Posts Tagged think
do you think the court will order drug tests for this?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on October 20, 2011
Question by Jake Breuer: do you think the court will order drug tests for this?
i was caught shoplifting and i got arrested, and i was drunk, but thy dropped the minor charge (i think because they diddnt hand me a ticket for that) and i probably get probation, do you think they will drug test me because i was intoxicated?
Best answer:
Answer by [ViRuS]ProCreated
Most likely not since no drugs were involved in the crime comitted
What do you think? Answer below!
Atheists, what do you think of the Terri Schiavo case?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on July 6, 2011
Question by Got rings this millennium?: Atheists, what do you think of the Terri Schiavo case?
This was not a euthanasia case in the traditional sense, as the patient was in a persistent vegetative state unable to communicate, was not terminally ill (but had no chance of recovery), and did not experience great pain.
1) Since her parents wanted to keep her alive, and her husband wanted her to pass away by removing her feeding tube, what do you think should have been the right thing to do in this situation? It’s a shame a Supreme Court order had to be given to settle this.
2) Suppose this happened to someone else under the exact circumstances except that person had no family and no close friends. In this case do you think he should be allowed to live indefinitely? If not, do you think a team of doctors should be the ones to decide on the best course of action?
3) This is aside from the previous two questions, but since the only belief atheists share is disbelief in God, and since almost all religions consider God or belief in deities to be quite essential (except perhaps Buddhism which also believes in unfounded things like the afterlife), does this mean that atheism usually means rejection of religion as well? Would it be accurate to describe atheism as being part of irreligion?
Best answer:
Answer by LHOOQ corné
The autopsy revealed that she was brain dead. She should have been allowed to die with dignity, instead of being shown on national television in her condition.
What do you think? Answer below!
Q&A: What do you think about this court decision? from Yahoo News… Judge: Man must display victim’s picture?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on January 21, 2011
Question by johnnybassline: What do you think about this court decision? from Yahoo News… Judge: Man must display victim’s picture?
BARTOW, Fla. – A judge has ordered a man who pleaded guilty to vehicular homicide to display a large picture of the victim in his home after serving two years in prison.
Circuit Judge Robert Doyel said Friday that the picture must be at least 2 feet wide and displayed prominently. It also must include lettering that says: ‘I’m sorry I killed you.’
Arthur Pierce, 31, was racing with his cousin on a busy street when they caused an accident that killed 17-year-old Chelsi Gregory, authorities said. Witnesses told police Pierce was swerving in traffic at about 120 mph when his Cadillac collided with a pickup in which Gregory was a passenger.
A prosecutor also said alcohol was a factor in the crash. Pierce’s cousin, Christopher Pierce, is set to be sentenced April 5.
An advocate for Mothers Against Drunk Driving requested the photograph be part of Pierce’s sentence, according to The Ledger of Lakeland newspaper.
The judge said that Pierce’s probation officer will be allowed to search his hom
The judge said that Pierce’s probation officer will be allowed to search his home at any time, and if the photograph is not displayed, it will be considered a probation violation.
Best answer:
Answer by Ed P
If it makes him think ?/?Remember he was convicted once. How many times did he not get caught????
Add your own answer in the comments!
Q&A: Ca a debt recovery company sue me for a debt that I don’t think I owe?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on October 23, 2010
Question by BARBARA J T: Ca a debt recovery company sue me for a debt that I don’t think I owe?
O.K my credit is not perfect and I have some past debts that have gone unpaid. Now there is a debt recovery company that has been coming after me for a credit card debt that is not mine. It has passed through 3 companies and this one has gone to the point of getting some kind of court order. I have spoken to them on the phone and written letters asking for documentation but all I received was a computer printout of my name, social and wrong birthdate. This is not going away and I don’t know what to do! Can they take my assets? I don’t own anything except a very small savings. Help!
Best answer:
Answer by mike4400
In our society anyone can sue anyone for anything
What do you think? Answer below!
