Fraser Parry
1.3K posts

Fraser Parry
@farserparty
Sweet technological baby with a magic bag. He/him.




Given that the British Library has been the infrastructural home holding up Marxist writing since quite literally it’s inception, I think it’s basically incumbent on all attendees to Historical Materialism to go to this and show solidarity









No disrespect to Philip, who seems like a good lad to me. But. Look.



🚨‼️ Trust me, you’ll want to watch this. The government keeps claiming they’re investing in treatment — but the numbers tell a very different story. Out of 2,136 publicly funded beds in B.C., only 806 are actual treatment beds. The rest? Supportive recovery, not clinical care. We’re in the middle of an overdose crisis, and this government still can’t deliver real treatment for the people who need it most. #bcpoli #TreatmentNotTalk #MentalHealthMatters #AddictionsCrisis #SafeBC #skeena




The allocation of £8.3 million to Glasgow's Enhanced Drug Treatment Service (EDTS) and the newly established drug consumption room highlights the deeply flawed and ideologically driven reliance on harm reduction strategies to address the drug crisis. These initiatives, while reducing immediate harms for a small group of individuals, are built on the delusional premise that addiction can somehow be managed or controlled. If addiction could be managed, it wouldn’t be addiction—it is, by its very nature, a condition of chaos, compulsion, and dependency that defies control. This philosophy underpins a system that perpetuates dependency rather than offering individuals a genuine way out. Let us break down the figures to illustrate this stark imbalance that Glasgow's health and social care partnership @GCHSCP is spending: @GlasgowCC @NHSGGC £6 million on the Enhanced Drug Treatment Service (EDTS), which provides pharmaceutical-grade heroin (diamorphine) to individuals for supervised injection. £2.3 million on Scotland’s first drug consumption room, designed to facilitate safer drug use under supervision. (keep and eye on these costs as they will be much higher than quoted here) £8.3 million total to support services that help people continue using drugs, maintaining their dependency. In comparison, Glasgow currently funds just 23 residential rehabilitation beds: 7 beds at Phoenix Futures at a cost of approx £364,000 per year (£1,000 per bed per week). 16 beds at Rainbow at a cost of approx £665,600 per year (£800 per bed per week). (Note: prices may have gone up with inflation as these prices are from a 2 years ago) Combined, these 23 beds cost just over £1 million per year. For the same £8.3 million being spent on harm reduction services, Glasgow could fund its 23 rehab beds for over eight years. Yet, the ideological dominance of harm reduction over recovery-based approaches means that far more money is being spent enabling continued drug use than offering a path to freedom from addiction and the wider dependencies it creates, such as poor health, unemployment, and broken family relationships. This imbalance is emblematic of an ideologically maligned system that prioritises harm reduction measures at the expense of recovery-focused solutions. Harm reduction may address immediate risks, but it does nothing to help individuals escape the cycles of dependency that addiction creates. Instead of empowering people to rebuild their lives, the system traps them in a revolving door of dependency, with few or no opportunities to achieve lasting recovery. Addiction is not just about substances; it is about the broader web of dependencies that keep people trapped in cycles of poverty, trauma, and hopelessness. A system focused solely on harm reduction cannot provide freedom from this cycle. Without significant investment in recovery-focused services—such as residential rehabilitation, peer-led recovery communities, and holistic care—individuals are left without the tools and support necessary to break free. The Scottish Government must urgently rethink its approach. Recovery is not just about abstaining from substances; it is about addressing the social, economic, and personal factors that fuel addiction. @FAVORUK UK continues to advocate for the Right to Recovery Bill, which seeks to ensure everyone in Scotland has access to the full spectrum of treatment options, including recovery-based services that prioritise freedom from dependency over its maintenance. The people of Scotland deserve better than a system that spends millions managing addiction while neglecting the life-changing potential of recovery. It is time to abandon the flawed notion of 'managing' addiction and invest in solutions that save lives, restore families, and build healthier, more resilient communities." @GrahamGGrant





Homeless crisis blamed for brazen drug use, graffiti in Tarzana neighborhood trib.al/m51EfZ7

The story so far. 1. I am not a racist. 2. I didn’t post a racist tweet. 3. My tweet did not incite violence against any protected characteristic. 4. My fairly innocuous tweet was deleted a year ago. 5. Senior lawyers say my tweet does “not come near the threshold for criminal prosecution”. 6. But Essex Police upgraded the accusation from Non-Crime Hate Incident to offence under the Public order Act. Why? 7. Essex Police visited my home but refused to specify either the accusation or the accuser. 8. Under pressure, Essex Police deployed the terrorist-fighting Gold Command to investigate a solitary Welsh journalist 5ft 4 inches who still believes in freedom of speech. Weird, I know. 9. This is all nonsense. Deeply sinister, frightening nonsense and wholly disproportionate police over-reach if you ask me. 10. Last night, I realised I no longer feel safe in my own country. A terrible moment. As Elon Musk said, “This must stop.” It really must. @elonmusk

We need a leftist right-winger.






'We are going to fundamentally overhaul the regulation of the private rented sector' Housing Minister Matthew Pennycook spoke to #BBCBreakfast about plans to ban "no-fault" evictions in England as part of a Renters’ Rights Bill bbc.co.uk/news/articles/…










