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Guest Editorial: It’s Time for Baltimore to Have the Hard Conversation

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Home » Guest Editorial: It’s Time for Baltimore to Have the Hard Conversation
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Guest Editorial: It’s Time for Baltimore to Have the Hard Conversation

Yolanda PulleyBy Yolanda PulleyAugust 3, 20256 ViewsNo Comments5 Mins Read
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Guest Editorial: It’s Time for Baltimore to Have the Hard Conversation
Yolanda Pulley, PEBTS

The Living, Who Refuse to Join The Walking Dead

(BALTIMORE – August 3, 2025) – Not another roundtable of buzzwords.
Not another staged press conference with no follow-through.
Not another sanitized statement while the streets cry out for real change.

Baltimore doesn’t need more lip service.
We need truth.
We need action.
We need leaders willing to face the wreckage—without hiding behind talking points.

Let’s be clear: This is no longer about how addiction started.
We know the history—crack, pills, poverty, trauma, abandonment.
We’ve read the reports, seen the documentaries, and lived the aftermath.

Now the question is: What are you going to do about it?

Because today, our children are stepping over needles just to get to school.
They’re watching people nod off in broad daylight like it’s normal.
They’re absorbing this chaos and calling it life.

And you expect families to raise their children here?
You expect businesses to invest here?
You expect tourists to snap selfies at the Inner Harbor while just blocks away, entire communities are drowning in pain?

Let’s stop pretending.
Baltimore has become ZombieMore—
The city that bleeds and can’t read.
The city buried under the weight of failed leadership, broken policies, and political cowardice.

You call it harm reduction.
We see harm distribution.

Narcan in vending machines.
Free syringes like party favors.
Methadone on every corner, and drug clinics multiplying like fast food chains.
But where is the protection for the rest of us?

Where’s the safety for the child playing on the porch five feet from an overdose?
Where’s the care for the grandmother afraid to walk to the store past slumped bodies and discarded syringes?

And let’s finally address the double standard:
Why are alcoholics arrested for public intoxication while heroin users get free Narcan and a pat on the back?

Yes, addiction is a disease.
So is alcoholism.
But only one group gets consequence-free collapse.
Only one gets sympathy, subsidies, and “safe zones”—
While the rest of us are told to look away, to “understand,” to keep enduring.

That’s not compassion.
It’s cowardice.
It’s the politics of fear—afraid to be called “insensitive” while entire communities pay the price for your political correctness.

Giving Narcan to an active addict without a path to recovery is like handing a drowning man a straw.
It’s not mercy.
It’s malpractice.

Let’s talk about the clinics.
These grant-fed, non-profit-lined warehouses of managed misery.
They don’t heal.
They don’t restore.
They contain, monitor, trap.

Drive down North Avenue, Pennsylvania Avenue, Monument Street—you’ll see the damage.
Not the damage of the people, but the systems pretending to help them.
This is not healthcare. It’s hustle.
It’s an economy built on addiction.

And no—you didn’t put these clinics in Roland Park, or Canton, or Federal Hill.
You put them in Sandtown, Cherry Hill, and East Baltimore—already broken, already abandoned.
Because those neighborhoods are easier to sacrifice.

This isn’t about healing.
It’s about money.
It’s about maintaining misery because it pays.

And we are done.

Done watching nonprofits get richer while communities crumble.
Done watching overdose rates rise while you cut ribbons on new clinics.
Done watching this death spiral be branded as progress.

You call this treatment?
We call it policy warfare.

So let’s talk results.
What’s the success rate of these clinics?
How many people walk in and walk out clean?
How many relapse within days?

You don’t know.
Because you don’t measure recovery.
You measure intake.
You measure grants.
You measure survival, not healing.

This is not a recovery model.
It’s a recycling system.
Addiction in.
Dollars out.

To the policymakers, the public health directors, the nonprofit executives:

You are not fighting addiction.
You are franchising it.

You are not solving the crisis.
You are building your careers on it.

And the rest of us are forced to live inside your failed experiment.

We walk past bodies while you walk into boardrooms.
We bury loved ones while you budget for Narcan.
We watch neighborhoods collapse while you build careers off the rubble.

This isn’t harm reduction.
It’s state-sanctioned decay.

And if you think we’re just upset, you’re wrong.

We are furious.

Because this isn’t just about the users.
It’s about the children who grow up thinking this is normal.
It’s about the grandparents raising the children of overdose victims.
It’s about the communities forced to survive in someone else’s pipeline of pain.

We are done with the playdates with zombies.

Baltimore is not the overdose capital.
We are survivors trapped in a city that’s been turned into a graveyard by policy.

And it happened again.

27 overdoses in one day. On one street.
A week later—seven more bodies. Same block. Same pain. Same policy.

And still, you say the plan is working?

Still, you say “give it time”?
Let the data catch up?

Let the deaths pile up, you mean.

How dare you.

How dare you speak in soundbites while people die in slow motion.
You didn’t flinch at 27 overdoses.
But spray paint a brick in Federal Hill?
Suddenly, it’s a crisis.

Let’s talk about the $400 million opioid settlement.
Money earned off the backs of the addicted and the dead.
Money that won’t bring justice to a single family.
Money that will disappear into the same black hole of bureaucracy and back-patting.

Where are the reparations for the families who lost everything?
For the children now raised by grandmothers who’ve buried their own kids?

You didn’t just allow this crisis.
You engineered it.
Or worse—you monetized it.

So let me be clear:

If the heavens cry tonight, it won’t be because God failed us.
It will be because you did.

You had the power.
You had the money.
You had the time.
And you chose delay over dignity.
Profits over people.
Buzzwords over backbone.

And may every overdose you ignored echo in your ears.
May every grieving mother’s cry haunt your conscience.
May the blood on these sidewalks stick to your legacy like a curse.

Signed,

Yolanda Pulley
The Living, Who Refuse to Join The Walking Dead

Guest Editorial: It’s Time for Baltimore to Have the Hard Conversation
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