Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many heroin dealers deliver. And they'll come by your house at three in the morning while you and the rest of the neighborhood is asleep.
Sweet. I'll leave the light on.
Well aren't you funny.
I am currently waiting to attend a repass after this morning's funeral and burial for a 27 year old who died last Monday of a heroin overdose. I have never seen a family so torn up as my friend, her husband and surviving kids are. But this will never happen to you , right ?
It's a shame someone forced that adult to take heroin.
More likely it's a shame that some doctor prescribed opiates for a sports injury or that the adult had undiagnosed mental health problems.
No, what's most likely is that he was friends with the type of people who like to use heroin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am regularly in both places on Friday afternoons, and have never noticed people loitering around there.
You really think they'd be that obvious? If so, I guess we're all safe. Wrap. Next story...
Where exactly do you think they're going to hang out near the martial arts studio without anyone noticing them? There are classes going on all afternoon after school gets out, there are lots of parents walking through the halls, and waiting outside while their kids take classes. Constantly people going up and down the stairs, and in and out of the bathrooms.
As for the parking garage, it's entirely possible they're hanging out in cars waiting for customers and I haven't noticed them for that reason. But if that's what's going on, it means they're not randomly soliciting your kid who's just there to buy some Yoo-hoo. Your kid would need to be actively seeking it out and know where to find them. And if your kid is sufficiently into it that he knows how to find the dealer, simply getting the dealer out of the parking garage isn't going to solve your problem.
Does this even happen? Many drug dealers are dumb but few are this dumb.
In the town I grew up in, this happened a lot. even maybe 10 years ago people might mutter "marijuana?" as you walk by. (Haven't noticed it the last few visits. Maybe I'm too old, or the town became too yuppy/health-foodish.) I can picture kids offering drugs to other random kids at malls. Most of them aren't going to go straight to the cops, nor would much happen if they did, I'm guessing. Probably more likely if the sellers are black in a white neighborhood.
Are you familiar with the Lee-Harrison shopping center? Given that DWB is still kind of a thing in North Arlington, I doubt a black guy loitering around L-H is going to last very long before someone is asking questions.
Who said anything about a black guy? Most drug dealers are white.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am regularly in both places on Friday afternoons, and have never noticed people loitering around there.
You really think they'd be that obvious? If so, I guess we're all safe. Wrap. Next story...
Where exactly do you think they're going to hang out near the martial arts studio without anyone noticing them? There are classes going on all afternoon after school gets out, there are lots of parents walking through the halls, and waiting outside while their kids take classes. Constantly people going up and down the stairs, and in and out of the bathrooms.
As for the parking garage, it's entirely possible they're hanging out in cars waiting for customers and I haven't noticed them for that reason. But if that's what's going on, it means they're not randomly soliciting your kid who's just there to buy some Yoo-hoo. Your kid would need to be actively seeking it out and know where to find them. And if your kid is sufficiently into it that he knows how to find the dealer, simply getting the dealer out of the parking garage isn't going to solve your problem.
Does this even happen? Many drug dealers are dumb but few are this dumb.
In the town I grew up in, this happened a lot. even maybe 10 years ago people might mutter "marijuana?" as you walk by. (Haven't noticed it the last few visits. Maybe I'm too old, or the town became too yuppy/health-foodish.) I can picture kids offering drugs to other random kids at malls. Most of them aren't going to go straight to the cops, nor would much happen if they did, I'm guessing. Probably more likely if the sellers are black in a white neighborhood.
Are you familiar with the Lee-Harrison shopping center? Given that DWB is still kind of a thing in North Arlington, I doubt a black guy loitering around L-H is going to last very long before someone is asking questions.
Anonymous wrote:Kids buy drugs from other teens and college kids they know, not weirdos lurking in parking lots. Life is not an after-school special. Users and dealers don't like transacting with the unknown.
It is only when people are using hard stuff and their regular dude is a no-show that will they start going to known drug hoods to cop. And that's for heroin and crack...not to buy a quarter of weed.
Yup.
Signed,
Another Former Bad Kid
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many heroin dealers deliver. And they'll come by your house at three in the morning while you and the rest of the neighborhood is asleep.
Sweet. I'll leave the light on.
Well aren't you funny.
I am currently waiting to attend a repass after this morning's funeral and burial for a 27 year old who died last Monday of a heroin overdose. I have never seen a family so torn up as my friend, her husband and surviving kids are. But this will never happen to you , right ?
It's a shame someone forced that adult to take heroin.
More likely it's a shame that some doctor prescribed opiates for a sports injury or that the adult had undiagnosed mental health problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Well aren't you funny.
I am currently waiting to attend a repass after this morning's funeral and burial for a 27 year old who died last Monday of a heroin overdose. I have never seen a family so torn up as my friend, her husband and surviving kids are. But this will never happen to you , right ?
Nobody cares.
Anonymous wrote:
Well aren't you funny.
I am currently waiting to attend a repass after this morning's funeral and burial for a 27 year old who died last Monday of a heroin overdose. I have never seen a family so torn up as my friend, her husband and surviving kids are. But this will never happen to you , right ?