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tv   Documentary  RT  July 1, 2020 12:30pm-1:00pm EDT

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through all of these. this could be one issue in all of this. the maybe both for for the us. i think i'm not a fan of sanctions and sanctions but i think this circumstances should be clear. and european union it's becoming a question off. of summer and not only off of one project under a year time and thoughts always appreciated under a hunk oh m.p. for the german left party. thank you that's rubbish lives across the us but opioids don't tend to get the headlines not the likes of heroin and cocaine do next week chronicle those alex fighting to break free from its clutches it is a tough story it's a tough watch and it's next. all
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these people press away and there's a lot more of this wall so people who have lost their lives early to edition yeah this is from akron we're just not going to treat our way out of this epidemic and the only way we're going to eradicate it is to reggie cation of prevention and stop the kids from using because we have seen people go through programs 10 to 12 different times and go to treatment and just never get it going to end up dying tog masseur is a former drug addict who now heads a private rehab center in akron ohio all the guys been working on this themselves
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so the one guy up here he was a house water at new destiny treatment center and they found him literally dead like this ending up. a guard appear his girlfriend they were found in their park move that they just gotten. cold and they were dead for like 3 days holding each other. has a population of about 200100 years ago it was one of the fastest growing towns in the u.s. it was famous for producing rubber and caught tiles and was even called the rubber
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capital of the world in the last 50 years the population has fallen by a 3rd and continues to decline these days akron is better known as the meth capital of ohio it's a city where the number of drug addicts keeps growing every year this film was shot in several private rehab centers and is about the people who still live in them i have respect. we left. we are at the recovery residence a home that's been in my family for over 50 years 53 years i believe you know i've read read some editorials and such lately were and people are saying that the worst is behind us and that is far from true. the statistics such as they are are disappointing on the just released accounting report were and were on track to outpace last year's deaths significantly working. to former prisoners and to people who have checked out of a state rehab center and need a safe shelter for a while they can stay free until they find work then they pay $500.00
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a month in rent. 10 months and. i mean really that i'm alive that's huge my last jury. my 4 story apartment window on the sidewalk and should not be alive here today should not be able to walk it's just another thing everything i just did a nice story. you know they sent a work out. i had to go to surgery on my back the darker stone know if i waited like an early day or 2. more still be alive the last time i was in your o's smoke and you're all those.
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kind of drugs. renard you know it. was you know and corey met when they both rented rooms from rain out and buns they'd been to heroin and misuses for than 10 years. corey is from a very poor family in west virginia and his mother about. and she's never seen her biological father. and that to me. is right after they adopted me because the day after that 4 days old i remember that she doesn't even know who made it so big mystery i don't really care it's not important. i have a great family anyway. and then that's me senior picture so i was 17 and a half there. and i was a blond then. if.
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this is her adoptive parents were wealthy and loving but that didn't save her from addiction and other things the rap sheet. corey have now stayed with me. i was just broken you know i broke in college when i was raped in that stairwell you know that's when i was like started drinking and that slake when the the addiction in me was like awakened but never like i said consistently or like norrish like i mean i nurtured my heroin it made everything that was broken inside of me go away. when we met things he was working at one of the crunch rehab centers and had been clean for one of us as well as administrative work for the center. on the streets hoping to try and help them change their lives.
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plain to see me that's what it's all about you know all it takes is one person. connecting with another person you know believe in somebody else. but god does with the white man i'm right i'm rob you don't look at my head ok bill you mean the research is pretty conclusive i mean we have genetic markers for addiction the disposition towards addiction certainly it is a learned behavior as well so now we have 3 generations of people under the same roof who know active addiction and again that's
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a path all of that's pretty entrenched i mean how do you interrupt that cycle when grandma builds dads wasted on this you know the kids are on meth where do you start to untangle that one i'm good now because i don't want to be a statistic i want to give my kids stuff that i didn't have like i was you know my whole life my dad could means money. you know my aunts and uncles came up when i was 14 i came up to ohio and my whole family were gigantic it was a perfect storm of factors we are just now peeling back the layers of trauma throughout much of the 1990 s. and beyond the doctors were encouraged in some cases incentivized to overprescribe we have towns small towns here in ohio. that have been prescribed millions of pills i mean enough to sedate a small country then we had the same aloa cartels and the other mexican cartels who
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have distribution centers throughout the rust belt in the midwest ohio very central among them drug addiction and the many other just desperate causes is the main reason behind this steadily declining population according to the american medical association journal in 70 is from 2000. 10 to 2017 the death rate among people aged 25 to 64 rose by more than 20 percent. this memorial was actually conceived built by the young people of our residents here are recovery residents part of who we are part of what we do is we provide ceremony in these people's lives the ceremony of death which. started about in 2013 we buried our 1st young guy from the house here and
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it has not abated and they are succumbing you know one after the next so these are all the personalized tags of the young souls who came to us and sought help and there's more coming. we had a couple of our crew of our sort of core guys who lived at the house when they left against the council 48 hours later they were dead relapse and just stopped picked back up part of the challenge is if you stay in their coverage obviously your tolerance lowers significantly. so you go back to believing the the lay of the way in this changed significantly i mean we're talking about. a chemical that can stop your heart with the net mess of a grain of salt can stop your heart. it is talking about fentanyl and cough
