Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You must not be a lawyer.
I am a big law partner (of color). Big law attorneys and their children are dropping like flies. I can think of six overdoses and three deaths in the past two years, and I am not even trying hard. All whites.
I don’t feel sorry for any of them. UMC whites have zero compassion for others. If this epidemic was killing blacks at sky high rates, the UMC whites who decide what is newsworthy and control news networks wouldn’t give the issue any air time.
I believe the opioid epidemic is a side effect of the winner takes all, zero sum, every man for himself culture that prevails in America today. Guess who are the architects of that culture. Karma.
Agree with you 100% on paragraphs 3-4. When it was the crack epidemic, society viewed it as a character flaw among the AA victims. Now that it’s affecting whites, it’s a disease and getting political and media attention.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always hear it referred to as an issue that is affecting largely middle class whites, but from what I've seen that isn't true. It seems to be affecting poor and working class whites. I haven't seen anyone touched by it among the middle class white people I know.
Because the media hates the whites and the poors.
The media is actually sugar-coating this epidemic by not lambasting it in the same way the crack epidemic was in the 90s. Which is why you’re seeing even more middle-class and upper-class whites dying. Their children aren’t being scared into taking this seriously and parents are in denial about it being a community problem.
I’m convinced the deaths of Saoirse Kennedy and Harry Morton in just the last three months are a symptom of this denial.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always hear it referred to as an issue that is affecting largely middle class whites, but from what I've seen that isn't true. It seems to be affecting poor and working class whites. I haven't seen anyone touched by it among the middle class white people I know.
Because the media hates the whites and the poors.
Anonymous wrote:Please don’t link to Fox - it’s not a source anyone who cares about America should be looking at.
Also, re: th definition of middle class, the total wealth in America has roughly tripled since 1980 while the median income has roughly stayed the same. So middle class in West Virginia in 1980 looks very very different than middle class in WVA today.
Anonymous wrote:I always hear it referred to as an issue that is affecting largely middle class whites, but from what I've seen that isn't true. It seems to be affecting poor and working class whites. I haven't seen anyone touched by it among the middle class white people I know.
Anonymous wrote:Here are some demographics for you. 78% of opioid deaths were white in 2017. And if look at the info state by state, you can see it hits rural states very hard.
https://www.kff.org/other/state-indicator/opioid-overdose-deaths-by-raceethnicity/?dataView=1&activeTab=map¤tTimeframe=0&selectedDistributions=white-non-hispanic&sortModel=%7B%22colId%22:%22Location%22,%22sort%22:%22asc%22%7D
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You must not be a lawyer.
I am a big law partner (of color). Big law attorneys and their children are dropping like flies. I can think of six overdoses and three deaths in the past two years, and I am not even trying hard. All whites.
I don’t feel sorry for any of them. UMC whites have zero compassion for others. If this epidemic was killing blacks at sky high rates, the UMC whites who decide what is newsworthy and control news networks wouldn’t give the issue any air time.
I believe the opioid epidemic is a side effect of the winner takes all, zero sum, every man for himself culture that prevails in America today. Guess who are the architects of that culture. Karma.
Agree with you 100% on paragraphs 3-4. When it was the crack epidemic, society viewed it as a character flaw among the AA victims. Now that it’s affecting whites, it’s a disease and getting political and media attention.