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China has failed to cut its fentanyl trafficking, US congressional panel finds

Song Hong

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This is really mind blowing as China is world number one draconian against recreational drug abuses. Meanwhile the Jews such as the boss who run Purdue pharmacy are the one peddling opoids to US.


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‘China remains the primary country of origin for illicit fentanyl and fentanyl-related substances,’ US-China Economic and Security Review Commission says

Rather than ship directly into US, Chinese manufacturers now send raw materials to Mexico, where cartels make the drug then deliver it across the border

Beijing has so far not lived up to its promises to stanch the flow of the deadly synthetic drug fentanyl from Chinese chemical factories into the US, according to a report Tuesday by a congressional advisory panel.
“China remains the primary country of origin for illicit fentanyl and fentanyl-related substances trafficked into the United States,” concluded the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission (USCC), which advises US lawmakers on the national security implications of the US-China relationship.


 
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United States is so annoying. They should just Shut Up. China DID stop exporting fentanyl to US per US request. Did they even say Thank you ?

It is the Mexican Cartel that is making the fentanyl drugs and smuggling it to US. So go ask Mexico, damn it.
Ingredients can come from China or India or anywhere around the world.
US should fix it's own drug addicts problem. But can US incompetent drama queens politician do anything accept lecture and blame others ?

YOU WANT HELP FROM CHINA. BE NICE !!!! :angry:
 
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Any report from US or its source or cronies is not worth the toilet paper its written on... PEROID.....
 
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China has failed to cut down American drug abuse? Whats next?
China has failed to tackle American obesity?
China has missed target to curb American racism?

They sure are demanding for how little credit they give to China.
 
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Since the founding of PRC, minute recreational drug trafficking will ended one in death penalties.
 
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China has failed to cut down American drug abuse? Whats next?
China has failed to tackle American obesity?
China has missed target to curb American racism?

They sure are demanding for how little credit they give to China.
Our American government is only in charge of giving profits to big business. National governance is a matter for the Chinese government. If you have any needs, please ask the Chinese government.

This phenomenon is beginning to spread in anti - China countries. Looking closely at their appeal, the anger of the anti-China nations seems to be a complaint about why China does not rule them. :meeting:
 
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China rejects blame for sharp rise in US fentanyl overdoses
  • Chinese embassy in Washington blasts congressional report finding that Beijing has failed to stop synthetic opioid reaching US
  • Report’s claim that China is sending raw materials for the drug to Mexico is ‘irresponsible and utterly false’
Robert Delaney
Robert Delaney

Published: 12:00pm, 3 Sep, 2021
Fentanyl was involved in a record 93,000 US drug overdoses in the past year, according to a report. Photo: Reuters

Fentanyl was involved in a record 93,000 US drug overdoses in the past year, according to a report. Photo: Reuters

China denied accusations by a US congressional body that Beijing has failed to live up to a commitment to help stop the flow of the deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl into the US, and turned the blame for a sharp rise in overdoses on Washington itself.

“Some American politicians and media are still hyping up such disinformation as ‘American fentanyl mainly origins from China’, ‘Chinese fentanyl precursors flow into the United States via Mexico’,” the Chinese embassy in Washington said on Friday, referring to a report last week by the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission (USCC).

The report said China is sending raw materials to Mexico, where cartels manufacture them into fentanyl and deliver them into the US.

“These assertions are highly irresponsible and utterly false. Up to now, China has not found any scheduled precursor chemicals trafficked to Mexico, or received any notification from the Mexican side about seizing scheduled chemicals originating from China,” the embassy said.

“Such made-up allegations show zero sense of responsibility towards American fentanyl abuse victims and their families, and seriously mislead the Chinese and American people.”

Commitments by the Chinese government on the trade of fentanyl and precursor substances in 2018 were one of the few areas where former president Donald Trump’s administration and Beijing managed to cooperate. Within months, China moved to add all fentanyl-related substances to a list of controlled substances, a measure intended to stop drug makers altering the chemical structure of the drug to get around the current regulations.

However, fentanyl-related deaths have only increased since then. The US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported in July a record 93,000 drug overdoses in the country last year, with fentanyl and its analogues accounting for most cases.