Michael Lohan Doesn’t Think Lindsay Will Get Sober in Jail
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 23, 2010
Michael Lohan Doesn’t Think Lindsay Will Get Sober in Jail
Even though his daughter is serving time for breach of her probation conditions, Michael Lohan doesn’t believe prison will help Lindsay to get sober. “She’s going to jail, but they are gonna keep her on the same prescriptions she was…
Read more on Extra TV
Do you think Ted Kennedy suffers guilt, leaving Mary Jo Kopechne to drown, to protect his political ambition?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 10, 2010
Now that Ted is near the end of his life, there are questions remaining about his past; news stories that he has attempted to apologize for killing Mary Jo Kopechne, are recently out.
1) Do you think Ted feels any guilt or remorse for bullying the Kopechne family and manipulating the prosecutors from charging him with felony manslaughter & DUI & leaving the scene of a fatal accident ? Ted never spent a night in jail for the crime that any other American would have done 20 years in prison.
2) Knowing that Mary Jo could have been saved, if Ted went to a nearby house, to phone rescue workers, instead of leaving the scene to sober up, does that crime bother Teddy? Does he have any conscience? Does his ambition justify his crime, in his own mind?
2) Will Ted go to heaven for his legacy of raising the minimum wage for high school students OR does leading a selfish life, alcoholism, adultery, hard drug usage, helping his nephew escape justice for raping an innocent woman, secretly funding the IRA to bomb and murder innocent English civilians, do these sins affect his chances of going to heaven?
Have you ever wondered how all Teddy’s sins, failures, cheating, crimes, selfishness, hurting innocent people has not affected his standings as one of the brightest stars within the democratic party?
Only Sen Byrd, former leader of the KKK, has a longer history as senior democratic senator- what does this say about liberal leaders?
Is Teddy’s commitment to socialism worth all his crimes and wrong-doings?
http://www.nydailynews.com/gossip/2009/05/19/2009-05-19_kennedy_could_not_find_words_to_confess_kopechne.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chappaquiddick_incident
We have a Kennedy apologist, Michael p-brain, who repeats the tallking points of moveontosocialism.org, to spin lies, to deny the truth. Michaelp has never read any of the books about Chappaquiddic and knows nothing about the subject.
What do you think of these facts?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 10, 2010
FACTS ABOUT SUICIDE
* Worldwide there are more deaths due to suicide than to accidents, homicides and war combined.
* About 30,000 people in the United States die by suicide every year.
* Currently, suicide is the 11th leading cause of death in the U.S.
* Every day, approximately 80 Americans takes their own life, and 1,500 more attempt to do so.
* A person dies by suicide about every 18 minutes in the U.S. An attempt is estimated to be made once every minute.
* In the U.S. in 2001, the suicide rate among women was 4.1 per 100,000, while for men it was 17.6 per 100,000.
* There are more than four male suicides for every female suicide, but twice as many females as males attempt suicide.
* Firearms are the most frequent method of suicide among adults in the United States.
* Over ninety percent of people who die by suicide had at least one psychiatric illness at the time of death. The most common diagnoses are depression and drug and/or alcohol abuse.
* Alcoholism is a factor in about 30 percent of all suicide deaths.
* Early recognition and treatment of depression and other psychiatric illnesses appears to be the best way to prevent suicide.
* Certain personality disorders, such as borderline and antisocial personality disorders, appear to carry high risk for suicide. Impulsivity also appears to be a risk factor for suicide.
* Between 20 and 50 percent of people who kill themselves had previously attempted suicide. Although the majority of people who die by suicide have no made a previous attempt, a serious suicide attempt is a clear risk factor for suicide death.
* Suicidal individuals often talk about suicide directly or indirectly using statements like, “My family would be better off with out me.” Sometimes they talk as if they are saying goodbye or going away, and may arrange to put their affairs in order. Other signs of contemplating suicide include giving away articles they value, paying off debts or changing a will.
FACTS ABOUT YOUTH SUICIDE
* Suicide is the second leading cause of death among college students and the third leading cause of death among all youth 15 – 24 years old. In the U.S., only accidents and homicides claim more young lives.
* Nearly 4,000 people aged 15 – 24 die by suicide each year in the United States.
* Between the mid-1950s and the late 1970s, the suicide rate among U.S. males aged 15 – 24 more than tripled (from 6.3 per 100,000 in 1955 to 21.3 in 1977). Among females aged 15 – 24, the rate more than doubled during this period (from 2.0 to 5.2). The youth suicide rate generally leveled off during the 1980s and early 1990s and since the mid-1990s, it has been steadily decreasing.