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and tamil people it seems to treat pain quite similar to her cough until 5000 times cough into militias some powerful that it's used as a veterinary tranquilizer 2 milligrams is enough to sedate an elephant recent years have. name several mass proven doses on fentanyl often to know the drugs are cheap which pushes them to the expensive heroin meth to increase their profits given addicts more of a high for less money to strengthen their dependency for dealers to get the dose right when they concoct the mixture at home that's why so many people die from overdoses and anyone who survives enjoys a painful withdrawal much worse even than from heroin. doing too much. why would you want to throw up your clientele
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but then you should also hear about people say ray ray over here that yes somebody 3 people just died. and we got to go get that guy was just crazy he did too much you know what he would do i'm different you don't know why you. know you were going to say no only got it right let's go get it. from. the ground we're in a house there's nobody around is guess what. i'm a. drug dealing has long been a simple and accessible source of income for many a time for anyone who wants to quit and break the cycle of addiction because the push is on literally everywhere. it's not hard. i want to be sober but i thought i did and i was walking to the bus you know from
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the sober house is overrun brown street. and i literally met my dealer walking to the bus stop he was like hey you want to sample that's how. you know and i was like sure like what do you get. you know and that's that's that was one of my relapse and one curious. byproduct of course of the epidemic is the. epidemic of crime. and i just read here were 3 young guys right down the street here were were shot in a running gun battle i mean we're talking about a small city we're at 100 what 90000 people and we've got a running gun battles up in the slot chicago in the thirty's it's a wave of crime i've had rounds hit the building next door and 9 millimeter rounds right through the picture window so this is the wild west you know courtesy of the
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epidemic. where you could just said here you are here you know myself. i'm not. ok we're at a.b.c. church and bible church on brown street and we came here to do trunk or tree. it's where the kids travel trying to trunk car to car in their costumes they get candy. this has how little you know coming up and it's a recovery church and it's what they do the journey of everybody that's here is the recovery from some sort of addiction. it's a rough neighborhood. don't
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. annex a coal group is a member of the crown bible church she has 4 children and no husband she hasn't used meth for over a year and believes her drug and sex addictions a rooted in her childhood. my dad raised me work and now fox saying he raised me like as if i was his son instead of his daughter so that's how i dress and a lot of people would make fun of me for it that i and then at home my dad choosing my step mom over me i feel like because she didn't like me and she didn't like the relationship that my dad and i had and he kind of wanted to please her which kind of left me lonely i think that's where it all came into play i just wanted to sleep with somebody even if it was for one night just that you know 5 minutes or an hour
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couple hours of being with somebody for one night made me feel like i had self-worth. the drugs would know me but then the more people i slept with or the more bad things that i did or you know people that i heard i'd have to use more drugs to try to numb those feelings on top of the feelings or mardy numbing and it was just a process that never ended and then eventually it got to the point where nothing worked. this is a place for a play baseball yes i was real good at it played little league world series when i was 14. very good at it baseball was my baseball was my getaway because of the childhood and i had a grown up i used to. use it driving foolish when i had my moments i still come down here. you know i love being around kids and
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you know helping kids and stuff to the point where ultimately i don't want to use them for their kids but when i go and i spend more time over there because they have kids because it allows me to decompress. wasn't there for mark huge. and there was. never knew her biological father but since she's immensely grateful to her adoptive dad he kept believing in her throughout her years of addiction it's largely because of his support that she managed to overcome dependence start a family was corey and move into a house in a nice safe neighborhood. lost so many close. in may using. the. f.
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word dad every time i go to treatment he have to pretty much any new clothes he. got so good like going to the store and getting like women's clothing like the ladies at the store a new when they go she need more clothes you know my dad. found this neighborhood for us he thought it would be a good place to start a family without her dad we would not be here now but that's what it takes to take family for. more really stuff. this is for oh the culture here we're. worried about really we're eating there so they're right here and in the end he is and i've read this and says baby my mom got does they're collector's items now i guess my dad sees her for like all these
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years and then gave them to me for lizzie oh. oh oh. we are at. terry in the highlands where. we come every morning of course for pride to do his thing but we also visit. a number of our misfit. in this place is. fairly planted with them. tom was 36 is actually one of the institute's very 1st volunteers and staff people just tremendously creative spirit really a beautiful person to look like a viking but 36. seth
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apple also used to rent a room from ray not while recovering from his addictions he was adopted by lance and carol apple pious financially stable and seemingly prosperous in every sense a good christian couple. if. there were some. number 12. i got to call. 36 morning. had a particular addiction to alcohol was an issue for me but. the
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it's called. the active ingredient in cough syrup. and they also st it's. called tripping robitussin and what he would do is he would drink several bottles of it and it would cause some effect and that's what he was. pretty much with using drugs for about 12 years he did have some very stringent rules voice that. no hair away you know he said don't mess with those so he really believed he thinks thought he had a handle on this that he was using it properly and he was not quite. willing to give it up. so.
