The Business of Poison: Boredom, Despair, and the Predators in the Middle
We often treat drug addiction like it’s two different worlds.
On one end, you have the ultra-rich. They have every luxury imaginable, yet they’re so bored with life that they go chasing a new high just to feel something. On the other end, you have the ultra-poor. They live in a cycle of survival where a "moment of feeling great" is the only relief they can find from the grind.
The Juxtaposition:
The rich often wear their struggle like a tragic badge of honor, while the poor feel like they’re just another statistic. But while we debate who is more to blame, we’re ignoring the real villains in the room.
The real problem isn’t the user—it’s the supplier. The common thread between the penthouse and the pavement is the raw greed of the cartels, the traffickers, and the criminal organizations who see human beings as nothing more than a profit margin. They don't care if you're chasing a thrill or escaping a nightmare. They don't care about your status or your struggle. They just want you dependent.
These criminal networks are the ones driving the engine of destruction. They feed off the abundance of the wealthy and the pain of the struggling, profiting from the misery of families on both ends of the spectrum.
It’s time to stop looking at the person suffering as the "problem" and start looking at the predators selling the poison. Greed is the ultimate sin here, and it’s killing everyone from the top to bottom.
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