#Seattle residents and taxpayers now understand why there are so many drug users on the buses, at the bus stops, and on the sidewalks. No need to stop using! Just do it in public! https://t.co/HrznTeAGab pic.twitter.com/gLG4h36u06
— Camp Site Seattle (@CampSiteSeattle) March 7, 2023
Boomers have insulated themselves in their gated communities with the ill-gotten wealth they achieved by completely burning out an entire civilization and scrapping it for parts.
They don’t know what’s going on with the child trannies and they don’t know what’s going on on the bus. The only thing they care about is social security and golf. Their plan is to die before the chickens come home to roost – and they’re going to get away with it.
A Seattle bus driver is on medical leave after he claims passengers commonly smoking fentanyl on his bus have made him sick.
Stevon Williams, a driver for King County Metro, was placed on leave while awaiting test results of overexposure to smoke from the lethal synthetic opioid, though health officials say the second-hand smoke “poses no real risk,” according to a local report.
“I really hadn’t ever heard of fentanyl smoking on the bus when I was hired by Metro,” Williams told local AM radio station KOMO News. “I don’t want to be put in a predicament where I’m around drugs every day on my job – I didn’t sign up for that.”
Stevon Williams
According to King County Metro data, there were 1,885 reports of drug use on the bus system in 2022. As many as 52 bus operators reported being exposed to drug smoke and 16 operators filed workers compensation claims, KOMO reported.
“You have people who are on there smoking right beside passengers, right beside mothers with little children. It’s for the drug users, they’re looked out for first,” Williams said.
Local health officials say that exposure to smoke from the deadly opioid is not particularly dangerous.
“When someone smokes fentanyl, most of the drug has been filtered out by the user before there is secondhand smoke,” Dr. Scott Phillips, the medical director of the Washington Poison Center wrote on the health department’s blog. “It doesn’t just sort of float around … there’s no real risk for the everyday person being exposed to secondhand opioid smoke.”
During a King County Metro meeting on drug use last year, a health department rep said that the media often misreports facts about second-hand fentanyl smoke.
“It’s important to note when you see fentanyl reporting that you take a really take a critical eye because there is a lot of misinformation out there,” said Thea Oliphant-Wells, a social worker for Seattle & King County Public Health. “We’re not seeing folks developing second hand exposure, this is just not happening. Not to say that it could never happen, but we’re not seeing it.”
Oliphant-Wells told metro workers that they actually prefer that users take drugs in public spaces in case of an overdose, although drug use is prohibited on public transit.
“We don’t want people to be using in private spaces alone, we want people to be using in a place where if they overdose they can be discovered and helped through that overdose,” she said.
This society is a hell on earth.
Unless you’re rich like the boomers, you’ve got nowhere to run.
No one who is not a Jew banker or a boomer has any money, so we all just have to deal with the junkies and trannies and every other abominable thing.
America in 2023 is the single worst experience of anything ever in all of history. I can promise you that. It is pure lunacy that people continue to pretend that this is somehow the end of history and the peak of consumerism.
We are in the end game now, chaps.
32F in north #Seattle. Unconscious person on @KingCountyMetro bus. Aroused enough to refuse additional aid, so given blanket before Seattle Fire and King County Sheriffs left. @MayorofSeattle @visitseattle #visitseattle pic.twitter.com/krgQeSDWrM
— Camp Site Seattle (@CampSiteSeattle) March 8, 2023