Fentanyl addiction turns users into living deads on the streets of Philadelphia, PA



    by Nukro666

    41 Comments

    1. Sadly this problem will only get worse. Kids these days leaving school have no housing options if they don’t have family or friends to assist them. The cost of living is pushing more and more to the streets

    2. What always puzzles me with this (it seems specific to Fentanyl, but I don’t know) is the mannequin-like poses. At the very beginning, the guy with the bright green shirt. He just stands there as if frozen during a walk. Why is that? I mean, I would expect them to sit down, lie down, even collapse, but certainly not stoping during a mtion and staying there. How does that work?

    3. How would you describe this as a symptom? I’ve taken strong opiates that make me wanna lay down, and I kinda get how they’re half-trying to use as few muscles as possible, but remaining standing whilst trying to relax only half your muscles? What’s going on here, I’ve never seen this before

    4. If you’ve never seen this before in real life, count yourself lucky. I have no idea what specifically about fentanyl leads so many users to stand like that when they’re high but it is very real and very common. I used to work in Kensington about 8-10 years ago and often described the streets as looking like a scene from a zombie apocalypse movie.

    5. If anyone is curious,

      they are like that because fentanyl , which is an opiate like heroin or morphine, causes them to “nod off” their eyes get heavy like they’re forcing themselves shut. But, people can fight against the nod off and practically walk around but eventually you’ll be taken down

    6. Dangerous-Remote8920 on

      Okay, yes fent and tranq are bad, but it’s important to review the history of Kensington and realize what political and financial factors in Philly allow/contribute to this. Important not to look at this vid and just say omg! Terrible! We must fix the drug problem! Without addressing the several different socio-economic avenues that create blocks like this in large metropolitan cities

    7. So many people die overdosing immediately doing this. Not sure if the installment plan is any better. Addiction is tragic. Please don’t start.

    8. MuricasOneBrainCell on

      Reminds me of Van. At least in Van we have community outreach programs. Decriminalized specific drugs so we aren’t just throwing these people in prisons and making shit worse. Needle exchanges.

      I can’t speak for Philly but going by the reputation of the US. I doubt they have similar programs.

    9. Ok how does the fent high work? Like this zombie phase lasts for how long? Then you’re good for a few hours? A day?

      Is the zombie phase just like the onset and then theres a settled high? I just need to know because this doesn’t look enjoyable ya know

    10. A lot of disabled people. No hope in those streets, they are just waiting to die. But I suppose that helping them and giving care would be socialism. Better blow up some random ships in international waters, right?

    11. LurkHereLurkThere on

      This is the result of an out of control capitalist society where drugs are easier to get than a job and cheaper than rent and food.

    12. ConsequenceAlert6981 on

      Meanwhile trump started a war against the perfectly healthy none addictive painkiller tylenol

    13. How is this any different from when the Chinese populace was addicted to opium? This is America’s Century of Humiliation. It’s time to recognize it as such and deal with it properly!

    14. It amazes me that we can’t figure out how to do government funded rehab. Something a little better than jail but not for typical criminals. This is what complete failure looks like. Pull the money from police budgets, because after all this has to be a large part of what they deal with.

    15. This is terrible. At the same time this also looks like a flash mob waiting for their Go cue from the early 2000s.

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