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myrrine
Member
Reged: 08/10/03
Posts: 163
Loc: Western PA
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ariticle
I hope this url works, I thought this kinda interesting:
Scoring some Vike just a quick stroll away
Joan Ryan Tuesday, October 14, 2003
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The guy at U.N. Plaza yesterday afternoon said I needed to go to Jones and Golden Gate, near St. Anthony Dining Room. That's where I could find Vicodin or OxyContin.
"Good luck,'' he said.
I had never bought drugs off the street. But I wanted to see if it was as easy as the drug rehab folks had told me. I had called a few of them yesterday morning to talk about radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh's addiction to OxyContin. He reportedly has been taking up to 30 a day, buying them with cigar boxes stuffed with cash in a parking lot from his former maid. He told his listeners on Friday that he was entering rehab after more than four years of addiction.
"There are a large number of people addicted to Vicodin and OxyContin who won't come into public clinics for help," said San Francisco's Dr. David Smith, considered one of the grandfathers of addiction medicine. It seems Limbaugh is the most famous of a fast-growing population of prescription-drug junkies: An estimated 9 million people 12 and older used prescription drugs for nonmedical reasons in 1999, according to the National Institute of Drug Abuse.
I walked up to Golden Gate and hung a right, passing the vacant-eyed men and women who slump against fences and buildings that line the sidewalk. When I reached St. Anthony's, I lingered at the corner for a moment, sizing up the situation. I approached two wiry, bedraggled men I overheard talking about nickel bags.
"Excuse me,'' I said in a low voice. "Do you know where I can find some Vicodin or OxyContin?''
The ease of buying the drugs off the Internet has fueled the boom. But it's even easier, I was told, to buy them on the street, which is essentially what Limbaugh did.
So I found myself at 2:30 yesterday afternoon, in broad daylight, in the heart of the Tenderloin trying to score drugs. I had a cute red purse, a red Gap T-shirt, black slacks and black-heeled sandals. I couldn't have looked more like a suburban mom if I had been wearing a tennis skirt.
The two men didn't hesitate in answering.
"This street is just weed,'' one said loudly, as if he were a sales clerk in a department store. "Next street is prescription drugs.''
He pointed up Jones toward Turk Street, where other men loitered, huddling in twos or threes then moving on. I sidled up to one and again asked about Vicodin and OxyContin.
"Vike!'' he shouted to a man on a bicycle a few yards up the street.
Suddenly Vike and three other guys closed in. "How much you need?'' Vike asked. He said they cost $3 for each 500 mg tablet. Another man elbowed his way to my side, opening his hands to reveal dozens of oval white pills. "I sell for $2,'' he said.
Vike barked at him to get away.
Of course, I had no clue how much I needed. I hadn't thought to find out what a reasonable dose of Vicodin might be.
"I don't know,'' I said. "It's for my brother.'' (God forbid any of these men thought I was looking for myself.)
"Is he an addict?'' one of the bystanders asked. I nodded. "Eight to 10, '' he said.
None of the men asked if I was a cop. Vike straddled his bike and just asked how many. I bought seven. Why seven? I have no idea. I reached into my purse for my wallet and walked toward a doorway, obviously more uncomfortable than my seller with completing a drug transaction at the curb of a busy street in midafternoon.
Vike handed me the seven tablets, telling me they were from a pharmacy and thus "safe,'' and I handed him $21 and walked away.
The entire transaction, from talking to the first guy at U.N. Plaza to slipping the tablets into my red purse, took about 25 minutes. I hadn't even used up my entire lunch break. The rehab doctor was right: Feeding an addiction is easy if you have the money. It's not so easy if you don't.
And that's the difference between people like Limbaugh and the addict on the street. The street addict begs and scams for his drug money. Folks like Limbaugh go to the ATM. Both groups are junkies. Both are buying drugs illegally. But only one group ends up in jail.
That, perhaps more than the many other social problems of drugs, is what Limbaugh's addiction could shine a light on. He has been famously harsh on drug users, saying, as a typical example, "If people are violating the law by doing drugs, they ought to be accused and they ought to be convicted and they ought to be sent up.''
Now, one presumes, he might have a deeper understanding of the complexities of addiction: It knows no race or class or political affiliation. There aren't good drug addictions and bad drug addictions.
Limbaugh probably never worried about being arrested. I certainly didn't yesterday. Buying drugs is quick and easy when you have a pocket full of money. And it seems going to a rehab center instead of jail is even easier. But no one, Limbaugh least of all, should think that the guy slumped against a building on Golden Gate Avenue is any different from the radio talk show host or physician or ad executive who pops 30 pills to get through the day.
They might have descended into their addictions from different roads, but they ended up in the same hell.
E-mail Joan Ryan at
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They say "time marches on," I just never got used to the beat...
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Sky_Queen
Fly Girl
Reged: 12/03/02
Posts: 1955
Loc: Texas
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Well that's an interesting piece....thanks for posting.
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lemongrass
Board Addict
Reged: 09/23/03
Posts: 361
Loc: IL
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Interesting, indeed, but I kind of had to laugh.
