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Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
Niklas Osterman
18 episodes
1 month ago

For decades, policy favored punishment over healing. From crack-era laws to “zero tolerance,” governments built enforcement-heavy systems that filled prisons while leaving demand untouched. This episode examines how deterrence failed: supply adapted, markets shifted, and harm multiplied. Meanwhile, treatment and harm reduction proved what punishment could not—reduced death, improved safety, restored lives. We explore the choice societies still face: criminalize people for the substances they use, or design systems that address why use begins and why it persists. The war on drugs was never a war on molecules—it was a war on communities.

By Niklas S. Osterman BHPRN, MA Addiction Specialist

Show more...
Mental Health
Health & Fitness,
Medicine
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All content for Addiction - Not a Moral Failing is the property of Niklas Osterman and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

For decades, policy favored punishment over healing. From crack-era laws to “zero tolerance,” governments built enforcement-heavy systems that filled prisons while leaving demand untouched. This episode examines how deterrence failed: supply adapted, markets shifted, and harm multiplied. Meanwhile, treatment and harm reduction proved what punishment could not—reduced death, improved safety, restored lives. We explore the choice societies still face: criminalize people for the substances they use, or design systems that address why use begins and why it persists. The war on drugs was never a war on molecules—it was a war on communities.

By Niklas S. Osterman BHPRN, MA Addiction Specialist

Show more...
Mental Health
Health & Fitness,
Medicine
Episodes (18/18)
Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
No Abandonment
1 month ago
10 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
One Step Forward - Three Steps Back
1 month ago
9 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
A Responsibility Deferred
1 month ago
16 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
Make The Map- Do The Work. For Pilot To Policy
1 month ago
30 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
Paychecks, Not Punishments - The Shift That Saves Lives
1 month ago
26 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
From Cuffs To Clinic
1 month ago
22 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
Seed And Collapse
1 month ago
28 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
Adolescence At Risk
1 month ago
30 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
Why This Person, Why This Drug?
1 month ago
32 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
Pathways That Work
1 month ago
33 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
Recovery is a System
1 month ago
24 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
The Synthetic Era
1 month ago
24 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
The Pain Revolution
1 month ago
23 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
Punish or Heal
1 month ago
25 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
The Void and the Brain
1 month ago
26 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
Temperance: The First Culture War
1 month ago
7 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
From Sacrament to Commodity
1 month ago
15 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing
Naming the Hunger
1 month ago
17 minutes

Addiction - Not a Moral Failing

For decades, policy favored punishment over healing. From crack-era laws to “zero tolerance,” governments built enforcement-heavy systems that filled prisons while leaving demand untouched. This episode examines how deterrence failed: supply adapted, markets shifted, and harm multiplied. Meanwhile, treatment and harm reduction proved what punishment could not—reduced death, improved safety, restored lives. We explore the choice societies still face: criminalize people for the substances they use, or design systems that address why use begins and why it persists. The war on drugs was never a war on molecules—it was a war on communities.

By Niklas S. Osterman BHPRN, MA Addiction Specialist