February 3, 2014
War On Drugs Targets Wrong Individuals
[From article]
The list of young stars being caught up in drug scandals or checking into rehab seems endless.
[. . .]
Such is the prevalence of drugs that a celebrity needs to be hospitalised or have a run-in with the law for the story to break in the quality press.
[. . .]
Yet what is different today is not that drug taking seems to be the norm, but that the drugs being taken have evolved and are easier than ever to obtain. More importantly the moral stigma of being seen to be on drugs has been hugely diminished.
[. . .]
Lindsay Lohan [admitted] on Oprah, claiming to take cocaine only because it allowed her to drink more.
[. . .]
Drug taking has become a fact of life, and it's true for bankers and lawyers as much as for film stars.
It's now become a story when someone feels the need to come out and say they don't do drugs,
Here's an idea, why not follow known drug addicted elite celebrities. They are easy to follow and to observe where and when they get their drugs. It makes the war on drugs much easier. Instead the law enforcement apparatus focuses on 70-year-old white males who do not drugs, and who were exploited by police and the FBI using him in an impaired state to fight organized crime for 15 years without paying him. Followed by 22 years of retaliation by crime families. Currently Harvard University campus police and their residential building superintendents conduct surveillance harassment, sleep disturbances every one or two hours every day, character assassination, insults, provocations, threats, and more. One more misguided priority of government wasting taxpayer funds.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/philip-seymour-hoffman-and-hollywoods-drug-addiction-9105298.html
Philip Seymour Hoffman and Hollywood's drug addiction
KALEEM AFTAB
Tuesday 04 February 2014
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