You see, when the person shouted vike, they weren't referring to a person by the name of Vike, they were referring to what the customer wanted; vicodine=vike. It's like people who want crack cocaine, they refer to it as rock and heroin is referred to as blow or china. At least in some parts of the Chicagoland area. When I have to pass through the heavily populated drug areas, they simply yell out what's for sale to just about every passing car! Yeah, that's pretty wild stuff.
Anyway, thanks for sharing this piece.
lemongrass
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Opie_Yates
Old Hand
Reged: 08/11/03
Posts: 418
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SF Chronicle...consider the source.
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Better living through the pharmaceutical sciences.
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sheenafur
Enthusiast
Reged: 04/25/03
Posts: 225
Loc: California
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Well, the Chronicle is a pretty crappy paper, but what do you mean "consider the source"? I'm sure they sell vicodins in Houston and Dallas, too.
From a proud SF'er
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Go easy, step lightly, stay free--J. Strummer
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sheenafur
Enthusiast
Reged: 04/25/03
Posts: 225
Loc: California
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Can't help but add an addendum to my last reply--I long ago cancelled my subscription to the Chronicle. It's perhaps one of the worst papers in the country (even the San Jose Mercury is better), and Joan Ryan is not one of their most stellar reporters. The article manages to be both silly and stupid; most of all though, if there were any kids out there who didn't know where to get drugs off the street, they do now. Ryan writes about her kids all the time--I guess she doesn't care much about ours. I do love my city, though!
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Go easy, step lightly, stay free--J. Strummer
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Opie_Yates
Old Hand
Reged: 08/11/03
Posts: 418
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Quote:
Can't help but add an addendum to my last reply--I long ago cancelled my subscription to the Chronicle. It's perhaps one of the worst papers in the country (even the San Jose Mercury is better), and Joan Ryan is not one of their most stellar reporters. The article manages to be both silly and stupid; most of all though, if there were any kids out there who didn't know where to get drugs off the street, they do now. Ryan writes about her kids all the time--I guess she doesn't care much about ours. I do love my city, though!
I don't blame you all for loving the Bay Area...it's just how do you cope with the cost of living, the homeless clogging the streets and ruining the tourism, and the wacko politicians?
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Better living through the pharmaceutical sciences.
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sheenafur
Enthusiast
Reged: 04/25/03
Posts: 225
Loc: California
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The cost of living is horrendous--especially when you're forced to buy your medication through OPs! But we managed to buy a house before things went crazy in a part of town which is lovely, quiet, and free of homeless people. The homeless situation is, by far, the worst problem we have. Yes, it's awful. We have a mayoral election next month, and it is the biggest issue being discussed. The problem is that the city hands out cash to the homeless, so they can go to Jones St. and buy and sell Vicodin! But when I go to the top of Clipper Street, and look out over the bay and bridges, it still gives me goosebumps. And, we are one of the last truly liberal cities, which does have its pros and cons. Anyway, thanks for the opportunity to let me defend and praise my city. Now if only Joan Ryan would move out!
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Go easy, step lightly, stay free--J. Strummer
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moonbeam
Member
Reged: 05/23/03
Posts: 173
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I'm in nursing school right now and hope to graduate in about a year and a half. Once I graduate, I'll move back up to North Georgia to gain experience in one of their hospitals for a few years, and then I'm hitting the road!
I want to eventually end up traveling as a nurse so that I can get out west. Spend 2 or 3 months in Alaska, a couple in Wyoming....I can dream can't I? I want to see the Pacific Ocean, the Grand Canyon, Yosemite, and Arizona. I hope that nursing will be my ticket.
Every little town in the U.S. has homeless, so you can't really sweep it under the rug. It's a problem but I know that some of them want it this way. I live in a really small town. I managed a small office for 15 years, we had one homeless guy sleep in our little doorway in the front on the building, and another that slept in the doorway at the back of the building. This went on the whole time I worked there. They didn't steal or cause problems at all, and in fact, it was like my own little private security company at night for my business. I would buy them an occasional lunch, or give them drinks out of our Coke machine. I felt sorry for them, but when I offered them some housing help, they both refused. One guy walked around town with a shopping cart gathering soda cans. He usually had the darn thing full, but this is what he did. The other guy would just hang around, eat lunch at the restaurant next door, and wait until 5 or 6 o'clock when they would then spread out their blankets, sleeping bags, and whatever else they could use for bedding and snuggle down for the night. They would usually be gone when I came in to work each morning, but some days, I'd have to wake them up so that I could get in the building and get them gone before the customers arrived.
Anyway, way off topic.
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sheenafur
Enthusiast
Reged: 04/25/03
Posts: 225
Loc: California
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So true, Moonbeam. There are many homeless people who choose to be homeless--and a lot who certainly don't and who need real help. The problem is that our economy here in SF really relies upon tourism, and I'm personally horrified for the poor tourists who are sometimes verbally attacked and are certainly put off by people taking a dump on the sidewalk. I'm all for helping the needy, but giving them cash (again, so they can buy and sell drugs on the street) just doesn't make sense. Maybe Joan Ryan has a bright idea?
In regards to the article, I still say it's one of the stupidest things I've read. What was she thinking? Sharon Stone's ex should have intervened!
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Go easy, step lightly, stay free--J. Strummer
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