* Among young people aged 15 – 24, males die by suicide almost six times more frequently than females. In 2001 (the latest year for which national rates are available) the suicide rate among young men was 16.5 per 100,000 and the rate among young women was 2.9.
* Youth suicide rates vary widely among different racial and ethnic groups. In 2001, white youth had a suicide rate of 11.5 per 100,000, compared to rates of 7.3 for African Americans, 6.1 for Hispanics, 6.4 for Asian Americans and 18.8 for American Indians and Alaskan Natives.
* Twenty percent of American high school students report having seriously considered suicide during the previous 12 months. Eight percent of high school students make a suicide attempt.
* Seventy percent of youth who make a suicide attempt are frequent users of alcohol and/or other drugs. In states where the minimum drinking age was raised from 18 to 21, the suicide rate for 18 to 20 year olds decreased.
* Over 90 percent of youth who die by suicide had at least one psychiatric illness at the time of death; in about half such cases, the psychiatric illness was present, although often unrecognized, for two years or more. The most common diagnoses among youth are depression, substance abuse and conduct disorders.
FACTS ABOUT DEPRESSION
* Depression affects more than 19 million American adults aged 18 and over each year, representing nearly 10 percent of American adults.
* More American adults suffer from depression than coronary heart disease (7 million), cancer (6 million) and AIDS (200,000) combined.
* About 15 percent of the population develops clinical depression at some time in their life. Depression will affect one in 10 men and one in four women.
* Symptoms of depression include:
* sadness or “down” mood
* loss of interest or pleasure in usual activities
* poor appetite or overeating
* trouble falling or staying asleep or sleeping too much
* feeling tired or having little energy
* feelings of worthlessness, self-reproach or guilt
* trouble concentrating
* moving or speaking very slowly, or the opposite, being fidgety or restless
* thoughts of being better off dead or of hurting oneself in some way
* Depression is among the most treatable of psychiatric illnesses. Current treatment includes medication, psychotherapy or some combination of the two.
* Fewer than half of all Americans consider depression to be a health problem and more than 2 in 5 believe it is a sign of personal weakness.
* Over 60 percent of people who die by suicide are estimated to suffer from major depression, with no other psychiatric or physical illness. Thirty percent have alcoholism, and half of those with alcoholism have depression as well.
* Certain intense emotional or affective states may suggest a suicide crisis in individuals who suffer from depression. These include intense desperation, hopelessness, rage, abandonment, self-hatred or anxiety.
* Almost two million Americans currently suffer from bipolar disorder (manic depressive illness), in which episodes of depression alternate or co-exist with periods of mania. This mood disorder carries a high risk of suicide.
* Approximately 20 percent of all patients with bipolar disorder have their first episode during adolescence.
I know this is a lot, but I think it’s an extremely important topic and maybe in learning/understanding some of this it is quite possible you might be able to help save the life of your friend or a family member.
I have lost 2 family members (in the same family) in the last 8 years. My 17 yr old nephew just 2 1/2 weeks ago.
Wanted to post this in hopes that maybe something can be learned to possibly help others…..
ABSOLUTELY NOT! This is to try and educate people about the topic, to try and prevent further deaths.
Just wish the stigma of suicide could be lifted and maybe by further education it can be. Maybe if people took there heads out of the sand about this subject it might help those having these feelings feel more comfortable to come forth – instead of just to say an online chat room, but to actually friends, family, etc. that care about them!
¿Smoker Or Not: Do You Think Marijuana Will be Legal Almost Everywhere in 50 Years from Know? Arguments?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 8, 2010
1 out of 100 American adults are in jail. When you see that figure, what comes to mind? You may ask yourself, “Why are so much people in jail?”
One of the big answers is: Marijuana. In the year 2006, 43.9 percent of the 1,889,810 total arrests for drug violations were for marijuana- a total of 829,627. Out of that 829k, 738,916 people were arrested for just marijuana possession alone. Think of how much it would have risen since then? In the recent news report about the jail rates it said on average a state spends 25k per inmate. That’s around 18,472,900 dollars- If they where arrested all in the same state, since some sates spend even more, or less per inmates.
