understanding of the 'problem'. I personally think, if left alone, the drug problem will correct itself.
ReplyDeleteI agree with most of the previous commenters, but especially this one. As a nation the United States has done its best to remove the Lord from everything and everywhere. I am quite certain this nation is currently under judgement.
ReplyDeleteMy $0.02, is as follows.
1) We need to seal the borders. All of them. No immigration legal or illegal, for 20 years minimum. Post guards on the borders, if people try to cross, shoot them. No more catch and release, treat them as they are invaders.
2) In those 20 years hunt down the illegals, hunt down the gang members, and hunt down the US Citizens who broke the laws by aiding them. Round them up and pay a central African nation to take them, then exile them. Removal of citizenship from any citizens caught doing the above.
3) In those 20 years hunt down the dealers. Execute them publicly with via hanging. No 40 years on tax payer dime jail-time. Should they have the ability to appeal, yes, but this endless waste needs to stop. So an arbitrary 5 year maximum time limit for appeals. If found guilty they get a visit from a chaplain to give them a chance to save their soul, then a short drop with a sudden stop.
4) We need to bring God back. A public apology to him from our leadership, and the return to how it was before the wicked started removing him.
5) For those who are addicts. I do have some sympathy for them. I've heard stories about dealers and gang members deliberately mixing drugs made to look like candy into bowls of candy to get kids addicted. I'm sure there are other methods used too. However sympathy can only go so far before you are guilty of causing suffering to others because of lack of action. (Think comics. I see Batman as the worst villain in Gotham, because he refuses to remove Joker and the rest. The first three times ok see if you can get him to repent and change, but after that all those people the joker killed or did horrible damage to is on batman's shoulders.) So I think all of them should be given a chance, three chances even to get straight, if they can't then remove their citizenship and pay an African nation to take them in and exile them from the country.
All that being said, that one commenter was completely correct about the CIA allowing this to happen because they are benefiting from it. Now there is a group that could use a good cleaning out. Them and the State Dept. too.
- W
There's never been a "War On Drugs".
ReplyDeleteThere's Been a Slap Fight On (Some) Drugs, With Collateral Damage.
And there's been a War On The Fourth And Fifth Amendment, beyond question.
When we start executing drug smugglers and dealers for first offenses, and carpet-bombing production sites, give a holler. That would be a "War On Drugs".
Until then, the "War On Drugs" is more of a fantasy than Bigfoot.
Jimmy_W, unfortunately that is easily disproven. The drug use in Indian and Alaska Native villages is higher then most urban areas.
ReplyDeleteAfter the Second Opium War a significant portion of the Chinese population was addicted. The governments solution was to give everyone one chance to get clean, fail that and they executed them. The also killed all the suppliers. It worked.
Anyone wanting legalizing drugs can go to San Francisco and see how that's working out.
one of the most interesting I've eve read, including/particularly the comments.
ReplyDeleteI (almost) totally agree with Anonymous(W) save he/she/whatever is far too kind: addicts are recidivists - never met one that wasn't (drugs, alcohol, smokers (they'll just find something else - ever met a smoker who didn't put on weight after quitting). Only one time, not three.
Why send them to Africa, the CCP needs slave labor and knows how to control a problem population (it has been said I have no heart).
Last, but far n' not least, get rid of the DEA (at all government levels. If root canal specialists or oral surgeons are unable to prescribe "pain pills" for their patients without some DEI decerebrate at some government level overseeing (and calling to tell the dentist that their license to practice is under review due to their prescribing history), we have lost not just our relationship to reality, but our country - we have become Hitler Germany/Stalin Russia/Ceaușescu Romania.
As a final note: hemp rope is ecologically friendly.
I say we ramp up production of krokodil and let the problem sort itself out.
ReplyDeletePeter, yours is a well-reasoned argument that speaks from personal experience. It immediately derailed my emotional response, which was similar to the Naxalone quandary. I see no solution on the horizon, either. I have seen the effects of addiction in people in my life...it's sad. The only thing I can think of is an evolutionary solution, those who would use addictive drugs will, those who won't, won't. Time will take care of the problem. But there will be lots of pain between now and then.
ReplyDeleteAn automatic death penalty after (x) violent felonies would solve most of our problems.
ReplyDeleteBut even with a grace period, we'd start with thousands of executions (of violent felons) every year for at least a few years, and the public wouldn't like it.
So instead we'll allow thousands of deaths per year of innocent people at their hands. But mostly we'll never see them, so how about some Netflix?
I recommend Chris Anvil's story, "Trial By Silk". The premise is that on a planet, certain areas were dedicated to anything goes. Those unable to restrain themselves gave in to their pleasure of choice and soon died.
ReplyDeleteIt is an intriguing proposition; much like Oregon embarked on by legalizing hard drugs. Oregon is horrified that their drug deaths have skyrocketed. It wasn't supposed to work like this.
With drugs we have learned nothing from Prohibition. Legalise the lot and have them sold in stores, like cigarettes, where standards can be enforced.
ReplyDeleteIt is intellectually cheating to ignore and not count the government problems that inevitably accompany the government "solutions".
ReplyDeleteI don't think we dare take off what restraints there are, because if we did, those problems would be multiplied instantly and many times over. We can't prevent them, but we can at least minimize them compared to what they'd be without anti-drug laws and actions.
This is a myth, an apology for an undeserved power of government, a lie as big as Hobbes' war of all against all. The Harrison Narcotics Tax Act which first regulated narcotics was passed in 1914. Do you argue that America from 1650-1913 was a complete disaster due to all the available drugs?
Some of daytime drunkenness in the past was because before chlorination tap water wasn't bacteriologically safe to drink, and a dilute alcohol solution was.
Opiates and cocaine are agricultural products, and should cost no more than table sugar. The high price which motivates stealing by addicts is also a problem created by government.
Execute the pushers. Lock down the border. Inspect every single container from China, and add a 100% tariff to pay for the expense.
Let's recreate East Germany. Turn the border into a Soviet iron curtain, and inspect everyone's wallet and purse every few blocks. Prohibition is supported by both Baptists (control freaks) and bootleggers (who benefit from government price supports).