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well we had let's see little was the best i know them are 6155 pm so this isn't my 1st child it's korea's 1st child my 1st child was adopted. by which choosing only to say it was the best option and you know my cousins ended up adopting her. but the 1st time was just it was
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a you know i was. trying to understand sobriety and then trying to become a mother at the same time and fundamentally didn't work. we 1st met our protagonists in june 29th teen and for the last time in february 2020 during that time the rehab center where rob rawlings worked closed down. and started using it again. then he completed a one month course at a rehab clinic and found a job you know he delivers heavy white goods like fridges and washing machines he gets up at 5 am every day and mostly lives in hotels because he has to travel involved in his work he says he's making more than ever before and feels happily self-sufficient his dream is to save enough by the end of the year to rent premises for his own sober house so he can start helping other people again. the most
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important. trying to help themselves obviously everybody wants to help everybody the epidemic is ridiculous take your yourself before you take yourself. you know you know if you're poor from an empty cup you can't transmit something you don't have. running a household 14 which i would get down every time i would hurt every time i would feel pain i would go far and one of the guys in the house to see what they needed because he. problem is you can't you. grab somebody else and hope that's the same you know if the problem and the problems maybe there's just put a band-aid on it because when. you go. you know i was. so i actually i had real after my here. is the process. mentally. emotionally get to the physical part is just simply pick. and percent of
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will ever get. takes the heroin addict. 8 times if they don't die if you add up every treatment center i've been since i started on my journey in recovery and then the relapse and then back in recovery in the area and etc i've spent. close to 3 years in programs and that's not counting time that i spent in sober living but every time i went you know planted a seed and it made i made more connections it wasn't all you know because i'm sitting here and i'm alive and i am giving back to the community that i used to be a burden. completed her studies at the recovery coach academy founded by. 2022 years since she stopped using more than 10 years ago she went to college to become
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a social worker. wants to use knowledge and experience to help addicts to break the vicious cycle and claim back. they have this false belief that the streets care about them and those people support them that are out on the street but if they get some support over here you know you can introduce them to like a better way of living slowly no it's not going to be fast and it's not going to you know but maybe they will one day. maybe they want that's like the saddest thing about this field is you're going to watch people die and you're going to watch them kill them so. the colegrove also completed her recovery coach training a little earlier but she hasn't started working yet she wants to get her life back on track so now devotes all of her attention to her children. you know i love my children i have 4 kids with 3 different dad now my 1st daughter's father hung himself my. kids' middle 2 children that i have dallas and cole and who are 5 and
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4 their dad is about alcoholic and he's clean right now but. last kid that i had his dad is an active addiction still to this day so chances are one out of 4 of my kids will be an addict at least if i live the right way and show them how to live instead of tell them how to live their lives my job i can only lead by example and if they choose the opposite way that's ok i'll be here for them i won't enable that but i will be there for them. just a couple of news items is anyone following what's happening in franklin county this week 28 deaths in 10 days again that's 28 deaths in one county in the past and. continues to help rehabilitate former drug users and educate others he believes that individual coaching is the best solution
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. other teachers at the academy see addiction as an illness and not just a sickness of the mind and body but an affliction of the spirit and that's what gets in the way for many who are trying to escape drug dependency they don't have the strength of spirit or higher goals to face but they can succeed. again i think it's important to note that it's not an opioid. i mean perhaps ultimately it's an epidemic of spirit it's the fact that we've become so disconnected soul bereft of spirit and community. moving forward now a lot of you. you are all going to be working in wildly different capacities please know you are the tip of the spear of the recovery revolution.
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the primary purpose of history is to understand it as a guide to understanding the present and future. because a lot of history is peaceful. so how should we find the right. to choose the right .
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deciding rush's next chapter it's the final day and final hour of voting on changes to the constitution we look at what's being offered on the public's reaction to it . i think that it's needed because the current constitution is out of date i think it is nonsense according to all legal and ethical to your small with all of its members also ahead in a busy news hour intense scrutiny on germany's huge meat processing industry after a major covert i brick among stuff at the biggest plunge shines a light on working on living conditions for that mainly low paid migrants. rocking the boat draws from nature missions in the mediterranean sea.

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