Oh, yes. Don’t forget the cost of fighting Marijuana “States spent $42.89 billion on Corrections in 2005 alone. To compare, states only spent $24.69 billion on public assistance.” So, in 2006 to around 2005, if you add all that up, the cost of jailing the inmates, and the correction costs: it all adds up to more then 42,908,472.900 being spent!
Those 829,627 people did nothing wrong, they did no violent act. If free they’d be any normal working tax payer in the US.
The point of this article is to show you that Marijuana isn’t the work of a bad force. Rather the work of a good force but clouded by the government and its drug laws. If we stopped spending all that money, we could put it into something that’d help the economy. Give it to schools, or help feed some poor people. This war on drugs has done nothing to stop the flood of drugs entering the US. “Did alcohol use decrease during the Alcohol Prohibition? No.” in fact “Consumption by women and children increased dramatically” Today we’re seeing the exact same thing when it comes to the drug war. “Every hour spent investigating a drug user or seller is an hour that could have been used to find a missing child…”
I’m in favor of legalizing drugs. According to my value system, if people want to kill themselves, they have every right to do so. Most of the harm that comes from drugs is because they are illegal.”
Which do you think would work better for drug addicts. Mandatory prison sentences or rehab?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 5, 2010
you would think Rodney King had change his life around WRONG!!?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 4, 2010
this man we know as a victim has yet to change his life around!
I’m not trying to justify what the cops did was right but since this man was assault he was award 3mil and is still causing problems. After the riots King was awarded $3.8 million in a civil case, and used some of the money to start a hip hop music label, Straight Alta-Pazz Recording Company. He subsequently moved to Rialto, California. King also made a cameo on an episode of BET’s ComicView.
He was arrested again for spousal assault in 1999. In 2001, he was then ordered to undergo a year of drug treatment after pleading guilty to three counts of being under the influence of PCP and one of indecent exposure. On August 27, 2003, he was arrested again on similar charges as in 1991. It is alleged that King was speeding, ran a red light while under the influence of alcohol, failed to yield to police officers, and then slammed his SUV into a house, breaking his pelvis. Now he on VH1 doing a rehab show for money.
I’m just saying.. Don’t you think 55 deaths would make your change the way you live?? He could of been the 56th
Ladies: Do you think that you can adequalty raise a child without a man?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 4, 2010
This is not an attempt to slam single moms, but for you women that feel that a man’s leadership in a home is not important, please consider these statistics.
A Gallup Poll finding showed that about “80% of all Americans feel that the most significant problem facing our country today is the physical absence of the father from the home.”
Stats::
63% of child suicides come from fatherless homes.
Almost 90% of all homeless and runaway children come from fatherless homes.
85% of all children with behavior problems come from fatherless homes.
71% of all high school dropouts come from fatherless homes.
75% of all teens with drug and alcohol problems come from fatherless homes.
70% of all long term prison inmates were raised without their fathers come from fatherless homes.
70% of juveniles in state-operated institutions come from fatherless homes.
85% of all youths in prison come from fatherless homes.
72% of all youths who commit murder come from fatherless homes
what do you think about lrgalizing all drugs?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 3, 2010
Prohibition does not prevent cannabis use by children or the mentally ill, the vulnerable populations whom we supposedly want to protect. Instead, cannabis prohibition makes it more difficult for parents, patients, society, doctors and law enforcement to control cannabis use.
The Drug War makes honest education about cannabis impossible, and leaves cannabis users marginalized in ways that make their lives more stressful.
This stress is unhealthy for everyone, but it is certainly most damaging to people with schizophrenia.
Cannabis prohibition is not merely a failure; it is a counterproductive fraud that is harming those whom we claim we want to protect.
There are currently more teens in treatment centers for marijuana in comparison to those admitted for alcohol.
Only an idiot would have to ask why alcohol is not the no#1 problem
after all alcohol is perfectly legal ( If you are 21.)
That is due to responsible people handling alcohol by way of the carding and id system.
Contraband markets make no age disgression.
Since the crackdown on tobacco there are 75% fewer teens trying or using tobacco.
However when it comes to cannabis and other illicit substances it’s a whole
other ball game.