The American Medical Association (AMA) said last month “the nation’s drug overdose epidemic” was exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

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“Every state has reported a spike or increase in overdose deaths or other problems during the pandemic,” the AMA said. “One prevailing theme is the fact that the epidemic now is driven by illicit fentanyl, fentanyl analogues, methamphetamine, and cocaine, often in combination or in adulterated forms.

“Overdose related to prescription opioids and heroin remain high and also are increasingly adulterated with illicit fentanyl,” it said.

The Chinese embassy pointed out that the US has not yet permanently classified fentanyl and its analogues as controlled substances subject to the strictest controls, which contrasts with Beijing’s move to put them in that category.

“The US has a fentanyl problem more rampant than other countries, but it has not officially scheduled fentanyl substances permanently yet.
The reasons behind are worth pondering,” it said. “Against the backdrop of increasingly strict control of fentanyl substances in the world, including in China, America’s worsening fentanyl crisis and rising deaths resulting from it have shown that it has not addressed the crux of the problem.”

A US law enacted last year classified fentanyl analogues as a “schedule I controlled substance” – meaning it “has a high potential for abuse and no currently accepted medical use” – on a temporary basis, and that designation expired in May. Fentanyl itself is classified as “schedule II”, which allows it to be used by medical practitioners for pain management in some cases.

Congress has struggled to put fentanyl analogues into schedule I permanently, in part because “controlled substance analogue prosecutions are fact-intensive and burdensome compared to prosecutions involving scheduled substances”, according to a report in April by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). “Analogue cases raise ‘complex chemical and scientific issues’ related to the molecular make-up and effect of each substance.”

For example, banning fentanyl analogues by making them schedule I according to their chemical structure “may be both over-inclusive (because it may include inactive substances) and under-inclusive (because it may exclude potentially dangerous opioids that are not chemically related to fentanyl or that involve chemical modifications)”, according to the CRS report.
 
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You reap what u sow. It's payback time. Since US likes to promote drug ,alcohol, sex and party with American culture. It's not surprising American young generation fuel such business.

If u shut down China one, what's next? Mexico and Colombia will takeover. It's not about source but changing of US culture. US culture are toxic and evil. Those who worshipped such are no angel too. Blaming China will not change anything.
 
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Opioids have killed 600,000 Americans. The Sacklers just got off basically scot-free
Chris McGreal
Sun 5 Sep 2021 06.25 EDT
A bankruptcy court gave members of the pharma family immunity from further civil suits. They don’t have to admit wrongdoing – and they may end up richer than they started

Protesters stage a die-in outside the courthouse where the Purdue Pharma bankruptcy case took place.

Protesters stage a die-in outside the courthouse where the Purdue Pharma bankruptcy case took place. Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP

Corporate money has a powerful and malign influence on so many aspects of American life. But even by that low standard, events this week in a New York bankruptcy court are shocking. The legal system has effectively allowed one of the country’s richest families to buy its way out of accountability for what a White House commission called “America’s national nightmare” of mass opioid addiction.

On Wednesday, the court approved a deal for the dissolution of the opioid manufacturer Purdue Pharma, which kicked off the opioid epidemic two decades ago with its illegal drive to sell a high-strength painkiller, OxyContin. Purdue’s owners, members of two branches of the now-notorious Sackler family, are estimated to have made more than $10bn from the drug – even as the opioid crisis claimed more than 600,000 lives, with the toll climbing higher by the year.

Astonishingly, the Sacklers seem to have been able to work the bankruptcy process to buy themselves immunity from accountability in the civil courts – in return for handing over only a small fraction of the money they made from OxyContin – and still remain one of the richest families in the country. All while continuing to deny their responsibility for their role in creating the opioid crisis.


At this point Purdue Pharma’s reputation is little better than that of a Mexican cartel. The company has twice pleaded guilty to felonies, in 2007 and last year, including lying about the risk of addiction from OxyContin, bribing doctors to prescribe it and defrauding the federal government. But that barely scratches the surface of the company’s corruption in pursuit of profit: it used its money and influence to warp the practice of medicine, compromise drug regulators and keep open the doors to mass prescribing of opioids even as evidence of an epidemic grew.

Those Sacklers behind Purdue were not bystanders. Several members of the family served on the company’s board and as senior executives, and some were directly involved in the drive to push OxyContin on unsuspecting Americans. And they happily creamed off the profits.

