All posts tagged "fentanyl"

Trump adviser's CNN interview goes off the rails as he insists on discussing drugs instead

With the trade war simmering between the U.S. and its closest neighbors, CNN anchors Wolf Blitzer and Pamela Brown wanted to get the inside scoop from guest Peter Navarro on the Trump administration's next moves.

Navarro is currently the administration's senior counselor for trade and manufacturing, and seemed to be the perfect official to ask about the tariffs that will end up hurting American consumers. But Navarro didn't want to talk about trade and manufacturing; he wanted to talk about drugs.

Brown began, "Of course we're all waiting to see what's going to happen with these tariffs. What's going to happen with the call today between Trump and Trudeau? What can we expect to happen from that call? Do you expect a deal to be struck?"

"Well, as the boss says, 'Let's see what happens.' It's really not my place to get ahead of the president on this," Navarro said before heading down the rabbit hole while Brown and Blitzer looked on.

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"What I've done a really deep dive on, and I think your viewers would really benefit from understanding, as the secretary of commerce said today, it's a drug war. And here's the issue. Fentanyl. It's been called a 'slow-moving weapon of mass destruction.' And I think it's the most insidious material that's ever been invented because it's very low cost, it's highly addictive, and extremely potent."

Navarro went on to explain how fentanyl is laced into other illicit drugs to "up the high."

Brown interjected, "Right, but I want to just follow up with you on this —"

"But let me just say the other part which is the buried lede," Navarro continued. "Ambien, Xanax, all these painkillers, Vicodin. These all now are being spiked with fentanyl. The DEA, the Drug Enforcement agency, got 80 million pills —

Brown tried again, "OK, but I have to jump in here because I want to —"

The two then began talking over each other with Brown finally managing to say, "Justin Trudeau, for his part, said, 'This isn't about fentanyl. That's a false pretext. Less than 1% of fentanyl crossing the border comes from Canada.' He said there was a 97% drop, according to the CBP...from December to January, because of what Canada has done to try to crack down on fentanyl."

"Do you want to know what I say to him?" Navarro asked. "I say to him that 12 pounds of fentanyl coming across the borders, which is what they got, is enough to kill 3 million Americans. I would say to Mr. Trudeau that he has allowed Mexican drug cartels to embed themselves across Canada, bring up their little pill presses, and manufacture these fake prescription drugs, which then find their way. So, I think, Mr. Trudeau, it would be really useful if he just toned stuff down."

Watch the clip below via CNN or click the link.

Trump camp insiders say he's looking to 'jettison' key part of campaign pledge: report

President-elect Donald Trump may be on the path to breaking his first campaign promise, according to a report in Monday's Washington Post.

During his presidential campaign, Trump claimed he would impose “universal tariffs" of up to 20 percent on all goods imported to the United States. Economists and many congressional Republicans criticized the plan as potentially "disruptive," warning that American consumers would immediately feel the pinch at the grocery store.

However, Trump's aides are now said to be considering imposing the tariffs only on "certain sectors deemed critical to national or economic security," according to Washington Post White House economics reporter Jeff Stein.

Stein cited three anonymous sources, and wrote that such a move "would jettison a key aspect of Trump’s campaign pledge, at least for now," adding that, "no decisions have been finalized and that planning remains in flux."

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Stein wrote that it wasn't clear "exactly which imports or industries" would face Trump's tariffs if the new plan were imposed.

"Preliminary discussions have largely focused on several key sectors that the Trump team wants to bring back to the United States," Stein wrote, citing two of the sources. "Those include the defense industrial supply chain (through tariffs on steel, iron, aluminum and copper); critical medical supplies (syringes, needles, vials and pharmaceutical materials); and energy production (batteries, rare earth minerals and even solar panels)."

In addition to the "universal tariffs", Trump has threatened Mexico and Canada with 25 percent tariffs and an additional 10 percent tariff on China if they don't stop the flow of drugs and migrants into the United States.

Trump posted to social media in December that he warned the EU he would impose tariffs if they don't close the trade gap with the United States.

"I told the European Union that they must make up their tremendous deficit with the United States by the large scale purchase of our oil and gas. Otherwise, it is TARIFFS all the way," Trump wrote.

Read The Washington Post article here.


‘Fourth wave’ of opioid epidemic crashes ashore, propelled by fentanyl and meth

The United States is knee-deep in what some experts call the opioid epidemic’s “fourth wave,” which is not only placing drug users at greater risk but is also complicating efforts to address the nation’s drug problem.

These waves, according to a report out today from Millennium Health, began with the crisis in prescription opioid use, followed by a significant jump in heroin use, then an increase in the use of synthetic opioids like fentanyl.

The latest wave involves using multiple substances at the same time, combining fentanyl mainly with either methamphetamine or cocaine, the report found.

DeSantis wants lethal force at the border to stop fentanyl traffickers. Most are Americans.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is doubling down on his promise to use lethal force against fentanyl traffickers attempting to cross the U.S. southern border if elected president, telling voters at the first GOP presidential debate last week that he would “use all available powers as commander-in-chief” to suppress the epidemic.

But homeland security officials tell McClatchy that an overwhelming majority of fentanyl is being smuggled through the border at legal ports of entry — and not by foreign nationals, but by U.S. citizens.