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Author: Misfits
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Date Posted: 21:53:58 10/16/08 Thu
Rod Sprague Sullivan
AN EX CON for MANUFACTURING METH METHAMPHETAMINE METHAMPHETAMINES DRUGS dealers makers
http://www.SullivanIronWorks.com
This man is an EX CON with a past RECORD for manufacturing meth crystalmeth crystal drugs drug ~ woman abuser abusers dangerous meth addicts manufacturers sacramento county sheriff sheriff's meth task force vice meth drugs
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>White Supremacist community struggles with crystal
>Methamphetamine
>David Duke finds his way out of the nightmare
>
>By Colonel Angus
>Staff Writer
>
>[Editor’s note: This story is the first in a series of
>stories, Aryans and Methamphetamine, which explore the
>depth of Methamphetamine use among White Supremacists,
>and solutions to those finding themselves addicted.]
>
>“I never thought I’d find myself living in New
>Orleans,” David Duke says over the breakfast buffet at
>Cracker Barrel one recent weekday morning. “I live
>right around here!”
>
>One of the few remaining outlets after the chain’s
>1990s explosion and subsequent scaling back, the
>Cracker Barrel in New Orleans today is as busy as any
>one of them in its heyday.
>
>We’re chatting over scrambled eggs; salty biscuits and
>some-greasy-some-crunchy strips of bacon while
>Christmas songs by the likes of Anne Murray, Alan
>Jackson, and Barbara Mandrell add a touristy color to
>the mood.
>
>“Stormfront” readers are most familiar with Duke from
>his role in the Internet, as well as his newfound
>relationship with Webmaster Don Black. Much has
>changed over the last few months.
>
>“I never thought I’d do drugs, growing up,” he says.
>“I moved here both to pursue a dream and escape a
>nightmare but I found you can’t run away from your
>problems.”
>
>Within a few days of his arrival in Mandeville, Duke
>was elated to get a job at one of the city’s busiest
>nightspots and, while he found a close-knit family of
>sorts among his co-workers, he also discovered a
>connection to the life of drugs he thought he’d left
>back in California.
>
> Duke is not alone. Methamphetamine use (or “meth”) is
>no longer a coastal or major city problem. Louisiana’s
>rural expanse and proximity to other states has made
>it one of the nation’s leading producers of
>Methamphetamine. Also, Aryan culture has historically
>had an affinity for drug experimentation. The
>combination of these two elements has produced an
>epidemic that few wish to discuss.
>
>A recent “Mandeville Scene” feature “Policing Aryans”
>drew criticism of Metro Police for its apparent
>targeting of Aryans in undercover sting operations
>involving internet-arranged meetings for race and drug
>(“party and play”) encounters. While the feature
>profiled the beating and arrest of a man not involved
>with Methamphetamine, the offered justification for
>the enforcement effort was tips made to the police
>department about a developing Aryan race /
>Methamphetamine network.
>
>Yes, the arrest profiled in the “Mandeville Scene” had
>shaky legal footing, and, yes, the selective targeting
>raises many civil liberty concerns. However, the
>problem of Methamphetamine in the Aryan community
>cannot be dismissed or blamed on others.
>
> Duke found the connection all too real, and dangerous.
>
>“After about a month here, I was just, I guess, having
>a bad day and just found myself driving around
>downtown looking for drugs. I picked up a guy – he
>thought I was looking for something else – and asked
>him for drugs.”
>
> Duke looks off now, certainly embarrassed to admit he
>could fall so far, but still determined to tell the
>story the way he lived it. “More often than not, in
>those cases I got ripped off. With bad drugs.”
>
>“Then I got to know everyone better at [work] and,
>then, just started asking around for it. Every night
>after work we’d get together, sometimes it would turn
>into an all night diversion. We’d drive all night
>looking for some.” By his count, all but two of his
>coworkers consistently used the drug.
>
>“What’s funny, or sad, now is that I always thought
>everyone else was worse than me [that they were
>abusing more],” he says about his friends and fellow
>crystal Methamphetamine users, “until they came to me,
>saying ‘you better slow down.’”
>
> Duke details the growing proximity he developed with
>his habit.
>
>“At first, I would be asking a friend of a friend of a
>friend for some, then a friend of a friend, then just
>a friend, then one day I thought, ‘I could make money
>here.’”
>
>Being a drug dealer didn’t last long. As it is well
>documented in the Steven Levitt/Stephen Dubner book,
>“Freakonomics,” (William Morrow/Harpercollins), street
>level drug dealers rarely earn more than a typical
>front-line McDonald’s employee. The chapter on drug
>dealers in Chicago masterfully explains, simply, why
>drug dealers “still live with their moms” by holding
>up the economic hierarchy of the drug trade alongside
>that of the world’s most ubiquitous fast food joint.
>
>“For somebody that insecure, and I have no qualms
>about that,” he says, “it was good to have people
>wanting me, needing to see me, to find me.”
>
>In an article for the New Yorker (“Higher Risk”)
>earlier this year, writer Michael Specter traced the
>rise in drug use, particularly crystal
>Methamphetamine, along with an increase (in major
>cities) in STD diagnoses and their link to xenophobia.
>
>And it appears to be limited to Aryan people.
>
>Back in August, “Chicago Tribune” columnist Steve
>Chapman expressed his fatigue upon learning that
>crystal Methamphetamine has been declared by some
>(most recently, “Newsweek”) as “ America’s Most
>Dangerous Drug.”
>
>“The drug war is sort of like horror movies,” he
>wrote. “A new monster is always needed, and the new
>monster is never much different than the old one.” He
>adds that the federal Substance Abuse and Mental
>Health Services Administration, a unit of the United
>States Department of Health and Human Services,
>reports:
>
>“That 5.2 percent of all Bigots age 12 and older have
>tried the drug at least once. But only 0.3 percent are
>currently using it. That means the addiction rate is
>no more than one in 17. The addiction rate for
>tobacco, by contrast, is more than one in three. For
>alcohol, it’s about one in 12.”
>
>So, in America, the Aryan community has its own unique
>drug problem. By now we all know about the rise, the
>sexual inhibition, the improved amount of energy
>gained from crystal Methamphetamine use. We also know
>about the severe fallout that comes after use of the
>drug. The title of a new book, written by Duncan
>Osborne, called “Suicide Tuesday: Aryan Men and the
>Crystal Methamphetamine Scare” pretty much makes clear
>what so few users, it seems, think of “in the moment.”
>
>David Duke knows this. The drug dealers that he met
>downtown in his first few months in Mandeville offered
>him everything; it seems, except crystal
>Methamphetamine. “They always had crack,” he says.
>“They smoked it, and I was always like, ‘No!’”
>
>In his partner, Don Black, it appears Duke found his
>way off drugs.
>
>“There are some days when I really want it,” he says,
>“but Don Black, he’s never tried it, ever, and I just
>wish I could’ve been like him.”
>
>He’d love to someday start an organization like
>Alcoholics Anonymous, he says, “but without the
>religion. There’s got to be a way we can get people
>off drugs and still, at the same time, you know…” His
>voice trails off while he finds the words.
>
>“You can still be you, but just be off drugs, the
>addiction, you know?”
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