Tuesday, June 13, 2017

The Harsh Reality Behind The Drug Assessment Minneapolis Minnesota

By Richard Gibson


It is difficult to accept the War on Drugs is an intentional failure, or that the charade is a means to an end for local politicians. Many struggle to accept that those behind the laws do not care if people use drugs. However, it is an ugly fact that herds of residents are being shifted from one town to another against their will with the aid of a drug assessment Minneapolis Minnesota.

If anyone has been forced to sit through impersonal drug and alcohol classes for a DUI, then they are aware that in the eyes of the State, ANY drug or alcohol use is abuse. There was a time when a prescription could keep one in good stead with the law. However, with the widespread prescribing of opiate drugs speeding toward the black market, even a person holding a legitimate prescription can be harassed the same as any addict.

Fibromyalgia patients line up with the heroine addicts at the methadone clinic, but it may not be long before the State takes their kids, pulls their license, or simply harasses them with a DUI charge. Once charged with any drug related matter, even at the level of misdemeanor, the courts will require assessments to be done, at the expense of the accused. The assessors decide they have a problem more than 95% of the time.

Treatment comes as long-term programs requiring the accused to move to another state. They can be forced to get off prescriptions although many of them use strong opiates for chronic pain conditions that remain untreated during their withdrawal supervised by four or five other adults who share the room. True medical oversight is usually a part-time aspect of treatment, and the residents now risk detox on their own.

Forcing people to abandon their homes while also extending jail stays often ensures that the home they owned or rented is lost along with any belongings they cherished. Centers house and provide residents with employment at local establishments, but the money is allocated to fines as well as payment owed for treatment they did not deserve. After their long night of restricted access to personal finances they can leave the center but have gained nothing more than their job assignment.

Treatment has basically orchestrated a program to evict groups or neighborhoods that get profiled economically. People living check to check will nearly always lose everything due to their arrest, especially when they cannot get bonded out before losing the job they had. When they have nothing left to go back for after treatment, the program has achieved the goal.

Extreme drug addicts can benefit from such a treatment option. Yet, when court-enforced relocation therapy is enacted upon those potentially charged with misdemeanors, community members must rise up. These victims of circumstance are stripped of everything they have, and many lose custody of children as a result of this unconstitutional push to make arrests day and night.

It is not difficult to identify these communities where this is happening. There are suddenly four or more police departments in the small district, and the officers literally hunt down anyone driving a car that is more than 10 years old. They then proceed to search basically every vehicle, and clearly aim to make some form of an arrest at every stop if they can possibly get away with it.




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