How has the US become an opioid narco-state
By
Dakotah Lilly
Published: Aug 27, 2022
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202208/1273981.shtml
The United States is facing an epidemic and crisis
that has so far not been addressed appropriately by the ruling class. Millions of Americans have lost their
lives to this epidemic, and countless families have been ripped apart and
changed forever because of the inaction of our ruling elites in regard to the
opioid epidemic in the United States. Politicians and the hegemonic media in
the US have so far either ignored the problem or attempted to shift the blame
to other countries such as China or Mexico, completely absolving themselves of
the responsibility they share for the destruction reaped on society by this
epidemic. This is contrary to the facts of the matter. Even Bill Brownfield,
former US assistant secretary of state for international narcotics, said,
"I actually believe on matters of narcotics and drugs, the US and China
cooperate extremely well."
Fentanyl accounted for the most drug overdose deaths in the United States in
2021, with over 71,000 deaths. Fentanyl was invented by a Belgian physician and is the 278th most commonly prescribed medication in the United States, with
more than 1 million prescriptions. US pundits and politicians point to the fact
that some of the fentanyl is produced in China as the reason that China is
culpable for the opioid epidemic in the United States. They would rather point
the finger at another government rather than place the blame on themselves and
the pharmaceutical companies that are making billions of dollars producing and
prescribing highly addictive opioids.
The United States is facing this epidemic for a variety of reasons; austerity,
neoliberal economics, and the basic nature of capitalism all play no small role
in this epidemic that kills more than 130 people every day in the United
States. Unethical doctors, pain clinics, hospitals, providers, and pill mills
have partnered with pharmaceutical companies to overprescribe and push opioids
on the unsuspecting American working class who are desperate for an escape from
their everyday economic anxiety and pressure.
The push toward prescription painkillers began in the '90s and has been
exacerbated by the "unique" nature of the US "healthcare"
system. In many cases, private insurance companies will only pay for a pill as
opposed to alternative treatments or therapies. At a time when inflation is the
highest, it has been in 40 years, when income inequality is now at levels we
haven't seen since the gilded age, and when 1 in 8 Americans are living in
poverty, more than likely most Americans are forced to go with the one
treatment method that is offered by their insurance.
At the same time that insurance companies refuse to cover any other treatments
for pain; pharmaceutical companies, pharmacies, distributors, and marketing
firms alike such as Purdue, McKesson, Cardinal Health, AmerisourceBergen,
Walmart, Walgreens, and Johnson and Johnson were making billions of dollars by
pushing these pills. These same companies also contributed and continue to
contribute millions of dollars to political parties and candidates.
If the United States wanted to get serious about facing this epidemic crisis,
it wouldn't be locking up low-level opioid addicts or pointing the finger at
China. It would instruct the DOJ and other law enforcement to raid the homes of
these corporate CEOs, and corrupt doctors, and would also bring these insurance
companies and pharmaceutical companies under public control. Over 2,000
municipalities across the United States have formally accused these companies
of flooding their communities with these drugs. This is a vast conspiracy by
very wealthy and powerful sectors of the US elite which has proved very
lucrative for them, and very lethal for the rest of us.
Let us not forget that Antonio Maria Costa, former head of the UN Office on
Drugs and Crime, has argued that in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis,
hundreds of billions of dollars from drug trafficking were utilized by US banks
to stave off the crisis.
At its very root, this epidemic is a problem of neoliberal capitalism. It's
disproportionately affected communities that have been deindustrialized. People
can't get treatment besides opioids for their pain because of the nefarious
system of US health insurance, all the while billions of dollars are being made
by powerful oligarchs and conglomerates. We need a government of the people
that will prosecute these entities that are responsible for the deaths of
millions in the United States, a government that recognizes that healthcare is
a right and not a source of profit or commodification, a government that isn't
in bed with, or afraid of confronting these corporations with expropriation if
their murderous business practices continue.
Ultimately, the people of the United States deserve to have their rights
respected, including the right to health. We need systematic change that will
not allow corporations and oligarchs to push murderous policies and practices
as long as there is a buck to be made. We need a better system that respects
the dignity of human beings, and the integrity of our health, and measures economic
well-being hand in hand with the well-being of our communities.
The author is a political and economic analyst with a concentration in areas
such as socialism of the 21st century, Chavismo, Populism, Latin America,
Geopolitical Trends, Latin America, and Kirchnerismo. opinion@globaltimes.com.cn
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