Prominent western gangs have worldwide drug networks, pose security threat in Canada, report finds

Four criminal organizations based in Western Canada are considered high-level threats to the security of the country, according to a new report by Criminal Intelligence Service Canada.

The federal agency, which is responsible for collecting information from police across the country, said that “organized crime remains a preeminent threat to Canada’s security, contributing to thousands of deaths annually from overdoses due to illicit drugs, as well as firearms and gang violence.”

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Trump’s fentanyl ultimatum puts Canada’s ‘super labs’ under microscope

The growth of illegal Canadian fentanyl production came into focus over the weekend after U.S. President-elect Donald Trump reportedly gave Canadian government leaders a clear impression that the runaway drug problem is his top priority, even in Canada-U.S. relations.

Canada’s China class must be concerned.

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Adam Zivo: New study shows a quarter of safer supply patients diverting opioids

A new Vancouver-based study suggests that many “safer supply” patients are diverting their taxpayer-funded opioids to the black market and are possibly being dishonest to researchers about defrauding the system . Worse yet, it appears that safer supply may not be as effective at separating addicts from street drugs as advocates claim, even though the entire point of the program, as described by Health Canada , is to provide “a safer alternative to the toxic illegal drug supply”

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At least 350 gangs in Canada are trafficking fentanyl

Canada has become a significant producer and exporter of fentanyl, with more than 350 organized crime groups involved in its illegal production and distribution, according to a confidential federal memo.

Blacklock’s Reporter says the document, prepared for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau ahead of a January meeting with British Columbia Premier David Eby, highlights the alarming growth of domestic fentanyl production using precursor chemicals primarily sourced from China.

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Involuntary treatment for severe addiction is better than doing nothing

Involuntary treatment (IT) for people with severe substance use disorder (addiction) is a hotly debated topic. There is skepticism that political expediency is suddenly driving elected officials to support IT when faced with a general public that has had enough of public disorder. But family caregivers have been advocating for a right to intervene for decades, and until now, their pleas have been ignored.

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Canadians who sold purer drugs in bid to stop overdoses challenge charges

Two Canadians activists who illegally sold untainted hard drugs in an effort to reduce fatal overdoses have launched a legal challenge to federal drug laws.

Jeremy Kalicum and Eris Nyx, co-founders of the Drug User Liberation Front (DULF), were charged in June with drug trafficking-related offences by police in Vancouver.

They had made headlines two years ago for offering pure cocaine, meth and heroin to drug users, saying they wanted to prevent deaths from a supply tainted with other substances.

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Erika Naomi Gertz: From the rise of fentanyl to disastrous ‘safe supply’ policies: The long, sad story of how Canada’s drug crisis spiralled into an epidemic

This August, Ontario’s Health Minister, Sylvia Jones, announced that the Ford government would close drug consumption sites within 200 metres of schools and childcare centres. In making the announcement, Jones explained, “Continuing to enable people to use drugs is not a pathway to treatment.”

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On the Moral Status of Addicts

They have become a potent American metaphor.

Anyone raising children in an American city these days has had to confront the following disconcerting scene: a person unconscious or semiconscious, in filthy clothes, stoned at midday, a nuisance if not a menace. As you lead your child gingerly around an adult prone on the sidewalk, the questions come: Why is that person lying there? Are they okay? Why do they take drugs if they know it could kill them? We tie ourselves in syntactic knots trying to formulate credible answers. We want to emphasize personal responsibility: that person made choices, but you can make different ones. We also don’t want our children to think us hard-hearted: that person is still a human being; somebody loves them. This conversation is even more difficult for the millions of Americans who have addicts in their own families.

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Derek Finkle: What drug injection sites aren’t telling you

Now that more than a month has passed since Ontario’s Conservative government announced the province would be closing 10 of its 17 supervised injection sites, there is some very interesting manoeuvring going on in harm reduction circles.

The injection site that I live across the street from, in the South Riverdale Community Health Centre, just east of downtown Toronto, has a particularly pressing conundrum. The province has given South Riverdale and the other nine sites being closed for being within 200 metres of schools and daycares until March 31, 2025, to wind down their operations.

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BC Not the First to Consider Mandatory Treatment for Severe Addictions

Although British Columbia has been in the spotlight this week for mulling mandatory care, it’s an approach that has also gained traction in New Brunswick, Alberta, and Ontario.

Mandatory care has been used historically in Canada, but was abandoned in recent decades when the idea took hold that the method infringes on personal liberties. Since the 1990s, the approach to addiction in Canada has moved from abstinence-based models to harm reduction–a method aimed at reducing the negative impacts of drug use rather than a focus on eliminating the use itself.

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Adam Zivo: Crack pipe vending machines and home delivery do not reduce harm

The B.C. government is backtracking on two controversial harm reduction programs that distribute free drug paraphernalia — such as syringes, crack pipes and snorting kits — through vending machines and online home delivery. This new scandal is yet another reminder of how the province, under the leadership of Premier David Eby, has mishandled the overdose crisis and prioritized enablement over recovery.

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Derek Finkle: Harm reductionists struggle to accept that they’re losing Ontario

A week after the Doug Ford government announced the closure of 10 supervised injection sites in Ontario within 200 metres of schools, harm reduction activists had moved on from denial and were well into the second Kubler-Ross stage of accepting the dire news — anger.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), which represents many of the staff members at the five Toronto injection sites set to close by the end of March 2025, organized a press conference Monday to express their collective rage.

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Important New Poll Reveals Most Americans Know China Is Funding the Fentanyl Murder of More than 100,000 Americans Each Year

In a recent national poll, more than half of responding Americans believe that China is deliberately exporting fentanyl to the United States for the purpose of harming, or even destabilizing our nation.

Were that true, some might reasonably describe that strategy as an act of war.

For China, it would be historic payback time.

Having lost a generation, a nation, and an empire to opium introduced by Imperial Britain during the 1800s, no one knows better than the Chinese that a drug scourge can bring a country literally to its knees.

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