Disaster Enough Fentanyl Crosses the US Border Each Month to Kill Every American - “[2.2 pounds] of fentanyl can potentially kill 500,000 people” “ CBP has already seized[…] an average of 2,427 pounds per month.”


In June, U.S. Customs and Border Protection seized more than 2,100 pounds of illicit fentanyl

In June, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) seized approximately 2,100 pounds of illicit fentanyl at the U.S. southern border, according to the agency’s latest report. The amount is enough to kill every American and then some.

One kilogram (2.2 pounds) of fentanyl can potentially kill 500,000 people, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).

“I don’t think the public is really aware of what a challenge this is,” said Dr. Donna Nelson, an organic chemist and professor at the University of Oklahoma.


“You have to assume that the border agents are not catching everything that’s coming into our country,” she told The Epoch Times.

“And the amount that’s coming in keeps increasing—not steadily, but it is increasing over time.”


Ms. Nelson was also the science adviser for the show, “Breaking Bad,” and the 2016 president of the American Chemical Society. She was also pivotal in showing how the chemical structure in “bath salts,” “spice,” and related designer drugs impact a person in a similar manner as illegal drugs.

Today, however, she’s turned her research prowess to what she considers an even bigger problem: illicit fentanyl, a synthetic opioid, which she says should be declared a weapon of mass destruction.

Prescription fentanyl is generally prescribed by doctors to treat patients suffering from severe or chronic pain, however, illicit fentanyl has become the source of the majority of overdose deaths in the United States.

Fentanyl and the Border​

In fiscal year 2020, CBP seized an average of 445 pounds of fentanyl per month at the southern border. In fiscal 2021, that amount increased to approximately 882 pounds per month. In fiscal 2022, the average amount of fentanyl seized per month was 1,175 pounds.

The total amount for fiscal year 2023 won’t be available until October, but CBP has already seized more fentanyl in the first nine months than it did for all of 2022, for an average of 2,427 pounds per month.


In less than three years, the amount of fentanyl seized at the southern border per month has increased more than fivefold.

“Every month, that’s enough to kill every person in the United States,” Ms. Nelson said.

Ms. Nelson said that while Americans might hear about people dying from fentanyl poisoning, she doesn’t think they’re “fully aware” of the scope of the problem. To help raise awareness, she organized a symposium on fentanyl during the American Chemical Society’s annual meeting in San Francisco in August.

“The public needs to be alerted about this,” she said. “I don’t think that they’re really that knowledgeable.”

She said the symposium will feature leaders in the fight against fentanyl, including a virtual presentation from Rep. Neal Dunn (R-Fla.).

Mr. Dunn introduced a resolution to the U.S. House in January, which would classify illicit fentanyl-related substances as a weapon of mass destruction.

He said the classification will make it easier to curb drug trafficking and free up resources for U.S. law enforcement.


The resolution has been referred to the Subcommittee on Health.

“The House must recognize this dangerous drug for what it really is—a weapon of mass destruction,” Mr. Dunn said. “Fentanyl-related substances are tearing families and communities apart, and we must do whatever we can to help law enforcement get them off the streets.”

Ms. Nelson testified recently at a congressional briefing at the U.S. Capitol in support of Mr. Dunn’s resolution.

During her testimony, she explained that fentanyl presents a unique challenge because of how addictive and deadly it is, that other countries, primarily China, are shipping the precursors of fentanyl to Mexico, which are then combined and smuggled across the southern border, and that scientific research hasn’t kept up with the evolving illicit fentanyl crisis.

Escalating Fentanyl Deaths​

Synthetic opioids, such as fentanyl, are the primary driver of overdose deaths in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The DEA reports that fentanyl is involved in more deaths of Americans under 50 “than any other cause of death including heart disease, cancer, homicide, suicide, and other accidents.”

For the 12 months ending in Jan. 2022, the CDC reports that 71,238 Americans died from fentanyl poisoning—an increase from 2020, which had an estimated 57,834 deaths.

April Babcock, the founder of Lost Voices of Fentanyl, a nonprofit organization dedicated to raising awareness on illicit fentanyl, told The Epoch Times she thinks those numbers are “significantly underreported.”

“There’s a family … that’s pretty definite their kid died from fentanyl because they found fentanyl at his house. But guess what: He was never tested!” Ms. Babcock said. “[The death certificate] says he died from cocaine. No, he didn’t. He died from fentanyl.”

She said the family is pushing to get a bill passed in Maryland that requires all hospitals to test for fentanyl if an overdose occurs.

“I hear it all the time: ‘They didn’t test for fentanyl.’ How are we ever going to get the right data?” Ms. Babcock said.

Border Security​

On July 12, representatives from the DEA appeared before the House Homeland Security Committee Subcommittee to testify on border security.

As part of its testimony, the DEA issued a statement that said fentanyl “has transformed the criminal landscape.”

“Fentanyl is exceptionally cheap to make, exceptionally easy to disguise, and exceptionally deadly to those who take it,” the DEA stated.

The agency said it seized more than 58 million fake pills containing fentanyl, and 13,000 pounds of fentanyl powder in 2022.

“This is enough fentanyl to supply a potentially lethal dose to every member of the U.S. population. These seizures occurred in every state in the country,” the DEA stated.

Department of Homeland Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has insisted that the “borders are not open” and that the United States isn’t facing a “crisis” at the southern border.

Rep. Clay Higgins (R-La.) disagrees. “The reckless open border policies set by President Biden and Mayorkas have greatly benefited the Mexican cartels,” he stated.

