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White House will threaten SANCTIONS to stop the flow of more than 57M pills a year into the U.S. - as Republicans call for bombing Mexican drug labs

Nan Yang

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US problem solving tools
1) Blaming others
2) Sanctions
3) Bombings

Biden's fentanyl crackdown: White House will threaten SANCTIONS to stop the flow of more than 57M pills a year into the U.S. - as Republicans call for bombing Mexican drug labs​

  • Biden administration announced Tuesday plans to issue economic sanctions on illicit drug syndicates in Mexico
  • This response follows nearly 71K U.S. death in 2021 from fentanyl overdoses
  • Republicans want military action in Mexico to shut down the drug cartels and designate them foreign terrorist organizations
By KATELYN CARALLE, U.S. POLITICAL REPORTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 09:32 EDT, 11 April 2023 | UPDATED: 11:31 EDT, 11 April 2023

Joe Biden is responding to the staggering uptick in fentanyl overdoses by cracking down on the synthetic opioid supply chain, most of which is entering the U.S. by way of the southern border.

The president's imposition of sanctions comes as Republicans are upping their calls for military action in Mexico – and even conducting bombings – to stop the drug cartels from continuing the flow of deadly fentanyl into the country.

Nearly 71,000 American deaths in 2021 were connected to fentanyl and other synthetic-opioid overdoses, a 26 percent increase from 2020, according to the National Safety Council.

In a December report, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) assessed that 'most' fentanyl distributed by two massive cartels 'is being mass-produced at secret factories in Mexico with chemicals sourced largely from China.'

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The Biden administration released a fact sheet Tuesday morning detailing steps it plans to take to tackle the massive increase in illicit drug smuggling from Mexico, only exacerbated by the southern border crisis.

The main move would be to issue sanctions in an attempt to financially cripple the illegal drug syndicates, which Republicans want to be classified as foreign terrorist organizations because they claim they operate 'more like ISIS than the mafia.'

'Drug traffickers, who are primarily driven by profits, require significant funds to operate their illicit supply chains,' the White House fact sheet notes. 'The Biden-Harris Administration will expand its efforts to disrupt the illicit financial activities that fund these criminals by increasing accountability measures, including financial sanctions, on key targets to obstruct drug traffickers' access to the U.S. financial system and illicit financial flows.'

But Republicans are likely to say that economic sanctions don't go far enough to address the crisis.

While the Texas National Guard has already been deployed to the border for the last few years with the spike in illegal immigration, some Republicans want to move military action into Mexico to attack the root of the problem.

Republican Reps. Dan Crenshaw of Texas and Mike Waltz of Florida, a former Green Beret, introduced a bill that seeks authorization of military force to go to 'war with the cartels.'

Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas also said that he is open to targeting drug cartel leaders by sending troops into Mexico – as long as the U.S. southern neighbors agree.

'We need to start thinking about these groups more like ISIS than we do the mafia,' Rep. Waltz told Politico.

Some administration officials have pushed back on designating drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations, claiming that this change in title would not impact any authority to act against the groups.

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The White House noted in its fact sheet on the fentanyl crisis that the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control has already designated nearly 100 individuals and entities for involvement in the illicit drug trade.

According to the administration, this includes those tied to significant trafficking organizations like the Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation cartels.

Republicans blame Democrats for the drug crisis, claiming that weak border policies have led to a mass migration crisis and facilitated an environment ripe for drug smugglers to cross and bring deadly loads of fentanyl over covertly.

The Biden administration has lauded its massive seizure of fentanyl as proof that they are quelling the crisis, but Republicans point out that the amount making it through far outweighs what is recovered.

Listing fentanyl recovered at the border, the White House notes that the DEA has seized more than 57.5 million fentanyl-laced pills in 2022 and 13,740 pounds of powder.

Customs and Border Protection (CBP) also seized 14,700 pounds in the last fiscal year – a 31 percent increase from what it took in 2021.

