The Part I Like Best

About harm reduction sites is how they coax drug users off the street and into gas chambers.

Representatives with the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS unveiled Vancouver’s first indoor safe inhalation site in the Downtown Eastside on Wednesday.

Dr. Julio Montaner, the Centre’s director and physician-in-chief, and Dr. Kate Salters, a senior researcher with the Centre, gave a tour of the soon-to-open rooms at the Hope to Health Research and Innovation Centre.

“We needed to do something more directly focused on the needs of this patient population if we’re going to get ahold of the [drug toxicity] epidemic,” Montaner said.

It looks like I picked a good week to start sniffing glue.

11 Replies to “The Part I Like Best”

  1. BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS.

    Will we soon see annual award ceremonies?

    Echoing Shakespeare’s Richard III, “My kingdom for a good idea” among the Canadian pygmy elites.

  2. Sniffing glue is a stepping stone to model airplane building. Remember the old days when you walked into a bar and people smoked cigarettes? Thank God we’re safe now.

    If we’re going to get a hold of this drug epidemic we need to provide places that allow users to inject drugs. Never anything about treatment. It’s always about making it easier to take drugs. I posted a link a few days about drugs in Oregon. The “journalist” complained that drug legalization wasn’t followed up with treatment programs. Not enough money. There is always a reason.

    But I can see the logic in a drug user agreeing to voluntarily enter a drug treatment program where they can’t take drugs, versus being offered a place to safely inject drugs at any time. It’s the logic of the left. Build it (safe injection sites) and they will stop (taking drugs). Because the left cares.

    1. OH YES! Free drugs for those “unfortunate people” who use them is the norm, but one can also bring cartel-managed street drugs.

      BC normal taxpayers, with actual incomes, are required to now pay for HARD drugs, thanks to municipal, regional, provincial and federal governments.

      All these unfortunate folks are mostly kept away from expensive neighbourhoods, as services for loosers are have been deliberately located in the lower east side of Vancouver.

      As well, the unfortunates clutter up hospital beds, parks with tents, etc..

  3. makes me wonder what might be mixed with all that air infusion? is there an entry door at the front and a back door to a cremation room?

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