Pennsylvania authorities have busted an affluent students drug gang. The gang was run by two affluent graduate of $ 35000/ year prep school. The gang suppled marijuana, cocaine and ecstasy to school and college students. The leaders of the gang were 25 year Neil Scott and 18 year old Timothy Brooks, both were graduate of Haverford school. They both had made a very intelligent network in which there were sub dealers in the region and whoever gave them a good business was eligible for good profit. The network was spread across different high end schools and colleges. The reputation of these schools was not tarnished before with drug rings. This incident shows, how much this problem is engraved in our society. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2609721/Prosecutors-Prep-school-graduates-ran-drug-ring.html
"Investigators found approximately eight pounds of marijuana, three pounds of hash oil, 23 grams of cocaine, 11 grams of ecstasy, $11,000 in cash, a loaded AR-15 assault rifle, a loaded 9mm pistol, and a loaded .22 AR-15 style rifle along with ammunition for all of those guns." Good on them. Someone's got to fill that demand. A real shame that thugs with guns shut them down and are now moving to destroy their lives through forced caging and the such. [hr][/hr] To make cannabis and cocaine it costs basically the price of soil, water, and fertilizer. The difference you pay on the street is the "drug tax" - where the state takes money from taxpayers though forced taxation, and gives it to drug dealers via the threat of imprisonment. The market adjusts for this risk by jumping the price up several hundred fold.
These children suffer from "Affluenza" and are therefore "Not Guilty". They need understanding and love. Not judgement and punishment. That's for the unaffluent. What do you suppose is responsible for this epidemic of Affluenza? No not required vaccinations. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affluenza http://www.cnn.com/2014/02/05/us/texas-affluenza-teen/ Cure: A "Hunger Games" or "Naked and Afraid" type scenario to stimulate recovery. Moi No