Biden’s HHS Crack Pipe Distribution for Racial Equity: ‘This is Insanity … Crazy’

There is no end in sight for this lunacy says Marco Rubio. Whose bright idea was this? Hunter? Meanwhile San Francisco is allowing people to use drugs in an outdoor area of Mayor London Breed’s new Tenderloin Linkage Center. With just four weeks left in office, Mayor Bill de Blasio launched the country’s first legal shooting galleries, calling them safe havens for addicts — shortly before five people overdosed at just one of the clinics on opening day.

Add that Biden is allowing enough Fentanyl to kill all of us to walk across the border. Lunacy is too kind. Aiding and Abetting is a crime and should be treated as such.

The term “aiding” and the term “abetting” are similar legal concepts. But each has a slightly different meaning. Aiding a crime means helping someone else commit a crime. Abetting means to encourage or incite a criminal act. Although to abet does not necessarily mean that you help or facilitate its execution.

Both aiding and abetting are crimes and forms of accomplice liability. A conviction usually comes with the same penalties as the underlying offense.

(CNS News) — In reaction to the news that the Biden administration’s Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is funding nearly $30 million in “harm reduction” grants to battle drug abuse, funds that can be used to purchase and distribute crack and meth pipes, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said “this is insanity … crazy.”

“The Biden administration is going to be sending crack pipes and meth pipes, targeting minority communities in this country, underserved communities,” said Rubio on Tuesday in a video-statement on Twitter.  

The Washington Free Beacon reported:

The Biden administration is set to fund the distribution of crack pipes to drug addicts as part of its plan to advance “racial equity.”

The $30 million grant program, which closed applications Monday and will begin in May, will provide funds to nonprofits and local governments to help make drug use safer for addicts. Included in the grant, which is overseen by the Department of Health and Human Services, are funds for “smoking kits/supplies.” A spokesman for the agency told the Washington Free Beacon that these kits will provide pipes for users to smoke crack cocaine, crystal methamphetamine, and “any illicit substance.”

How are things out in San Francisco?

San Francisco Chronicle:

San Francisco is allowing people to use drugs in an outdoor area of Mayor London Breed’s new Tenderloin Linkage Center in United Nations Plaza, interviews and Chronicle observations confirm.

Francis Zamora, a spokesperson for the Department of Emergency Management, which is running the linkage center, denied the city was operating a supervised consumption site. San Francisco is working to follow New York City in opening such a site, which would provide medical supervision and clean supplies, despite its questionable legal status.

Three men with foil said they were glad to have a calm place to use drugs. Others were also appreciative, saying they could connect with the center’s services while taking advantage of a more private place to use drugs than the sidewalk.

Kayla Simpson, 28, sitting outside the center in U.N. Plaza, said she went in Jan. 18, the first day the center opened. While waiting in the fenced-in area, she said she felt the need to smoke, so she did.

“They were cool about it,” she said Tuesday.

Since the center opened, staff members have reversed three overdoses, the city said. But those overdoses might be the result of someone using drugs prior to entering the site.

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Indianna law will track users of some cold medicines in real time.

Oh how it starts out so well-intentioned. Nothing like a database of purchasers. Here is part of the operative sentence “stores some personal information about buyers”. Some? I would have to subscribe to the paper for the full story, but let’s just say, I have the gist of it. Indiana, I thought you had better sense. There will be others after you, that may not be so well-intentioned and use the database you set up for ugly purposes.

Pharmacists and police are gearing up to implement a new Indiana law that will better help them identify and track methamphetamine makers and dealers.

Beginning Jan. 1, retailers selling ephedrine and pseudoephedrine must use an electronic system that tracks drug sales in real time and stores some personal information about buyers.

The National Precursor Log Exchange, or NPLE, will issue “stop-sale” alerts to pharmacists if buyers try to purchase more than the allowable limit within a 30-day period. The limit has been reduced to 7.2 grams — or about 240 cold pills — from 9 grams. The one-day limit remains 3.6 grams.

Currently, police have to review hundreds of pages from log books from pharmacies to determine who is buying more than is legally allowed. From The Republic