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JD Vance on Drugs
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Rated C by NORML: "Not a fan" of recreational marijuana
Source: NORML Politician Info on 2024 Republican Veepstakes
, Aug 16, 2024
Close the border to end drug trafficking zone
Vance: Speaking of fentanyl coming into the United States, "you've got to close the border. You've got to finish the wall and you've got to make it so that these drug cartels are not able to use the U.S. southern border as a drug trafficking zone."
[Is that true that drugs come across the southern border?] Most of the fentanyl seized by U.S. border authorities is seized at official checkpoints, not in between ports of entry.
Drug policy and immigration experts have told PolitiFact that physical barriers at the border probably won't stop drugs from coming in, because drug cartels find ways around them--including through tunnels and under legal goods in trailer trucks that
seek to cross the border legally. Annual fentanyl seizures at the southwest border have been steadily increasing since at least fiscal year 2016, the Drug Enforcement Administration has reported.
Source: PolitiFact.com Fact-Check on 2022 Ohio Senate race
, Oct 17, 2022
Border wall would stop flow of fentanyl
During a discussion about immigration and the U.S.-Mexico border. Ryan said he supports a wall along certain parts of the border but also wants to increase funding for border patrol and use technology to block the flow of drugs. Vance accused Ryan
of not doing anything to address the problem during his lengthy tenure in Congress.Vance said, "What have you actually done to reduce the flow of fentanyl so that people like my family are not as affected by this terrible addiction crisis?"
Source: The Columbus Dispatch on 2022 Ohio Senate race
, Oct 10, 2022
Tackle drug epidemic, eliminate drugs coming into community
Opioid addiction has devastated my family and my community. More and more Ohioans are falling victim to addiction, which means an entire generation of children orphaned, and another generation of grandparents forced to step up for our community's kids.
Communities are on the decline as job loss and poverty further engulf them. I'll work to tackle the drug epidemic, eliminate the drugs coming into our community, and help those devastated by addiction.
Source: 2021 OH Senate campaign website JDVance.com
, Oct 3, 2021
2017: Founded non-profit to fight the opioid epidemic
After moving back to Ohio in 2017, Vance founded Our Ohio Renewal, a nonprofit dedicated to fighting the opioid epidemic that he wrote about so wrenchingly in his memoir.Plenty of politicians seek to bolster their image by pointing to their
philanthropic efforts. In reality, though, it's not clear what, if anything, Vance has achieved through his charity. A review by Insider of Our Ohio Renewal's tax filings showed that in its first year, the nonprofit spent more on "management services"
provided by its executive director -- who also serves as Vance's top political advisor -- than it did on programs to fight opioid abuse. The group, which has shut down its website and abandoned its Twitter account after publishing only two tweets, says
it commissioned a survey to gauge the needs and welfare of Ohioans, but Vance's campaign declined to provide any documentation. A spokeswoman for Ohio's largest anti-opioid coalition told Insider that she hadn't heard of Vance's organization.
Source: Business Insider magazine on 2024 Veepstakes
, Aug 29, 2021
Addictions based on grim future without hope
I wrote this book because I've achieved something quite ordinary, which doesn't happen to most kids who grow up like me. You see, I grew up poor, in the Rust Belt, in an Ohio steel town that has been hemorrhaging jobs and hope for as long as I can
remember. I have a complex relationship with my parents, one of whom has struggled with addiction for nearly my entire life. My grandparents, neither of whom graduated from high school, raised me, and few members of even my extended family attended
college. The statistics tell you that kids like me face a grim future--that if they're lucky, they'll manage to avoid welfare; and if they're unlucky, they'll die of a heroin overdose.I was one of those kids with a grim future. Whatever talents
I have, I almost squandered until a handful of loving people rescued me. That is the real story of my life. From low social mobility to poverty to divorce and drug addiction, my home [in Appalachia] is a hub of misery.
Source: Hillbilly Elegy, by Sen. JD Vance, p. 1-4
, May 25, 2017
Prescription "hillbilly heroin" was invited, not invaded
[One day] in the small Ohio town where I grew up, four people overdosed on heroin. A local police lieutenant coolly summarized the banality of it all: "It's not all that unusual for a 24-hour period here."Folks back home speak of heroin like an
apocalyptic invader, something that assailed the town mysteriously and without warning. Yet the truth is that heroin crept slowly into Middletown's families and communities--not by invasion but by invitation.
Very few Americans are strangers to
addiction. Shortly before I graduated from law school, I learned that my own mother lay comatose in a hospital, the consequence of an apparent heroin overdose. Yet heroin was only her latest drug of choice. Prescription opioids--"hillbilly heroin" some
call it, to highlight its special appeal among white working-class folks like us--had already landed Mom in the hospital. In our community, there has long been a large appetite to dull the pain; heroin is just the newest vehicle.
Source: The Atlantic on 2024 Veepstakes: Vance OpEd
, Jul 4, 2016
Page last updated: Oct 30, 2024; copyright 1999-2022 Jesse Gordon and OnTheIssues.org