Powered By Blogger

Thursday, May 5, 2011

My thoughts on Bin Laden's death

There has been a lot of talk flying on the media about the death of Osama Bin Laden from should they show his picture to was it fair to shoot an unarmed man to blah, blah, blah. I posted one comment on Facebook and it set off a nationwide (literally) debate between people that have never met and lasted for days. Not that I like to set off that much conflict, but I was kind of proud that my single thought could spark that much interest.

Obviously much of how our society has functioned over the past ten years has been strongly influenced by this man and I know I had given up hope that he was ever going to get caught so this event has certainly taken my by surprise. Some that I have spoken to are of the opinion that we are safer with him gone. I am not so easily convinced. I am certain that Al Quaida will continue on. Any organization of such power has built in backup systems in case its leader is lost. The US Government is the most obvious example that comes to mind. Bin Laden was not a nice person, but he was not dumb enough to assume that he was invincible and I am sure he had some kind of "in case I go on to my 67 (0r whatever the number is) virgins in the sky" plan in place for a replacement to take over.

The newest opinion I read was that the death of Bin Laden should have been kept secret for a certain period of time to allow the military longer time to evaluate the material in his compound. The writer of this editorial felt that the rapid announcement was only a way for Obama to gain popularity points. Now he is withholding the photographs of Bin Laden for his own gain as well. My guess is that the writer is not an Obama fan and needed to find something to criticize him on. Tell the public now or tell them later, they will get the news, and this is the kind of news that they have waited for a long time.

Personally I think that it is a silly thing to worry about. There are too many other things going on in the world to worry about minutia. I still maintain we are not safer as I mentioned above. Al Quaida has strong holds in Yemen and Somalia and do not need orders from Bin Laden anymore. The world is not a better place. There are something like 6 billion people on the planet. Killing one bad person is not going to make that much of a difference. Maybe I feel better that he is gone, and I know that a lot of people certainly do but if we let one bad person have too much influence on our life, we will let him win.g

Monday, May 2, 2011

Continued Bath Salt Rants

The number of admissions to the psychiatric unit here continues to be a fairly steady rate of 2-4 a week caused by psychosis secondary to MDPV, or bath salts (as they are commonly called) abuse. In some cases the patients have nothing else wrong with them and if it were not for this, would not come in contact with the mental health system. Some of them have other comorbid conditions. For a patient who has bipolar disorder, adding a hefty dose of "Blizzard" can set off a psychotic manic episode in no time. Not that one has to have a history of psychosis to get psychotic on MDPV. Most of the patients admitted do not have any psychiatric history. The common factor with all of these patients is that they are grossly psychotic.

And addicted. Many have turned to stealing to find the money to pay for their addiction. This stuff runs at about $35-40 a packet and the version sold around here, Blizzard, runs around $50-70 for a small jar. Break ins have been reported in areas that never had to deal with them before because of the presence of a "head shop" that sells MDPV. This is all to pay for a legal substance, not a so called "street drug". At these costs, the price is simply too high for most people to sustain their habit without resorting to illegal means to pay for it.

I am not sure about the weight or volume that is in a jar of Blizzard, but I know this is about enough to keep one person doped up on an out of control speed binge for about a weekend. It goes further than crack certainly, but still not cheap. In other words, enough to keep someone awake for three days straight and end up so flagrantly psychotic that one is either going to end in the hospital or dead. Much longer would cause the heart to give out from tachycardia (racing heart). That or the delusional patient ends up running into the street fleeing an imagined assailant and gets hit by a car. That or the person just dies of an overdose.

Although the user will come off such a long binge swearing he or she will never go through that experience again, they inevitably do. By now the user is addicted. The withdrawal symptoms make the user miserable and the actual experience of a binge is not always pleasant, but the drug's effects are stronger than the intellect. I have talked to people who have been fighting this battle for years.

And there are still people who think that legalizing drugs will solve the country's problems. I just hope that if a store decides to sell this product, that this store is in their neighborhood and not mine. If they want legal drugs, they can have them. I do not want them in my, or my family's (especially my child's) neighborhood.