Control, regulation and better education work prohibition, dose not.
Or as John Walters of the ondcp (Office for national drug control policy) calls it “ a war on drugs” (Sorry John but it’s true look at the Netherlands)
America loves a war even if it is on it’s own people.
One of several reason they don’t legalize drugs is not because of the harm of drugs,
But people would lose more money in the long run.
Some of the people behind the support of this irrational so called war are
The tobacco industry,
the alcohol and distilled spirit industry ( people simply don’t drink as much, or decide not to drink at all with cannabis meaning a decline in there sales.
The pharmaceutical corporations can not make money on whole or raw cannabis, but they can charge an arm and a leg for there synthetic Marinol (dronabinol) CIII.
The textile and paper industry would lose out from hemp production, sinse hemp dose not need to go through all the various processes that ordinary tree products would. Also it’s possible to get two harvest in one season.
However people don’t know the difference between industrial hemp and smokeable cannabis, yet they are able to distinguish between the two in other country’s like Germany, the UK , Netherlands and even Canada, but our `DEA agents are so dumb they cant tell the difference between a stalk and a bush.
Also people who have any knowledge of growing high quality cannabis will tell you that male plants should never be grown next to your high grade female plants,
(unless of course you want to pollinate for future seed production).
When it comes to farming hemp the males are left in tact to pollinate the females and produce as much seed as possible.
This would mean a seedy mess for the pot smoker to clean up and produce undesirable future generations of smokeable cannabis.
If anything, Hemp farming would be anti marijuana and would harm any outdoor pot farming within a one mile radius of any hemp farm.
The petroleum industry would also be affected, sinse almost everything that can be made from petroleum can be synthesized from hemp oil, everything from bio fuel to even plastics. If North America would use a third of it’s land for hemp production we could create enough bio fuel to supply an area the size of Canada.
Now also for a moment consider how many people are incarcerated over just cannabis who are currently in the prisons and jails.
If cannabis were legalized and all inmates serving time for cannabis were freed there would be an over abundance of empty cells, and millions of guards in this country would be no longer needed.
The prison building industry would almost be obsolete ( and if all drugs were legalized that would mean even more empty cells).
So the prison system must have some means of gaining more inmates.
Not to mention other areas such as treatment centers, probation.etc
or HIDTA high intensity drug traffic areas where money is fed in to law enforcement,
(they would miss there green $$$)
Drugs , not even alcohol are the cause of the fundamental ills of society, rather than checking people for the presence of drugs, they should first test people for stupidity, ignorance, greed and love of power.
Check out Law Enforcement Against Prohibition at
why do you think taxes on cigarettes keeping up?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 1, 2010
the tax on cigarettes has gone up faster then taxes on any other consumable product that has ever been produced in the united states, in which the government both state and federal have deemed detrimental to the heath of its citizens. why not alcohol, it has been responsible for killing thousands, destroying families, hurting society as a whole and many other social problems. millions of taxpayes money has gone into treatment and programs for alcoholics and lets not forget the amount of taxpayers money are spent by police departments, courts, jails, prison the list goes on and on. where is the outcry. has any real real solid scientific research by using double blind research experiments been conducted to prove their assertions about cigarettes. i.e. providing a placebo to one group and not the other (they could use people who smoke for the other group) over an extended period of time, to see what the effects of second hand smoke really does to non smokers and what environment is most likely to create these adverse effects. if your answer is yes, to the double blind research or any reasearch project, please state the name of that research project and when it was done.. dont bash me, i am a reformed smoker who spent 1500 dollars and it took me five years to quit. its hard for some easy for others. do you think the government has taxed cigarettes to the point of creating a black market for them. some stores are charging seven dollars a pack in some states who have steadly singled out one segmenmt of society to tax (on the pretext of using that money to help treat smoking related illnesses), in order to help balance their budget or have to keep increasing the tax to matain there tax base because people are going to states who have no sales tax on cigarettes, have quit or an exhisting black market. i would also like to know, has theft of bulk cigarette shipments on the increase. of course the government may. not want us to know this.
