I'm Clayton, English and I'm Greg Glad and this is a war on drugs Quick fix. I'm Sanegel County Sheriff Bill Gore. What you're about to see is traumatic body Warren camera footage involved in one of our deputies who was exposed to fentanol during this patrol ship. I just saw a video online. You're okay, don't be sorry. There's not to be sorry. Oh supposed overdose of a deputy out in San Diego. Got you okay, I'm not gonna let you die. It's Okayan passed out the head to
administer narcan to him. As far as I knew that that was completely plausible. Fetanyl. You get too close to it, you're dead right. It's I'm not a doctor, but there's a ton of doctors that came out. I mean, I know the video you're talking about. He kind of falls over. It's actually after he's been told that he may have been exposed to fetanyl and then he falls. I ran
over and I grabbed him and he was o'dein. But they essentially just said that this is a fentanyl overdose and you can get it by just it being in the air, being exposed to just a few small grains of fentnyl could have deadly consequences. And that's completely false, and it's false. And that doesn't mean that fentnyl isn't dangerous, that it shouldn't be taken seriously, that it's not the biggest plague. And the reason why we're over one hundred
thousand overdose stats. Absolutely is as dangerous as they make it out to be. Yeah, but not from the aspect of one grain can get caught in the wind and land on the tip of your lip and now all of a sudden, you're overdosed and you did. Yeah, And it just goes with the fear mongering that happens with this, and it plays this on the fear of this drug. Please take the time to share this video. It might save the life of your son, daughter, friend, or a
loved one. And it's kind of ironic or not, it's just kind of interesting that all these videos and exposures of overdose only happened to law enforcement and not anyone else. I sent more on my skin and experiencing no signs of toxicity, no overdose symptoms, nothing whatsoever. Yeah, And I think that video served its purpose as far as making people fearful and you know, scaring people. It reminds me of the videos, you know, back in the day or
the news stories they would have about crack cocaine. Yeah, you know, once a person hit crack, they became, you know, a fiend of not even human anymore. Like all they wanted to do was steal shit and hurt people and smoke crack. And you know that the fear of what crack was doing in the inner city and that it was going to spread to the suburbs, it created a whole another well of problems with mandatory minimums and the disparity and the sentencing for crack and the sentencing for cocaine.
So I'm just trying to see what could the fear mongering that's coming with fitting all lead to. And I saw the negatives of what it did to the crack. Yeah, it's still dangerous. Yeah, you wonder was coming around the corner, you know. So yeah, no, I'm totally with you. Also question why did the word fiend just continue to go with Druggs. It sounds like some like gangsters in the nineteen twenties, Like, yeah, conversation fiend, a fiend they still
kept there in the nineteen days out there. They need a little remarketing on that. Yeah, definitely. They got the mustache and the top hand, like a stripe suit and a Tommy guys you fiend you. Yeah, it's very dick dastard. Yeah, I'm Greg Glad and I'm Clayton English and this has been a war on drugs. Quick Fix. Thanks for listening.
