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I think something might have happened to hydro
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2018-07-08 at 7:57 PM UTCI just got a pm from 1337(bipolarhighroller) saying that hydro died in that nursing home today. he hasn't replied anymore so far, but i don't think this is a troll this time tho. didn't say how it happened or anything. has he messaged anyone else about this saying what happened exactly?
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2018-07-08 at 8:02 PM UTCRelease the logs
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2018-07-08 at 8:11 PM UTCi'm just waiting to get a reply to find out more but i think he's gone offline again. this is pretty fucked up if its true tho. i want to know if he messaged anyone else with anymore info?
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2018-07-08 at 8:15 PM UTCI hope it's a troll. 😓
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2018-07-08 at 8:48 PM UTCyeah me too but i've never known 1337 to troll me ever tho. i mean even hydro doesn't troll me, she tells me when she's trolling everyone else.
why you here anyway golm? you hated her apparently and never had a good word to say about her tbf.
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2018-07-08 at 8:55 PM UTCIt is so good to hear it
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2018-07-08 at 9:08 PM UTCLanny please wordenhancement "gabapentin" to "trashcan treaure".
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2018-07-08 at 10:07 PM UTC
Originally posted by NARCassist yeah me too but i've never known 1337 to troll me ever tho. i mean even hydro doesn't troll me, she tells me when she's trolling everyone else.
why you here anyway golm? you hated her apparently and never had a good word to say about her tbf.
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We do, however, know you to try to troll re: hydro. -
2018-07-08 at 10:07 PM UTCI saw her chillin in her living room when she said she was in a dang nursing home
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2018-07-08 at 10:09 PM UTCOf course §m£ÂgØL is the first to reply to a thread with "hydro" in the title. I swear that nigga has some sort of notification setup where when someone posts a thread with "hydro" in the title, it spams the shit out of his phone so he knows instantly to throw everything down and race to his computer to post.
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2018-07-08 at 10:10 PM UTCAlso, hydro is (was?) a shit person. If she is dead, that's what you fucking get for living the life you chose.
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2018-07-08 at 10:10 PM UTCI had a sense that she was checking out. I think it was her time. Was it an OD or did the infection spread to an organ?
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2018-07-08 at 10:12 PM UTC
Originally posted by Grimace Also, hydro is (was?) a shit person. If she is dead, that's what you fucking get for living the life you chose.
She was a victim of opiates, which are imported and produced by jedis.
The war on drugs is literally a jedi plot to control the competition, to pathologise responsible drug use, and to prevent real, effective interventions in opiate users lives.
https://dailystormer.name/profit-from-pain-whos-behind-americas-opiate-epidemic/ -
2018-07-08 at 10:13 PM UTCPoor people can't afford the super high cost of modern HIV medications. They get put on low-tier, 90-s era meds that are known to be ineffective and at best, only prolong life by a few extra years. Compound that with her continued rampant drug abuse, promiscuous lifestyle, etc. It's no wonder that the medication she was taking didn't even have a chance. She didn't allow it to.
I will say that, that nigga hydro was bout it-bout it. Shit-tier life till she died. -
2018-07-08 at 10:15 PM UTC
Originally posted by Cootehill She was a victim of opiates, which are imported and produced by jedis.
The war on drugs is literally a jedi plot to control the competition, to pathologise responsible drug use, and to prevent real, effective interventions in opiate users lives.
I am a former heroin addict myself. IV heroin user, went to prison for heroin and cocaine possession and oxycodone with intent to distribute. I know about opiate addiction plenty. I went on to become an entrepreneur. I now own my own business and am quite successful in life. Just celebrated 10 years clean.
Not every opiate addiction story ends with death. -
2018-07-08 at 10:16 PM UTCShe didn't die and she doesn't have HIV. I can't believe you guys are falling for like the exact same troll narc pulled a month or two ago.
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2018-07-08 at 10:21 PM UTCThe all knowing Lanny has spoken, we can all go back to our own fucked up lives now
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2018-07-08 at 10:22 PM UTC
Originally posted by Grimace I am a former heroin addict myself. IV heroin user, went to prison for heroin and cocaine possession and oxycodone with intent to distribute. I know about opiate addiction plenty. I went on to become an entrepreneur. I now own my own business and am quite successful in life. Just celebrated 10 years clean.
Not every opiate addiction story ends with death.
Genuine congratulations. Since you (no sarcasm) seem to know more than me, how would you approach solving opiate use? -
2018-07-08 at 10:39 PM UTC
Originally posted by Cootehill Genuine congratulations. Since you (no sarcasm) seem to know more than me, how would you approach solving opiate use?
I don't know if it can ever be truly "solved". People are going to use the substances they want to use regardless of any legal aspects. So laws and regulations won't help the situation. We should all be well aware of that now, since this whole "War on Drugs" started in the 1960's and the revamp of the Reagan era in the 1980s. That isn't to say that a lack of laws and regulations will solve it either. People are going to use either way.
However, there are certain things that will make it better and society is slowly moving to that point. Immunity for those who call for an ambulance for an overdosing friend. Many people don't call for fear of being arrested themselves. I was dumped out in front of a children's hospital myself when I overdosed once. My friends didn't want to be caught with me, for fear of being arrested. Immunity from arrest for the sake of saving a life is one step.
All emergency and first response personnel carrying Narcan. They are doing this in most major cities, but it should be widespread. Carry it. It could save a life.
Offer true rehabilitation rather than prison sentences for possession (or even small amount sales) charges. Prison doesn't rehabilitate. Prison doesn't address the fundamental root of the addiction. Prison also doesn't provide the needed psychological and addition support services and what little it does provide, is laughable at best. A true rehabilitation system should be the first step in the court system. This, of course, is hard to make work. There are some things about AA/NA that ring true, like "hitting rock bottom". I don't like to use that phrase, but what it refers to is real. The addict isn't going to seek or accept help until they themselves want it. Only when they want it for themselves will they accept help. You can send them to rehab or prison all you want, but if they never reach the point where they're ready to try and stop, then they won't. Prison doesn't adequately address that for most people and unfortunately, neither does most rehabs. Sending people straight to prison over a possession charge, making them a felon, taking away certain welfare benefits from them because they're a felon (like food stamps in certain states), blacklisting them from many job opportunities, etc. It's a system that is setup for the convicted to fail and return to incarceration. Incarcerate them, make them a felon so they can't get a job, take away welfare systems so they can't get food or monetary aid if charged with a drug related charge, offer them no rehabilitation or skills to cope with the fundamental reason they started using in the first place, and let them out on the street. What are a large portion of them going to do? The only thing they knew before they got locked up. Buy, use, and sell drugs. Arrested. Incarceration. Rinse. Repeat. Revolving door.
So saying all of that, I don't know if there is any actual "solution" to drug addiction or opiate addiction in particular. Those who want to use will use no matter what. However, we, as a society, can offer those who are addicted much more help than we currently are, lessen the crime status of the possession or small sales of drugs, and start treating those addicted with rehabilitation and therapy rather than incarceration.
I don't have a fix-all answer for you. It only worked for me because I was sick and tired of getting arrested over and over and over and in and out of prisons and rehabs and the constant up and down of being an addict. I was ready to quit because I hated my life. It just so happened to coincide with my arrest and 2.5 year prison incarceration. Speaking from someone who has been in prison, I can say with certainty that prison (at least the GA prison system) offers fuck all to addicts and prison itself is loaded with drugs. It's not the right answer for drug addiction. I don't know what is the right answer, but it's not that. -
2018-07-08 at 10:41 PM UTCmalice dead and now hydro fucking awesome
reaper pls kill §m£ÂgØL next