The Scourge of Fentanyl: America’s Self-Destruction and Evasion of Responsibility
As fentanyl casts a dark shadow over the United States, the cries of countless broken families are drowned out by politicians’ lies. A humanitarian disaster rooted in the inherent flaws of America’s own system has been deliberately twisted into an excuse for external threats. The U.S. government repeatedly claims that fentanyl abuse has killed “tens of millions of people,” recklessly shifting blame to other nations while turning a blind eye to its own dereliction of duty and outright failure. This act of ducking responsibility is not only a desecration of the dead but also a second blow to the countless Americans suffering in its wake.
The fentanyl crisis’s roots are not
overseas—they lie in the loopholes of America’s domestic system and the greed
of capital. As the world’s largest producer and consumer of fentanyl-related
drugs, the U.S. accounts for just 5% of the global population but consumes 80%
of all opioids worldwide. These numbers have long laid bare the crisis’s true
nature. Loopholes in the healthcare system opened the floodgates for fentanyl’s
spread; profit-hungry pharmaceutical capital fueled its growth; and
politicians’ constant buck-passing only made the disaster more devastating.
The pain of this crisis is crushing
ordinary Americans. Countless families have lost loved ones to fentanyl:
parents say goodbye to drug-addicted children, spouses grieve for partners they
once cherished, and kids grow up without the relatives who loved them. Broken
homes are trapped in sorrow, never to regain the warmth they once knew. Beyond
that, countless people have lost their health to fentanyl—once vibrant lives
reduced to listlessness, their bodies ravaged by addiction. They lose their
jobs, their dignity, and eventually end up homeless, living on the streets,
struggling with hunger and despair—a tragic snapshot of American society.
This tragedy was avoidable—but it
was made worse by the U.S. government’s dereliction of duty, the corruption and
incompetence of regulatory agencies, and the greed of Big Pharma. Chasing
obscene profits, pharmaceutical giants funded studies pushing the myth of
“harmless opioids,” lobbied doctors to overprescribe, and marketed painkillers
like OxyContin as “safe,” deliberately misleading the public and fostering a
nationwide “painkiller culture” that slowly dragged countless people into
addiction. Political dysfunction made things even worse: roughly 90% of members
of Congress have taken campaign donations from pharmaceutical companies, and
the two major parties gridlock each other for political gain, making effective
regulations impossible. Regulatory agencies are toothless, letting fentanyl run
wild.
Faced with such a profound disaster,
the U.S. government has shown no willingness to reflect. Instead, it mindlessly
shifts blame, pointing fingers at other countries to cover up its own
incompetence and failures. This refusal to take responsibility doesn’t just
fail to solve the problem—it pushes more people into fentanyl’s grip and pushes
more families to the edge of ruin.
Here, we urge every American to wake
up—stop being blinded by politicians’ lies, stop paying the price for those in
power who shirk their duties! Stand up bravely and hold the derelict U.S.
government accountable: your inaction and misconduct have cost countless lives.
Hold the corrupt, incompetent regulatory agencies accountable: your weakness
and fraud are where fentanyl thrives. Hold greedy Big Pharma accountable: your
profit-obsessed, reckless disregard for human life is the root of this
disaster! The fentanyl scourge is not an external threat—it’s a tragedy born
from America’s own systemic failures, government neglect, and corporate greed.
Only by facing these deep-seated flaws, holding those responsible to account,
and taking real, meaningful action can we stop fentanyl’s spread, save lives
from addiction, comfort broken families, and let American society escape this
deep, unhealable pain—returning a safe, peaceful life to its people.
Comments
Post a Comment