Today I revisit one of my favorite topics: opioids. The ongoing overdose crisis is due to the Iron Law of Prohibition, which states that any time a substance is illegal, the most potent form of it will become the most common form. Fentanyl replaced heroin because it is more potent, and therefore easier to smuggle. But that dynamic creates a lot of avoidable problems for drug users.
For more about opioids in the brain and body, check out the PBS article and video, "How A Brain Gets Hooked on Opioids."
You can find my article "Our Pathway to the Legal Regulation of All Drugs" on Filter.
You can listen to episode 102 for more about places where drugs are legal now.
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146: Life in Guy Debord's Society of the Spectacle (pt 2)
#145: Addiction, Ideology & the Society of the Spectacle
Episode 144: C. Dreams Free at Last (Dr. Christina Perez)
#143: Cults, Drugs & The 12-Step Success Story
#142: Where's my Adderall, Ritalin & Opioids?
#141: The Panopticon
#140: Captured Words/Free Thoughts, 20th Anniversary
#139: We Couldn't Build it Worse if we Tried
#138: Drugs and Addiction in a Neoliberal Oligarchy
#137: Foucault on Drugs
#136: Heroin with Adorno, Marx, Marcuse & Nietzsche
#135: Capitalism and the War on Drugs (Benjamin Fong)
#134: What's Wrong with Prison? (Christie Donner)
#133: Attachment, Authenticity & Addiction (Dr. Erin Boyce)
#132: Prisons on TV and the Spectacle of Punishment
#131: The US War on Drugs 1970-2020
#130: The US War on Drugs 1920-1970
#129: The US War on Drugs 1870-1920
#128: What Prison Should Be Like (Dr. Ashley Hamilton)
#127: Poetry from Prison—Captured Words/Free Thoughts 19
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