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US problem solving tools
1) Blaming others
2) Sanctions
3) Bombings

Biden's fentanyl crackdown: White House will threaten SANCTIONS to stop the flow of more than 57M pills a year into the U.S. - as Republicans call for bombing Mexican drug labs​

  • Biden administration announced Tuesday plans to issue economic sanctions on illicit drug syndicates in Mexico
  • This response follows nearly 71K U.S. death in 2021 from fentanyl overdoses
  • Republicans want military action in Mexico to shut down the drug cartels and designate them foreign terrorist organizations
By KATELYN CARALLE, U.S. POLITICAL REPORTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 09:32 EDT, 11 April 2023 | UPDATED: 11:31 EDT, 11 April 2023

Joe Biden is responding to the staggering uptick in fentanyl overdoses by cracking down on the synthetic opioid supply chain, most of which is entering the U.S. by way of the southern border.

The president's imposition of sanctions comes as Republicans are upping their calls for military action in Mexico – and even conducting bombings – to stop the drug cartels from continuing the flow of deadly fentanyl into the country.

Nearly 71,000 American deaths in 2021 were connected to fentanyl and other synthetic-opioid overdoses, a 26 percent increase from 2020, according to the National Safety Council.

In a December report, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) assessed that 'most' fentanyl distributed by two massive cartels 'is being mass-produced at secret factories in Mexico with chemicals sourced largely from China.'

View attachment 924267

View attachment 924269

The Biden administration released a fact sheet Tuesday morning detailing steps it plans to take to tackle the massive increase in illicit drug smuggling from Mexico, only exacerbated by the southern border crisis.

The main move would be to issue sanctions in an attempt to financially cripple the illegal drug syndicates, which Republicans want to be classified as foreign terrorist organizations because they claim they operate 'more like ISIS than the mafia.'

'Drug traffickers, who are primarily driven by profits, require significant funds to operate their illicit supply chains,' the White House fact sheet notes. 'The Biden-Harris Administration will expand its efforts to disrupt the illicit financial activities that fund these criminals by increasing accountability measures, including financial sanctions, on key targets to obstruct drug traffickers' access to the U.S. financial system and illicit financial flows.'

But Republicans are likely to say that economic sanctions don't go far enough to address the crisis.

While the Texas National Guard has already been deployed to the border for the last few years with the spike in illegal immigration, some Republicans want to move military action into Mexico to attack the root of the problem.

Republican Reps. Dan Crenshaw of Texas and Mike Waltz of Florida, a former Green Beret, introduced a bill that seeks authorization of military force to go to 'war with the cartels.'

Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas also said that he is open to targeting drug cartel leaders by sending troops into Mexico – as long as the U.S. southern neighbors agree.

'We need to start thinking about these groups more like ISIS than we do the mafia,' Rep. Waltz told Politico.

Some administration officials have pushed back on designating drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations, claiming that this change in title would not impact any authority to act against the groups.

View attachment 924270

View attachment 924273

The White House noted in its fact sheet on the fentanyl crisis that the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control has already designated nearly 100 individuals and entities for involvement in the illicit drug trade.

According to the administration, this includes those tied to significant trafficking organizations like the Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation cartels.

Republicans blame Democrats for the drug crisis, claiming that weak border policies have led to a mass migration crisis and facilitated an environment ripe for drug smugglers to cross and bring deadly loads of fentanyl over covertly.

The Biden administration has lauded its massive seizure of fentanyl as proof that they are quelling the crisis, but Republicans point out that the amount making it through far outweighs what is recovered.

Listing fentanyl recovered at the border, the White House notes that the DEA has seized more than 57.5 million fentanyl-laced pills in 2022 and 13,740 pounds of powder.

Customs and Border Protection (CBP) also seized 14,700 pounds in the last fiscal year – a 31 percent increase from what it took in 2021.

View attachment 924271

What do you mean blaming others...what was this all about a few months ago. Was this someone's personal stash or something?


