Any substance, even water, can kill. Should water be considered poison?fentanyl fits the definition of poison perfectly.
Fentanyl is still a useful tool for pain management.
The thread title is "Mass Murder".The word murder is not in the post.
Any substance, even water, can kill. Should water be considered poison?fentanyl fits the definition of poison perfectly.
The thread title is "Mass Murder".The word murder is not in the post.
Point taken on the murder issue although some people might argue there is little difference between handing out poison to a bunch of people you know are going to take it and herding them into gas chambers.. Fentanyl might be a useful tool for pain management but that does not preclude it from being a poison a large part of the problem being the difference between a safe dose and a lethal one is so small that mistakes are to easy to make and people are dying a lot of other drugs this is not the case. Not really sure what can be done so I think we should all try and come up with whatever they think might help because a lot of people are dying and were not hearing much from the politicians.Any substance, even water, can kill. Should water be considered poison?
Fentanyl is still a useful tool for pain management.
The thread title is "Mass Murder".
Correct. Stats only show overdose deaths where the family or someone else gets the OD victim to the hospital & they expire in a hospital environment. It doesn't count those who drop dead in an alley, a club bathroom, or a 5 star hotel room. Also doesn't count the near fatalities that result in permanent disability (brain damage) or the lucky few who actually gets the Naloxone in time.Just a little side note.
The acctual amount of people that have died from fentanyl OD is likely a lot higher then the reported official number. Numerous deaths are not investigated for drugs or are they expert enough to suspect fentanyl. Or they just don't want to bothered to send samples away because of the time it takes. And some families don't want it Stated that there family member died of a drug overdose.
Never the less this is world wild and in epidemic perportions and the amount of deaths here in our locale area and provincially is just a small amount compared larger populated areas .There it would be all most I'm possiable to determine what drug was the cause of all the drug related deaths.If it mixed with a know easy to detect drug ., then no doubt that will be put down as cause of death, fentanyl would be totally over looked.
Then "some people" are fucking idiots who have no god damn clue.Point taken on the murder issue although some people might argue there is little difference between handing out poison to a bunch of people you know are going to take it and herding them into gas chambers.
Its Chinese, really easy to get from China. The reason why its so heavily prevalent everywhere is because its easy to order off the internet with a click of a few buttons from the research chemical labs in China. No more smuggling kilos of heroin through the ports, now it comes right through Canada post into your mailbox.100 percent agree. Serial killers at work. Incredibly sad to see police not being able to stop this or find the source.
So as long as you scatter the bodies around so there not all in one place your just the friendly neighborhood salesman trying to make sure everyone has a good time but you know accidents happen.Then "some people" are fucking idiots who have no god damn clue.
My father was one of the first Allied troops into Buchenwald, and saw Dachau as well.
I toured the Auschwitz site myself. Also saw REAL genocide in various overseas rotations, as in piles of bodies in ditches, securing sites for UN war crimes investigators, and worse.
Comparing drug dealers with those places is ridiculous and tells me "some people" lead pretty cushy sheltered lives.
There are plenty of places where many more people die for being the wrong religion, the wrong race, or just because they are in the crossfire.
That never bothered the latte liberals of Vancouver.
Fentanyl is the first time they have had to face anything up close and they are panicking.
It was my understanding that if a body was found in an alley, club, etc. the coroner's office would have to determine cause of death nonetheless, particularly if there are no external signs (e.g. ingested not injected). Would those Fentanyl statistics not roll those toxicology reports into their numbers?Correct. Stats only show overdose deaths where the family or someone else gets the OD victim to the hospital & they expire in a hospital environment. It doesn't count those who drop dead in an alley, a club bathroom, or a 5 star hotel room. Also doesn't count the near fatalities that result in permanent disability (brain damage) or the lucky few who actually gets the Naloxone in time.
No, they don't. The overdose deaths we see reported are just the tip of the iceberg.It was my understanding that if a body was found in an alley, club, etc. the coroner's office would have to determine cause of death nonetheless, particularly if there are no external signs (e.g. ingested not injected). Would those Fentanyl statistics not roll those toxicology reports into their numbers?
Do you have a link to anything that specifies their inclusion criteria? The only thing I can find is this coroners' report:No, they don't. The overdose deaths we see reported are just the tip of the iceberg.