HOW I SHOULD MOTIVATE MY FATHER TO LEAVE ALCOHOL.BEING RUSSIAN GIRL I THINK HE SHOULD PROVE HIMSELF GOODINDIAN?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on June 29, 2010
HE IS A GOOD BUSINESS MAN AND HAVE SPECIAL RESPECT IN THE SOCIETY. HE ALWAYS TOUGHT EVERYONE SPECIALLY ME INDIAN VALUES AND CULTURE.
NOW HE IS BEHAVING JUST LIKE ANIMAL. WITHIN A PAG HE IS OUT OF ORDER. WE HAVE TO GO TO THE HOSPITAL GIVE HIM GLUCOSE AND TREATMENT. THIS REPEATS EVERY MONTH 3 AND 4 TIMES.
NOW PLEASE HELP ME HOW SHOULD I MOTIVATE HIM TO LEAVE ALCOHAL AND AFTER ALCOHAL HE USED TO DO STUPIDITY. MOREOVER INDIAN CULTURE IS INSULTED. FOR THE RESPECT OF INDIANS AT LEAST HE SHOULD NOT EVEN TOUCH THE ALCOHOL.
FROM THIS QUESTION AND BEING RUSSIAN GIRL I WANT TO SAY PLEASE NEVER AND NEVER ANY INDIAN SHOULD DRINK LIKE THIS.
SEND MOTIVATION WITH POSITIVE THOUGHTS FOR MY FATHER SO THAT IN FUTURE HE SHOULD NOT DRINK ALCOHOL.
THANKS
SANDY
Do you think prison/jail should be used as rehab?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on June 29, 2010
I’ve always thought going to jail means you are being punished for a crime, and learning or preparing to go back into society should not be the focus. Obviously school, parents and society failed to influence their choices in life. Why should doing a bad deed reward someone by using a prison system on tax dollars as a place to get rehab when their victims won’t be able to (like the ones they’ve murdered/robbed/raped/molested,etc.)?
Do you think that people with CHEMICAL DEPENDENCIES should be sent to PRISON? Why not REHAB?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on June 27, 2010
Shouldn’t we be focused on fixing their problem rather than punishing them for essentially the same thing that we are all guilty of – wanting to feel happy or trying to relieve pain, whether it is physical or emotional?
i mean the crime of possession of the drug – whatever it may be, and purchasing the drug for personal consumption.
Stanton Peele: Drug Courts: You Would Think They Would Work
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on June 26, 2010
Stanton Peele: Drug Courts: You Would Think They Would Work
The drug court follows the medical model of addiction, which is American to its core, and which actually produces worse results than allowing courts to follow their usual rough brands of justice.
Read more on The Huffington Post
Do you think it’s fair that my children should spend equal time with either parent?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on May 4, 2010
I’m separated and soon to be divorced. We decided to do the share care arrangement and the boys seem to like this. Their father suffers from alcoholism yet refuses to admit this to himself. He abused me verbally, physically and sexually during our loveless marriage and he shows no remorse. I have forgiven him and he has never physically abused the children. They seem to think its funny when he is drunk. My youngest suffers from torn loyalties and has told me he would rather just live with me and my new partner but says it’s not fair on Dad. Dad tends to use the children to get at me. He palms them off to babysitters every chance he gets. I would like to take him to court and fight for custody but feel that this would upset the children even more. I currently have a protection order out against him which protects me and my partner. He also is a compulsive liar. The children believe his lies and receive conflicting advice regarding morals and what’s right and wrong.
What do you think the sentencing will be for 2 felony drug charges, when the person charged already a felon?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on May 4, 2010
My mom who had previous drug charges back in 2003. She was just charged with 2 felonies and 2 misdemeanors. The 2 felonies are illegal conveyance a felony 3 and possession of drugs felony 5. She had already previously been court ordered into 3 rehab programs, and never had to serve any real time in jail. But I would think with previous felony on her record that 2 new felonies would mean that she will need to serve jail time. Any idea what kind of sentencing she will get? We are in Ohio, Any info you have would be helpful. Thanks!
What do you think about Drug Rehabilitation Centers?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on May 2, 2010
Considering 97% of drug users go back to using…but 90% (stat from my personal expierence) of people in rehab are there through court order to avoid jail time…what’s the general opinion…No Amy Winehouse quotes please!


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