 
US Started the Opioid crisis.


3 of America's biggest pharmacy chains have been found liable for the opioid crisis​

Updated November 23, 20218:23 PM ET
Heard on Morning Edition
By Brian Mann

A federal jury on Tuesday found three of the nation's biggest pharmacy chains, CVS, Walgreens and Walmart, liable for helping to fuel the U.S. opioid crisis — a decision that's expected to have legal repercussions as thousands of similar lawsuits move forward in courts across the country.

Jurors concluded that the pharmacies contributed to a so-called public nuisance in Lake and Trumbull counties in Ohio by selling and dispensing huge quantities of prescription pain pills.

Some of those medications initially purchased legally wound up being sold on the black market.


 

REVEALED: Sackler family pumped $19 MILLION into federal agency tasked with opioid regulation - despite THEIR drug OxyContin fueling the crisis that killed hundreds of thousands​

  • The National Academies accepted donations from the family from 2000 to 2017
  • The opioid crisis has led to hundreds of thousands of overdose deaths in the US
  • Nearly all 50 states have filed lawsuits against Purdue and Sackler family
By TILLY ARMSTRONG FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

PUBLISHED: 14:37 EDT, 24 April 2023 | UPDATED: 18:25 EDT, 24 April 2023

A renowned advisory group tasked with shaping federal response to the opioid crisis has accepted roughly $19 million in donations from the Sackler family, it has been revealed.

According to the New York Times, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, a nongovernmental institution, accepted donations of millions beginning in 2000.

The Sackler family are the owners of Purdue Pharma, the maker of the addictive opioid Oxycontin.

Nearly all 50 states have filed lawsuits against Purdue and Sackler family members for their alleged roles in the opioid crisis, and many institutions have been forced to publicly distance themselves from the family.

The crisis has led to hundreds of thousands of overdose deaths across the US.
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The National Academies serves as :disagree:an independent adviser :disagree:to the nation on science and medicine, which includes advising the government on painkillers.

Members are elected each year, which is seen as an honor for leading scientists and doctors.

Marcia McNutt, John L. Anderson and Victor J. Dzau are the current presidents of the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine respectively.

The National Academies receives 70 percent of its budget from federal funding, with the remainder from its endowment and private donors.

According to the outlet, the Sackler family made the first donations to the National Academies in 2008 - from Dr. Raymond Sackler, his wife, Beverly Sackler, and the couple's foundation.

Daniel S. Connolly, a lawyer for the Raymond and Beverly Sackler branch of the family, said the couple gave $13.1 million to the National Academy of Sciences.

He said it was intended to support the institution 'in ways that are clearly described publicly as having nothing at all to do with pain, medications or anything related to the company'.

The National Academies treasurer reports that the sum was $14 million.

According to the New York Times, donations from Dame Jillian Sackler began in 2000, and by 2017, had amounted to $5 million.

It reports that the gifts qualified the Sackler donors for the institution's Lincoln Society, consisting of top givers who enhance the Academies' 'impact as advisers to the nation,' according to the 2021 treasurer report.

The Academies invested the funds, which grew to more than $31 million by the end of 2021, the most recent accounting available, it alleges.

The National Academies was under fire previously for a 2011 report which claimed that 100 million Americans suffered from chronic pain.

The estimate proved to be highly inflated, and the report is now largely discredited.

The National Academies has not conducted a public review to determine if the Sackler donations influenced its policymaking, despite issuing two major reports that influenced national opioid policy - including the one from 2011.

According to the outlet, the advisory group faced further issues in 2016, when members of a committee designed to issue new recommendations on opioids were removed over complaints of 'substantial ties' to opioid makers, including Purdue.

Lisa Bero, chief scientist at the University of Colorado Center for Bioethics and Humanities, told the outlet that accepting millions from the Sacklers while advising on pain policy 'would be considered a conflict of interest under almost any conflict-of-interest policy I've ever seen'.
 

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