Smoke and Ashes by Amitav Ghosh
Author:Amitav Ghosh
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
These words were all too prescient. It was precisely by actively creating a âpublic tasteâ for opium, among âdiscountenancedâ and dispirited American communities, that the producers of prescription opioids addicted millions of people to prescription opiates. And, to a quite remarkable degree, those behind the opioid crisisâthe rogue doctors, pharmacists, salesmen, executives and tycoonsâwere as indifferent to the suffering they had caused as their nineteenth-century predecessors. âThose who bear responsibility for Americaâs national nightmare,â writes Chris McGreal, âshow no ⦠sense of guilt or torment. Even today, they shift responsibility for the epidemic onto those who fell victim to it.â113 Like the upper-crust American opium traders of the nineteenth century, contemporary âdrug dealers in Armani suitsâ blamed the addicts. âThey get themselves addicted over and over again,â wrote Richard Sackler. âThey engage in it with full, criminal intent. Why should they be entitled to our sympathies?â114 For them, the distressed rural folk who were worst affected by the opioid crisis were just as expendable as poor Asian addicts had been for their counterparts in the nineteenth century.
It is, to my mind, an entirely positive development that the current crisis has forced a reckoning with the extraordinary powers of the opium poppy, stirring up enormous outrage against the companies that reaped gargantuan profits from prescription opioids. It is notable, however, that it took a crisis that disproportionately affected white Americans to bring about this reckoning. Equally striking is the fact that the outrage against the manufacturers of prescription opioids has not led to a wider reckoning with the Westâs role in the promotion of opiates: this is a sign, I think, that narcotics are still being projected on to âillegal aliensâ and foreign countries in deeply misleading ways. If the story of the role that privileged, upper-class white Americans had played in the history of the opium trade were better known it would surely be more difficult, if not impossible, to impose xenophobic, anti-immigrant framings on issues concerning narcotics, as is still so often done in the United States.115
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