“The cartels quickly learned to outmaneuver the system, and with the help of the Chinese Community Party, they have smuggled an unprecedented amount of fentanyl, taken a record number of American lives, brought in billion-dollar profits, and have torn families apart. Secretary Mayorkas’ blatant disregard for the security and sanctity of the American people has wounded our great nation deeply.”

Mr. Higgins said his subcommittee plans to hold Mr. Mayorkas accountable for “dereliction of duty.”
 
How long until someone uses this stuff in such a large quantity at a mass event for terrorism that it makes 9/11 look like a car accident?

That's why I think its retarded that some people in the government are so concerned about radiological dirty bombs. A radiological dirty bomb could kill maybe a couple hundred people if the place was crowded. Someone sets off a dispersion type bomb stuffed with a kilo of fine grain fentanyl carried by an off-the-shelf drone over the stadium where the super bowl is playing tens of thousands of people will die.
 
What would happen if, hypothetically, somebody whoopsie daisy'd a truck load of fentanyl into a drinking lake or reservoir?
Fentanyl is far less potent when consumed orally.
Even George Floyd safely consumed a massive drug stash a few years before his later death. It's most dangerous when injected.

I don't blame China for corona, but there are tens thousands of people working in the Chinese chemical industry producing such feedstocks, and many thousands more marketing them. I myself bought 1000 lethal doses worth of a certain chemical online from Chinese sellers. (for a legal reason, but they didn't ask.) That is far more negligent than one lab leak.
 
Remember. California couldn't keep out Cartel farms and even legalizing weed didn't encourage said cartels to play ball. Its like a wimpy kid trying to befriend the bully who doesn't even respect them. Hell, this wimpy kid is outright being paid off by all types of syndicates to let a destructive chem run roughshod on the state.

So if there is a spot where fentanyl flows like water, it would be through Commiefornia.

 
They want this. Why bother with population control when we can just kill ourselves through addiction?
I think it's even worse than that. This constantly repeated headline about how many people could be killed using fentanyl is an invitation to a terror attack. Someone is going to sprinkle a brick of pure fent over a crowd using a drone and it will be the deadliest chemical weapon attack in history.
 
1690695596913.png

but NYC told me I should be proud of my drug abuse.
 
What size is a recreational dose?
That depends on the person. I don't fuck with Fent anymore or even drink but, I used to smoke 3 blues in a row to get really fucked up. I watched someone hit one and start to OD from the same batch, one poor fucker didn't know what he was doing and swallowed one like it was an oxy and ended up in the hospital in the ICU for weeks, once again from the exact same batch.
 
What's everyones feel on the reporting of these weight:huge deaths maths VS the old weight:huge street value maths?

I did like the bit of lulz I got every time some skinny wigger or jogger got pulled over and made the local news of "OVER 8 MILLION DOLLLARS STREET VALUE" that he was carrying in a marlboro bag inside an old cutlass and while the deaths lines don't bring that same nostalgia they do seem to be more fitting with some type future-talk would you like to know more type thing.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: FierceBrosnan
How many people does fentanyl actually kill? I was under the assumption that it mostly kills niggers
Black males represent the highest percentage of deaths and that is growing.

Drug addicts, especially ones that are using needles have already decided they don’t give a shit about anyone or anything so I’m not concerned with them. They know the risks.

I do worry that we’re going to see a lot more kids, who aren’t really doing anything but being reckless and partying on a Saturday night, ending up dead. Not because they’re regular drug users, but because they aren’t and have no idea what they’re ingesting.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: FierceBrosnan
Man we should really do something about the Southern Border...I am shocked that Kamala did not solve the problem yet!
Who is Kamala and can we fire them?

Remember. California couldn't keep out Cartel farms and even legalizing weed didn't encourage said cartels to play ball. Its like a wimpy kid trying to befriend the bully who doesn't even respect them. Hell, this wimpy kid is outright being paid off by all types of syndicates to let a destructive chem run roughshod on the state.

So if there is a spot where fentanyl flows like water, it would be through Commiefornia.

As much as I like to shit on California, I'd wager Texas is the main route of illicit activities such as human trafficking and drug distribution. There is a lot of empty land at the boarder of Texas, a lot of Mexican factories at neighboring border towns, not to mention the numerous rail, highways, etc. infrastructure available to easily drive without seeing another person for hours. But mostly it is just centrally located meaning that illicit substances can be easily spread out over a larger area more readily.
 
What would the legal consequences of declaring a substance like this a weapon of mass destruction? If china is pushing the the components of them over the border you’ll end up like the uk going to war in Iraq becasue of WMDs.
I mean I know fentanyl is nasty stuff but this seems more like getting a law that’s going to have consequences in place rather than shooting producers and dealers like rabid dogs and shutting the border
 
  • Like
Reactions: FierceBrosnan
I mean I know fentanyl is nasty stuff but this seems more like getting a law that’s going to have consequences in place rather than shooting producers and dealers like rabid dogs and shutting the border
I mean, shooting these people dead and shutting the border down would be a real good place to start.
 
We need a drug Czar. for the wealthy.

So we can reduce the cost of pure heroin and rid ourselves of this nasty additive.

Additives in drugs only becomes a problem when it is the drugs rich people use. Now Hollywood can't get their hands on pure Heroin and its a problem so now they whine like bitches.

They dont give a fuck who laces crack cocaine or weed, only when it starts hitting the wealthy's supplies do they ensure their is public outrage.'
 
Back