Question one, in what way does Ray’s crack operation resemble a legitimate business? Why do Ray and Primo want to “work legal” even though they have a successful crack business? Finally, why don’t crack dealers ever get rich? Ray is able to work the crack operation like a legitimate business because, he will lower his prices and raise the quality of the product like any legitimate business. Rays crack operation resembles a legitimate business because he is able to extract a higher profit margins
facing America's inner- city minorities. There are several different drugs that are gaining popularity amongst inner-city youths 1. Juice, that is marijuana soaked in embalming fluid is starting to show up in more and more inner east coast cities 2. Crack or rock cocaine is by far one of the most addicting drugs out there, it's been engulfing America's inner-cities since the early 80's 3. Heroin, is also making a comeback 4. Alcohol and marijuana are still very popular in the lower and upper classes
York City was introduced to the drug crack. The ensuing seventeen years have culminated into some of the most turbulent, and crime ridden years in the history of New York City. Crack is the street name for a form of cocaine introduced in the mid-1980s. Crack is smoked, rather then sniffed through the nose, or injected, which are all other ways to use cocaine. Users of the drug inhale the vapors that are given off when the crack is heated (Berger pg.20). Crack cannot burn, and in order to give off
has placed trust in our bond. During our previous sessions, Dianne has disclosed that she is 33 years old and was previously a social work student before she had to pause her schooling. She is a single parent, however her child is in care due her crack cocaine relapse. Dianne suffers from cervical cancer and has also been diagnosed with Bipolar and Multiple Personality syndrome. She explained that she experienced personalities that exhibited anger, addiction, depression and a combination of all three
The pay Water by the Spoonful is social significance of crack cocaine addiction. The play Water by the Spoonful is about four crack cocaine addicts who are recovering their crack cocaine addiction together. They chat online and tell each other their daily struggles. Odessa is a janitor who has a son who came back from the military name Elliot. Odessa is like the mother of the three other recovering addicts. Another social significance in the play is Elliot’s addiction to pain medication. Elliot got
Nation,” 2007). In the 1980’s, crack cocaine became a problem in the United States. Richard Pryor may have been the one to initially introduce crack cocaine to America when he reportedly ignited himself while attempting to smoke crack cocaine (“History of Drugs in America: Timeline of Important Dates,” 2012). Crack was cheap, simple to produce, ready for use, and very profitable for dealers, and it started surfacing in major US cities as early as 1981. The first crack house was discovered in Miami
dealers discovered how to create a cheaper version of cocaine by mixing baking soda and water with crack cocaine. Drug dealers figured out that there were less cocaine per dose of crack than there was per dose of cocaine. The process of making crack makes it more potent at a lower consumption rate. This allows the drug dealers to sell it for cheaper and eventually created a new market. By selling crack cocaine cheaper, it allowed cocaine to leave the noses of the elites and it was now made available
War, the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 was passed. The Anti-Drug Abuse Act punished crack cocaine a hundred times harder than powder cocaine. Crack and powder cocaine are the same drug, however different effects on the human body. According to the US Department of Justice, crake cocaine has a more psychological effect than powder, which leads to more people becoming addicted to the drug and heavier usage of the drug. Crack cocaine caused a great deal of violence, family deterioration, abuse, and neglect
Mass Incarceration of poor, black male, and increasingly female, young people in the Name of a Bogus War on Drugs Purpose of the Study Purpose Statement: to reveal the problem of mass incarceration of poor, black male, and increasingly female, young people in the name of a bogus war on drugs from the 1980 's?90 's. The purpose of this study is to expose the process of mass incarceration
When most people think of a crack baby, they get a different image than I do. When I was in my senior year of high school, I had to shadow at different medical facilities. I never thought when I got rotated to the nursery in a hospital it would change my life forever. My shadowing experience persuaded me to change my choice of major to nursing. I learned how substance abuse in pregnant women can affect an infant. I realized that I would have a direct influence on people’s lives. My experience shadowing