What You May Have Missed
Most Popular
Across Site
In World & Nation
- Colorado Mormons join other faiths in...
- Washington Post writer: Mitt Romney lost...
- Pew study: News media inserted bias into gay...
- Video: Miss Utah USA flubs answer at Miss USA...
- NPR writer 'slightly' defends Miss Utah USA's...
- Parents rally after Canadian elementary...
- Cap'n Crunch refutes claims he's not actually...
- Issues plaguing black families in the...
Most Commented
Across Site
In World & Nation
- Pew study: News media inserted bias...
51 - Video: Miss Utah USA flubs answer at...
26 - Parents rally after Canadian elementary...
23 - New York English teacher assigns...
16 - Washington Post writer: Mitt Romney...
16 - Officials: NSA programs broke terrorist...
15 - IRS official: Washington scrutinized...
15 - NSA director says surveillance programs...
14



It is amazing that there is a market in this country for that much poison. There is something very wrong in America if that many people are buying this stuff and making the cartels billions of dollars. This is definately a problem with more than one side. Both the suppliers and the users need to be dealt with. That's the obvious point. The answer, so far no one seems to know. I will say this though. I believe a life with purpose other than just doing what feels good may keep people from these drugs. Not always, but many times that purpose is found in religion. A belief system that transends the here and now. I think the testimonies of people who have either gotten off of or totally avoided drug addiction prove that. There are other ways to find purpose and meaning to life, but I stand by a religious belief as one of the best.
DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments