"There are problems with drugs, but fentanyl clearly can kill and will kill a very large number of people if we don't do something about it," said Paul J. Larkin, senior legal research fellow, Meese Center for Legal and Judicial Studies, Institute for Constitutional Government, at The Heritage Foundation.
"Enforcement has to be one of the three legs of any response. We have to educate people, we have to enforce the laws and we have to treat the people who wound up being addicted," said Larkin, who recently moderated a panel, "The Fentanyl Crisis: The Mexico-Texas Connection."
Joey Pontarelli: In divorce, the kids are not O.K. and here’s why
Cathy Ruse: Parents fight back — radical Sex Ed in schools (Part 2 of 2)
Cathy Ruse: Parents fight back — radical Sex Ed in schools (Part 1 of 2)
Christopher Bedford: Fighting for freedom while under siege
Casey Chalk: How to help Christians persecuted in Muslim lands
Ralph Martin: Misunderstanding the mission of the Catholic Church
Katie Gorka: The great parent revolt and what comes next
Exorcist Msgr. Rossetti: Go to confession to cast out demons
Jennifer Bauwens: What it really means to follow the science
Christopher Malloy: Fancy theology could get you to hell
David Ditch: The trouble with Pres. Biden‘s budget
John Martignoni: Helping Catholics learn and defend their faith
Katherine Beck Johnson: Optimism that Roe v. Wade will fall
Timothy Gordon: A Christian feminist is a contradiction in terms
Frank Cronin: How to know that God exists, without exception
Andrea Picciotti-Bayer: Civil liberties hinge on religious freedom
Fr. Brian Mullady: Receiving and retaining God‘s grace
S.K. Baskerville: What it means to be a gentleman
James Carafano: Pres. Biden‘s “unmitigated disaster” in Afghanistan
Connor Semelsberger: Your tax dollars are funding abortions
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Greece Travel Secrets Podcast
That Park Life: a Disney World Podcast
Ghostlore of Hawaii: Paranormal Paradise
Stuff You Should Know
Timcast IRL