Anyone doubting that law enforcement is at war with the people needs to wake up. The American War on Drugs was never intended to solve anything. It is simply a tool to criminalize average people from the moment blue lights come on behind them, to the moment they are faced with the reality of a drug assessment Minneapolis Minnesota.
Driving under the influence is a strong weapon law enforcement uses to stop, harass, arrest, and ultimately destroy individuals in small communities. Millions of people go through State run DUI schools where they are told that any and all drug or alcohol use is abuse even when they have no drug history. For those with prescriptions for opiates or medical marijuana, the DUI has become the weapon law enforcement uses to ruin them.
Fibromyalgia patients line up with the heroine addicts at the methadone clinic, but it may not be long before the State takes their kids, pulls their license, or simply harasses them with a DUI charge. Once charged with any drug related matter, even at the level of misdemeanor, the courts will require assessments to be done, at the expense of the accused. The assessors decide they have a problem more than 95% of the time.
Once a problem has been established, whether real or imagined, the accused is required to pursue whatever treatment plan is proposed. Again, this is done largely at their own expense, separate from any fine or probationary fee. It is not uncommon for these assessments to demand a person report themselves to a treatment center for up to two years.
The treatment centers are hundreds of miles from where they live. Often they will house the individual and provide them with employment, but the center controls their money. They pay fines and fees to meet their probationary requirements, but they also keep a goodly portion for themselves, and leave little to no saved by the end of this treatment that allows them limited liberties and almost no privacy.
A town who has been told they need to clean up the neighborhood has only to trump up charges on the poorer members of their community and ship them out of state while they permit repossession courts and tax liens take care of the rest. Even after the treatment, that person now has a forced interest to stay where they are to keep their low-wage job assignment.
Hard addicts should have access to this level of care so they can practice sobriety by relocating as a means to radically change their life and pursue personal commitments. Unfortunately, the majority of those being subjected to these programs are weekend warrior pot smokers, New Years drunk drivers, and elderly or middle-aged people on prescription opiates. They get caught in a web of laws designed to promote the a system feeding on those most vulnerable.
Such neighborhoods are revealed by the overpopulated law enforcement presence within small communities. When there are five squad cars at each intersection, at any given time of day or night, residents may want to accept that they are being hunted like dogs. When this police presence strongly appears to target anyone sporting older cars, then the aim of those in power becomes obvious.
Driving under the influence is a strong weapon law enforcement uses to stop, harass, arrest, and ultimately destroy individuals in small communities. Millions of people go through State run DUI schools where they are told that any and all drug or alcohol use is abuse even when they have no drug history. For those with prescriptions for opiates or medical marijuana, the DUI has become the weapon law enforcement uses to ruin them.
Fibromyalgia patients line up with the heroine addicts at the methadone clinic, but it may not be long before the State takes their kids, pulls their license, or simply harasses them with a DUI charge. Once charged with any drug related matter, even at the level of misdemeanor, the courts will require assessments to be done, at the expense of the accused. The assessors decide they have a problem more than 95% of the time.
Once a problem has been established, whether real or imagined, the accused is required to pursue whatever treatment plan is proposed. Again, this is done largely at their own expense, separate from any fine or probationary fee. It is not uncommon for these assessments to demand a person report themselves to a treatment center for up to two years.
The treatment centers are hundreds of miles from where they live. Often they will house the individual and provide them with employment, but the center controls their money. They pay fines and fees to meet their probationary requirements, but they also keep a goodly portion for themselves, and leave little to no saved by the end of this treatment that allows them limited liberties and almost no privacy.
A town who has been told they need to clean up the neighborhood has only to trump up charges on the poorer members of their community and ship them out of state while they permit repossession courts and tax liens take care of the rest. Even after the treatment, that person now has a forced interest to stay where they are to keep their low-wage job assignment.
Hard addicts should have access to this level of care so they can practice sobriety by relocating as a means to radically change their life and pursue personal commitments. Unfortunately, the majority of those being subjected to these programs are weekend warrior pot smokers, New Years drunk drivers, and elderly or middle-aged people on prescription opiates. They get caught in a web of laws designed to promote the a system feeding on those most vulnerable.
Such neighborhoods are revealed by the overpopulated law enforcement presence within small communities. When there are five squad cars at each intersection, at any given time of day or night, residents may want to accept that they are being hunted like dogs. When this police presence strongly appears to target anyone sporting older cars, then the aim of those in power becomes obvious.
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