Druggies and homeless row in Frankfurt—the West’s social degeneracy everywhere in the open

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Germany, the richest country in the EU, like the US, Britain, etc., cannot avoid showing the degeneracy of its society, especially in its aimless youth, many of which are among the "losers" in the capitalist game. The footage is of a street in Frankfurt, Germany.


Our correspondent Irina has sent us this video, which is plenty eloquent. She adds:

"Superfluous, useless people. This is Frankfurt (although not specified - on the Main or on the Oder), the central streets of the city, people inject drugs in the middle of the day. Rubbish everywhere, homeless people lying on the sidewalks..."

Well, there is a song in the theme "We get high".

I'm afraid to assume, that this is Frankfurt an der Oder. It was the first German border town, that the Soviet train Moscow-Wünsdorf entered in the GDR. The train arrived there at night. A toy town, with peacefully sleeping houses, neat clean streets, with Trabants standing in parking lots in neat, orderly lines. German customs officers entered the carriages to check passports. They were strict but unfailingly polite. And with a slightly funny German accent, they always pronounced in Russian, apparently difficult words for them to pronounce - Hello and Goodbye. Such a nice East Germany in my memories. And where are you?
Irina


If you think this is Russki propaganda, think again. The dispatch below was filed in 2015 by a reporter working for VICE, a Western journo outfit many say is heavily infiltrated by the CIA.

Inside the Devastation of Germany's Crack Capital

 
The crack problem in Frankfurt's Bahnhofsviertel neighborhood has gotten so bad, residents are nostalgic for the days when heroin was addicts' drug of choice.
BK
July 30, 2015, 11:05am

Hans and his crack pipe. All photos courtesy of the author

Hans has two rules for himself: Before he gets high, he needs to make sure his Labrador has enough food for a day, and while he is high, he's got to "not get on other people's nerves." Hans is homeless, has pancreatic cancer in the terminal stage, and doesn't give himself "more than a year." Next to him sits Robert, his hunched back bending toward the right. HIV gives Robert just as short a life expectancy as Hans. I met both of them in Frankfurt's Taunusanlage train station; in the 1980s this place would be packed with several hundred heroin addicts shooting up. Today, Hans and Robert can smoke crack in peace.

The pipe sizzles when Hans ignites his butane lighter, and then the air smells disgustingly sweet, like burnt plastic and ammonia. "I've already smoked three times since this morning," he says.

Most of the users who hang out in Frankfurt's Bahnhofsviertel neighborhood rarely make the trip to Taunusanlage, even though it's only feet away. The craving for crack can at times get so consuming, they just light up on the street immediately after buying it—huddled against buildings, between cars, or in shop entrances. The ones who can't afford to score hold out hope for some charity, biting their nails and clenching their jaws.

Related:How Synthetic Weed Is Ravaging Brooklyn's Homeless Population

In Germany, crack is a rather rare drug. Even though the 1980s tabloid press warned that the "deadly drug" was about to wash over the country like a flood, crack hardly spread beyond Frankfurt. According to a national report on narcotics, Hessen, the state that Frankfurt belongs to, is Germany's absolute forerunner in first-time crack users—217 people registered there in 2013. Hamburg follows in second place with a mere 17.

The drug has probably taken hold in Frankfurt because the city is geographically central and people fly here from all over the world. There's also been an open and visible drug scene for a long time in the Bahnhofsviertel, where crack use spread in the late 1990s. Cocaine in powder form has rarely been sold on the street since then. Meanwhile, crack's popularity has been rising continuously for years.

More than half of the addicts in this neighborhood consume a mixture of cocaine, baking powder, and chemical fillers, according to local police. It outsells heroin, while 97 percent of the drug addicts in the district have had experiences with crack. It's now the number-one drug consumed by addicts, with two dying last year from an overdose of crack mixed with other drugs.

In the Bahnhofsviertel, the "rocks" are having a devastating effect on users. No other drug is quite so addictive or as voraciously consumed. Few other substances take such a toll on the body, while faces also become gaunt and skeletal.

Many feel the drug is poisoning the entire neighborhood, while the reports of instances of aggression are frequent. A lot of residents, however, don't want to speak openly, fearing retribution from drug dealers. The dealers operate on shopping streets and threaten business owners; they stash their product in hourly hotels, dodgy cafés, and abandoned buildings. Addiction is also causing a rise in petty crime, even forcing some in the neighborhood to turn to the Hells Angles for protection.

The crack trade is really booming on Taunusstrasse street. At peak times—between six and eight in the morning—there's a dealer posted every few feet, offering their services to any passerby. If the police pick any of them up, a replacement will quickly take their place. North African and Albanian gangs dominate the trade and fights inevitably break out, often resulting in stabbings. "Hey, man, what's up, you need anything?"—at certain hours of the day, you'll hear this repeatedly while walking down a short stretch of Taunusstrasse.


Addendum
Raid in Frankfurt's railway station district: Junkies, dealers, crime -The whole reportage

Razzia im Frankfurter Bahnhofsviertel: Junkies, Dealer, Kriminalität -Die ganze Reportage


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Apr 11, 2018

Frankfurt's Bahnhofsviertel is notorious far beyond the city limits: Drugs and crime are the order of the day there. And yet the police feel largely powerless in the fight against dealers and junkies. Already at the end of the 80s and beginning of the 90s, certain corners of Frankfurt were centres of drug consumption and trafficking, the city was literally flooded with cheap heroin. Nowadays, the drug is mainly smoked in the form of crack, in the middle of the street, between the main railway station, hotels and skyscrapers of large corporations. This is accompanied by dealing, drugged-up users, dirt, rubbish, faeces and crime. In November, stern TV reported extensively on the situation in Frankfurt's Bahnhofsviertel, talked to desperate residents, employees and social workers - and asked the question: What must happen politically in the city? Only last week, the police carried out a large-scale raid in Frankfurt, according to their own statements with "great success". stern TV has now taken another look around the notorious corners of Frankfurt.


And, of course, the world's fortress of capitalism, the United States.

Streets of Philadelphia, Kensington Avenue, What’s going on Monday, July 26 2021.


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Jul 29, 2021

kimgary

Most dangerous street in Philadelphia Kensington Philadelphia Drug & Crime Problems Violent crime and drug abuse in Philadelphia as a whole is a major problem. The city’s violent crime rate is higher than the national average and other similarly sized metropolitan areas.1 Also alarming is Philadelphia’s drug overdose rate. The number of drug overdose deaths in the city increased by 50% from 2013 to 2015, with more than twice as many deaths from drug overdoses as deaths from homicides in 2015.2 A big part of Philadelphia’s problems stem from the crime rate and drug abuse in Kensington. Because of the high number of drugs in Kensington, the neighborhood has a drug crime rate of 3.57, the third-highest rate by neighborhood in Philadelphia.3 Like a lot of the country, a big part of this issue is a result of the opioid epidemic. Opioid abuse has skyrocketed over the last two decades in the United States and Philadelphia is no exception. Along with having a high rate of drug overdose deaths, 80% percent of Philadelphia’s overdose deaths involved opioids2 and Kensington is a big contributor to this number. This Philly neighborhood is purportedly the largest open-air narcotics market for heroin on the East Coast with many neighboring residents flocking to the area for heroin and other opioids.4 With such a high number of drugs in Kensington, many state and local officials have zoned in on this area to try and tackle Philadelphia’s problem.

Translated with DeepL

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