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by hexxiiiz
2121 days ago
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As much as the pharma industry and medical practitioners were irresponsible in their contribution to opioid addiction, there is a dimension to this problem that does still does not get enough attention: that people may really be in pain. Over the past couple decades economic conditions have stagnated at best and for many declined causing a lot of people chronic stress, depression, and anxiety. The food industry has raised generations of people on abysmal nutrition causing a rash of chronic health conditions, many of them inflammatory in nature. Whole cities have gone into decline and precarity because their core industries have laid off workers in droves and left. ... and so forth. The backdrop of the "opioid epidemic" has been a population that had arguably been already been declining in physical and mental health for decades. It is not too much of a stretch to suppose people are actually in more pain. This does not mean that the right thing to do is to allow the pharma industry to push pills on people, but if the underlying issues that cause this pain are not addressed people in pain are just going to move on to more alcohol and street drugs. |
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The left tends to ignore these and focus solely on the material aspects.