EVA RAUSING: LETHAL DRUG AMONG
MONIED CLASSES AS ON SINK ESTATES
www.standard.co.uk
- Far from being the preserve of inhabitants of sink
estates, the drug used by Eva Rausing has followers among monied
classes. Asked to describe a typical crack user, what would you say?
Most likely the words “billionaire”, “philanthropist” and “Belgravia
resident” would not be part of the picture. But here is the problem. The
“typical” crack user, it turns out, is a mythical creature. She does
not exist.
“There’s a stereotype of people who use drugs but people come
from all walks of life. Where you come from or how well off you are
doesn’t protect you,” says Dr Owen Bowden-Jones, a consultant addiction
psychiatrist.
Is there a better
illustration of this than Eva Rausing? Wife of the billionaire Tetra Pak
heir Hans Kristian Rausing, daughter of a wealthy Pepsi executive - and
after a suspected overdose her body was discovered at her £70 million
Cadogan Place home, 4 days after she died, when her husband was arrested
for drug possession in south London. He has subsequently been arrested
on suspicion of her murder.
With
a crack cocaine habit that first came to light in 2008 when she was
arrested for carrying 10g of the drug into the US Embassy for a party,
and after 50g of cocaine was found by police, along with Eva’s body, at
the Rausings’ home - which she could have been snorting, injecting or
cooking into crack herself - it’s no leap to conclude that Eva Rausing
was still addicted. So where was she getting it from? “Every dealer who
makes good money out of selling drugs has got a link to a really good
user - meaning the rich. Any dealer can get them, it’s just where you go
to find them,” explains Isha Nembhard, a reformed drug dealer who now
works to help young people leave gangs.
At
the moment there are 42,422 such crack users in London, according to
statistics from the National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse.
Since cocaine usage in the UK has risen over the past decade, so too has
the availability of the cocaine from which to produce crack. But crack
is twice as addictive as cocaine, crack requires just 10 seconds to
start working in the brain.
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Eva
Rausing, one of Britain's richest women, was found dead in her west
London home: Drugs. A scourge for the poor, for the middle class and
even for the super-rich, those who, like the Rausings, measure their net
worth in the billions. “Addiction doesn’t know any class boundaries,”
said Amanda Thomson, spokeswoman for Action on Addiction, one of many
charities the Rausings supported even as they swooned toward drugged-out
oblivion. An intense desire for drugs or intoxication at the time of
death is very sad and brings bad consequences.
WHAT DO THE VEDIC TEACHINGS TELL US?
A
person who had been strongly addicted to liquor and drugs will leave
the body with thoughts of liquor and drugs, or the desire for more
intoxication. Sometimes they leave the body while under the influence of
intoxicants, which has a most regressive affect on entering the next
realm. On the other hand, a person who had lead a pious and virtuous
life, with thoughts of God, will depart from the body with thoughts of
God. The last thoughts determine the conditions and nature of the next
birth. This is what the sages have said about the phenomenon of death.
This argument seems reasonable because the last dominant thought in our
mind at the time when we just drop off to sleep can often be the thought
that dominates our mind the next morning. It is for this reason that we
are advised to sing the Divine Names of God or hymns at the time of
death in order to focus the attention of the dying person on holy and
noble thoughts.
Published by dasavatara das - "Vedic Views on World News"
http://www.vedicviews-worldnews.blogspot.com.ar/
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