Current Tobacco Wars

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Literally hey.

What's the score on rehab survivors? A lot of long term sobers?

Do you know when the riskiest time for suicide is?
Use doesn't fix trauma, it makes it worse and harder to deal with. The source of the trauma remains but the use impacts the user's relationships, health, resilience, finances, performance, and self esteem. You mentioned a paramedic who uses. If they can't cope with the trauma of that work, the answer is to get different work, not use. There are people who experience trauma but have coping strategies other than use - that role would be better suited to them. And there are people who go to work functions without using, family events, holidays, even gigs without using, everything in life, it's possible. And some have experienced trauma. Anyway, it's a huge topic and this isn't the forum. All the best.
 

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I've been awaiting to encounter some of the illegal tobacco, I live far from Melbourne and haven't seen any, anyone know how widespread availability is the bacco?
Have you seen it, and what is it like quality wise?
A mate brought back maybe a kg of raw dried tobacco from Indonesia in the 90s. It was borderline unsmokable. Goes to show how much other crap is in a cigarette.
 
There's clearly enough money in it they could probably buy their own shops.
If they start buying the shops, and can't insure them, and the shops keep burning down... selling illegal poison won't be quite as profitable as it once was!!! :tearsofjoy::tearsofjoy::tearsofjoy:
 
On the topic of the crimes associated with the tobacco wars, interesting to see some of the names of the main players start to appear in the papers, but of massive concern is the cheap arson gangs the main protagonists are prepared to use.

Not sure if related to the tobacco wars, but very sad to see two innocent lives lost recently - people sleeping in a factory.
 

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