In my ever-increasing paranoia:
I especially was taken back by this part:
" [The] DEA in conjunction with state and local law enforcement agencies throughout the United States conducted National Prescription Drug Take Back Days on Saturday, September 25, 2010 and April 25, 2011. Nearly, 4,000 state and local law enforcement agencies throughout the nation participated in these events, collecting more than 309 tons of pills."
390 TONS of pills in just one day? Okay, they don't want your drugs, they want you prescription narcotics. And going all paranoid Alex Jones-ish here does anyone else see this as a possible precursor to other "things" you might own that the government may deem to be a "public safety hazard?" Like your firearm?
And now they are bringing this "we've come for your pills" day back - only now with more rhetoric claiming that if you are in possession of say, Vicodin at a traffic stop you can be charged with trafficking so you know you will give them up voluntarily under a "no questions asked" policy.
To me, this is programming for bigger plans from our (current) government. A slow but progressive process of having you freely give up your possessions or face a severe penalty after of being informed of the consequences if you don't.
I especially was taken back by this part:
" [The] DEA in conjunction with state and local law enforcement agencies throughout the United States conducted National Prescription Drug Take Back Days on Saturday, September 25, 2010 and April 25, 2011. Nearly, 4,000 state and local law enforcement agencies throughout the nation participated in these events, collecting more than 309 tons of pills."
390 TONS of pills in just one day? Okay, they don't want your drugs, they want you prescription narcotics. And going all paranoid Alex Jones-ish here does anyone else see this as a possible precursor to other "things" you might own that the government may deem to be a "public safety hazard?" Like your firearm?
And now they are bringing this "we've come for your pills" day back - only now with more rhetoric claiming that if you are in possession of say, Vicodin at a traffic stop you can be charged with trafficking so you know you will give them up voluntarily under a "no questions asked" policy.
To me, this is programming for bigger plans from our (current) government. A slow but progressive process of having you freely give up your possessions or face a severe penalty after of being informed of the consequences if you don't.
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