Yet the bankruptcy process has granted them sweeping immunity from further civil lawsuits over the opioid crisis without acknowledgment of wrongdoing. In fact, in exchange for a payment of $4.5bn, less than half of their earnings from Purdue, the Sacklers as individuals won’t have to declare personal bankruptcy.

In addition, as a Georgetown university law professor, Adam Levitin, told Congress in July, the Sacklers have worked the system so that they “will actually emerge from Purdue’s bankruptcy richer than they went into it” because the payments will be spread over nearly a decade during which the family’s assets are likely to grow by more than $4.5bn.

The US justice department has questioned whether the agreement is legal because it deprives those victimised by the Sacklers, who oversaw and profited from Purdue Pharma’s criminal behaviour, of their right to a day in court. Other critics of the decision have wondered how a bankruptcy court can grant legal immunity to people who have not declared bankruptcy.

But that is the practice that has evolved under laws, many written under the influence of corporations, that enable businesses to in effect hand-pick the judges who will handle their bankruptcy cases.

The US has 375 bankruptcy judges but, as Levitin told Congress, just three oversaw the majority of cases filed by large companies last year. Purdue Pharma chose to file with one of those three, Judge Robert Drain, to decide the conditions of its bankruptcy.

Although Purdue is based in Connecticut, it filed for bankruptcy in White Plains, New York, where Drain is the only bankruptcy judge. It’s unlikely to have gone unnoticed by the Sacklers’ lawyers that Drain had an unusual record of staying lawsuits against third parties who have not filed for bankruptcy.

One of Drain’s first steps was to block efforts to sue individual members of the Sackler family, even though they were separate from the Purdue bankruptcy case. Then he permitted the Sacklers to effectively hold the plaintiffs hostage by offering a stark choice between settling for a cut of the profits of misery in return for wiping the legal slate clean or facing years of court battles.

States, municipalities and families desperate for money to cope with the huge social consequences of the epidemic were left with little choice but to agree, although many expressed their distaste.

Others intend to challenge the deal in different courts, including Washington state’s attorney general, Bob Ferguson, who called the plan “morally and legally bankrupt”.

All of this might be more palatable if the Sacklers had shown remorse for the blood on their hands.

Dr Richard Sackler, a former president and chairman of Purdue Pharma, was instrumental in persuading the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to approve OxyContin on the false grounds that it was less addictive than other prescription opioids. He then promised that “a blizzard of prescriptions” for the drug would bury the competition.

When Sackler was asked at the bankruptcy hearing whether he, his family or his firm bore any responsibility for the opioid epidemic, he simply replied: “No”.

Instead, Sackler and other members of his family have spent their time smearing the victims. They have claimed that OxyContin was a legal drug used illegally and that responsibility therefore falls on the “criminal addicts” who overdosed.

Judge Drain said he was unhappy with the outcome of the case but that his hands were tied.

“This is a bitter result,” he said, arguing that he had little choice but to agree to the Sacklers’ demands or risk no financial settlement at all.

The judge’s critics say the outcome was preordained from the moment Purdue filed its case in his court.

But it is an outcome that fits with the history of a uniquely American epidemic. No other country has experienced the same scale of opioid addiction and death, in part because corporations in other countries do not wield the same influence over the practice and regulation of medicine.

Neither did Purdue act alone in this crisis. Drug distributors and pharmacies jumped on the bandwagon. Other opioid manufacturers, such as Johnson & Johnson, raked in the profits of narcotic painkiller addiction.

Even as evidence of a crisis grew and doctors witnessing the devastation sounded warnings, the din of corporate money drowned them out. The quarter of a billion dollars a year the drug industry spends on lobbying bought the complicity of politicians, influenced regulators, weakened investigations by the justice department and stalled action by the Drug Enforcement Administration. Purdue used its political muscle to head off even more serious criminal charges and to keep its executives out of prison.

Above all, the drug industry kept the doors to mass prescribing of opioids open for years not because they were an effective way to treat pain but because they were hugely profitable. Those same firms are now increasingly agreeing to payouts to head off a torrent of lawsuits – but it’s hard to conclude that they regard it as anything more than the cost of doing business.

Not least because, like the members of the Sackler family behind Purdue, none of them admit to having done anything wrong.
 
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