Your great nation again, stars and stripes, strippers and money more like it, sex is all in all, the law as well, truncated like most of my stuff, also i did a good deal of editing to my blog.
In other words, will do more editing later, as well as learn Korean, progress is excruciating slow, as the GW police officer, a white man, threw me face 1st into concrete.
The other blog, much smaller one, but i am very sick, regardless of what they tell u, they are not as smart nor informed as they make themselves out to be, the latinos, blacks, american women, who make themselves out to be SO innocent, like the short, light skinned black man, supposedly, in 5 dorm, like 6 years ago, calling me "motherfucker", like who are you asshole? He was a major in the marines, black ops, got journalists out of war zones, asshole is what he was/is, trying to start a fight
Like David, husky latino asshole, pouring rubbing alcohol on my private parts, in 14 dorm, new york ave shelter, ne wash dc. Where were my bodyguards? Probably laughing, as blacks, women, latinos, like to talk about my penis, pathetic, and YOU call disgusting, FUCK u and your country, liars, whores, and hypocrites
Staggering amounts of fentanyl hit streets as the DEA watched and took no action, records show
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Even as it battled the deadliest drug epidemic in American history, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration permitted hundreds of thousands of fentanyl pills to hit the streets of New Mexico between 2023 and 2025, according to three current and former DEA agents and government records reviewed by The Associated Press.
DEA agents repeatedly monitored shipments of fentanyl pills — but did not seize them — as federal prosecutors sought to bring bigger criminal cases against traffickers of a synthetic opioid that the White House last year designated a " weapon of mass destruction."
Agents and experts, however, said the tactic amounted to a gamble with public safety that potentially imperiled communities in and around Albuquerque and may have violated U.S. Justice Department rules intended to safeguard the public.
"We poisoned our community to make cases," DEA Special Agent David Howell told AP in a series of interviews in New Mexico. "Through our own willful blindness, we get to say, 'We don't really know what happened to the drugs.' But we 100% got people killed."
Comments
Post a Comment