But it isn't unique to San Diego County.  I live so far in a rural area that
to get to the "General Store" you only pass 3 houses in 6 miles. You don't
know who's growing what in your soybean field or pine forest!

As the recreational drug of choice changes so do the vendors change
products.  So now we have about 60% of 2000 people living on welfare
augmented by a side line of theft or manufacturing some chemical.

Bikers don't come through often because they don't like dirt roads with ruts
in them.  Ours is locally owned, operated and consumed.  They are products
of the product and their kids learn the ropes early.  Mainly they learned
how to get money without expending much energy!

The weekly newspaper might as well be a rehash of the previous month because
the same offenders are make the front page regularly.  It sounds bad enough,
but when you read it in print that this is a person's 5th offense, well,
duh. I know they don't have room in the inn.

Then we get to pick up the tab for the self induced health problems.

The newspaper printed on the FRONT page the formula in detail of how to make
methamphetamine!


----- Original Message -----
From: Bill Missett <miss...@prodigy.net.mx>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Thursday, September 05, 2002 3:34 PM
Subject: Re: CS>Re: Glad cow syndrome


> The perpetrators of the widespread availability of meth in Southern
> California is not traceable to returning GIs and Marines, who were largely
> hooked with heroin habits, but rather to the outlaw biker population,
which
> made it widely available to young people.
>
> I know.  I lived in San Diego County from 1968-1992, and my son was hooked
> on meth at the age of 14, by a biker crew which rented a home in an
upscale
> neighborhood, cooked meth in the house bathtub, and gave it away free to
> every kid in the neighborhood for months.   Bingo -- instant clientele.
>
> That went on until the bathroom blew up one day, and the biker boys just
> disappeared.  This went on all over Southern California for the better
part
> of a decade, and eventually branched out to the entire country when SoCal
> authorities got too smart.   Then the trade shifted to the Mexican mafia.
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: <jrowl...@nctimes.net>
> To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
> Sent: Thursday, September 05, 2002 4:09 PM
> Subject: CS>Re: Glad cow syndrome
>
>
> > Bill writes:
> >
> > > I believe the pills added to GI ration kits was dextroamphetamine, a
> much
> > > milder form of amphetamines.  The meth version didn't gain widespread
> > > popularity until the early-80s.
> > >
> > Well, this government sponsored drug is rearing its head now in the form
> > of wide-spread illegal meth labs all over San Diego county (for one)---a
> > prime living area for ex-military, what with the Naval, Marine and
> > defense-complex installations here.  Did the government think that once
> > out of the service, all would be forgotten and the servicemen and women
> > suddenly be "clean"?  Just declare another War---on the drugs they
> > seeded it with.  Pretzel logic at its finest.
> > Just an opinion,
> > jr
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.
> >
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> >
> > To post, address your message to: silver-list@eskimo.com
> >
> > Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html
> >
> > List maintainer: Mike Devour <mdev...@eskimo.com>
> >
> >
>
>
>