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PLAYBOY FORUM - Hollow

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40<br />

they’re legally prescribed medicines.<br />

One study found that<br />

40 percent of teens surveyed<br />

considered prescription drugs<br />

“much safer” than illegal ones.<br />

More than a quarter thought<br />

painkillers weren’t addictive.<br />

In fact, such pills can deliver<br />

a high stronger than heroin’s.<br />

That makes them tremendously<br />

appealing to drug abusers, and<br />

tremendously addictive. Worse,<br />

they can kill if mixed with<br />

other medications or alcohol.<br />

The traffic in pills is especially<br />

hard to stop because,<br />

unlike street drugs, most pills<br />

are purchased legally at first,<br />

from ordinary pharmacies.<br />

Thanks to the high injury rate<br />

in coal mining, West Virginia is<br />

awash in legally acquired pills,<br />

says Wayne Coombs, executive<br />

director of the West Virginia<br />

Prevention Resource Center.<br />

“Many people start out with a<br />

legitimate prescription and get<br />

addicted,” he says.<br />

Locals “from teenagers to<br />

80-year-olds” have learned<br />

there’s good money to be<br />

West Virginia is awash in OxyContin.<br />

made selling their extra pills,<br />

says Mark Shelton, chief field<br />

deputy with the McDowell<br />

County Sheriff’s Department.<br />

Or users can simply find an<br />

unscrupulous doctor, claim an<br />

injury and come home with a<br />

load of painkillers. “Dealers<br />

will rent a van and take 14 or<br />

15 people to North Carolina<br />

or D.C. to see doctors they<br />

know will help them out,” says<br />

Shelton. He’s all too familiar<br />

with the damage those drugs<br />

can cause: He has been raising<br />

his own teenage nephew<br />

since the boy’s mother died of<br />

an overdose.<br />

“Ninety-five percent of<br />

the people in this town are<br />

<strong>FORUM</strong><br />

dopeheads,” says Brandon Pendry,<br />

a 23-year-old pill user in<br />

War. His father and one of his<br />

friends died of overdoses, and<br />

Pendry says he was recently<br />

hospitalized when he snorted<br />

cocaine that had been cut<br />

with too much methadone. I<br />

meet him on the porch of the<br />

War Hotel, a flophouse that is<br />

one of the few businesses on<br />

Main Street that haven’t been<br />

boarded up. Pendry interrupts<br />

our conversation to offer to sell<br />

pills to a passing friend. “It’s<br />

the only way to make money<br />

here,” he says.<br />

Addicts trying to quit are<br />

pretty much on their own.<br />

There isn’t a single rehab facility<br />

in McDowell County, and<br />

there’s a chronic shortage<br />

of treatment beds statewide.<br />

“Unless you’re nine months<br />

pregnant with a needle in<br />

your arm, you’re not getting<br />

treatment,” says Kathie Whitt,<br />

executive director of FACES, a<br />

McDowell County family services<br />

agency. She and Hatcher<br />

have for years campaigned<br />

for the state to fund<br />

a rehab center, so far<br />

with no results.<br />

Even treatment<br />

doesn’t guarantee anything.<br />

Mayor Hatcher<br />

knows that from personal<br />

experience. His<br />

son John has been<br />

hooked on pills for<br />

years. Hatcher has twice<br />

put him through rehab<br />

clinics in other states,<br />

with little to show for<br />

it. John, 36, is unemployed.<br />

He lives with his wife<br />

and 11-year-old son in a spare<br />

room in his father’s modest<br />

house. Hatcher keeps his bedroom<br />

door locked because John<br />

has stolen things to sell for pill<br />

money. “I hate living like this. I<br />

hate being an addict,” says John.<br />

“But I can’t shake it.”<br />

He’s overdosed four times<br />

in the past few years but each<br />

time received medical treatment<br />

before it was too late. Tom<br />

Hatcher doesn’t think his son’s<br />

luck will last. “I think the reality<br />

is he will kill himself eventually,”<br />

says Hatcher. “We see so much<br />

of this here. A lot of people say<br />

there’s nothing we can do. But<br />

we can’t stop trying.”<br />

A fAkE CRiSiS<br />

why we shouldn’t oBsess<br />

over our Budget deficit<br />

BY jONAThAN TASiNi<br />

A<br />

president warns the<br />

nation of a looming<br />

threat to national<br />

security. A congressional<br />

bipartisan wave builds to<br />

meet the threat, spurred<br />

on by the editorial boards<br />

of leading newspapers and<br />

backed by reams of policy<br />

papers. The nation hurtles<br />

forward to face the<br />

enemy. Dissenting voices<br />

are drowned out.<br />

Does this sound like the<br />

hysteria leading up to the<br />

Peter Peterson<br />

Iraq war? Indeed. But this time it’s the growing<br />

drumbeat around the debt “crisis.”<br />

There is no debt crisis. We have been summoned<br />

to the barricades to combat a mirage artfully<br />

built with phony evidence proffered by political<br />

leaders and gobbled up by the very serious<br />

people in power. Some of these people also told<br />

us housing prices would never go down, the Dow<br />

would reach 30,000 and Bernie Madoff was an<br />

investing genius.<br />

The solution to this “crisis,” say the very serious<br />

people, is austerity: Cut “out-of-control” spending<br />

on pensions, Medicare and roads. If you say “Social<br />

Security is in crisis,” you are treated as a serious<br />

person—even though the actual numbers show that<br />

Social Security will be entirely solvent for many years<br />

to come and hasn’t contributed a single dime to the<br />

debt “crisis.”<br />

We do have a major crisis. The people who<br />

run our markets and our companies have failed,<br />

breaking basic rules we lived by. While they enriched<br />

themselves, they turned our country into<br />

a place where economic fairness is evaporating.<br />

Our political leaders have abandoned us because<br />

of the legal but corrupt system of raising money<br />

for campaigns, which means they serve the powerful<br />

interests that write big checks.<br />

Big corporate interests have hurt the economy,<br />

making inefficient use of our nation’s wealth at<br />

great cost to our financial stability. Chief executive<br />

salaries of tens of millions of dollars—which<br />

empty corporate treasuries and leave nothing for<br />

average workers—exist because our leaders have<br />

enabled a corporate governance system that allows<br />

such looting.<br />

The truth: Right now we need large deficits.<br />

We have a huge hole in spending because people<br />

don’t have jobs and thus can’t spend money. Deficits<br />

finance jobs when our economy goes down<br />

the drain. Deficits finance roads—that our children<br />

will use to get to their schools and, in the<br />

future, to their jobs. Deficits finance schools—so

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