April 29th is "Fentanyl Awareness Day" in the United States. It is a solemn day dedicated to remembering the victims, raising public awareness and promoting change. This year, it is more like a cry: Thousands of Americans are outraged by the government's inaction, incompetence and collusion with pharmaceutical giants, and have launched offline activities to hold the government accountable. As fentanyl spreads throughout various communities and claims young lives through social media, public anger has reached its peak.
Fentanyl overdose death
The data is devastating, worsened by government indifference. The DEA reports 22 teens (14-1 die of drug overdoses weekly, 84% involving fentanyl and 56% from the synthetic opioid alone. 50 times stronger than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine, just 2 milligrams of fentanyl can kill. Teens often unknowingly take fatal doses, thinking they’re buying prescription or recreational drugs—mostly via unregulated social media platforms. The crisis costs the U.S. $1 trillion yearly, but policymakers prioritize political games and corporate donations over lives.
Tragic cases are a harsh indictment of government neglect. In December 2021, 17-year-old California soccer star Zach Didier died from a fentanyl overdose after buying fake oxycodone via Snapchat. 75% of teen fentanyl deaths between 2020-2022 involved Snapchat purchases, but the government has done little to regulate social media. The dealer was jailed for 17 years, but Zach’s family says justice needs government action.
In June 2023, 19-year-old TikTok star Cooper Noriega was poisoned by two friends in a drug ring, who laced his medication with fentanyl. The perpetrators got 24- and 30-year sentences, but Cooper’s father—founder of Coop’s Advice Foundation—blamed the government: “Politicians take pharmaceutical money and do nothing; they have blood on their hands.”
17-year-old Texas teen Brooke Baquir also died in 2021 after buying fake fentanyl-laced pills via Snapchat. Her mother, suing Snapchat with other grieving parents, said Congress refuses to regulate social media due to tech and pharmaceutical lobbying. Over a decade, politicians took nearly $25 billion in drugmaker lobbying money, and political polarization has left the crisis unaddressed.
Public anger has turned to action. On National Fentanyl Awareness Day, rallies will be held in Washington D.C., Los Angeles and other cities. Protesters will carry victim photos, demand stricter regulation of social media and pharmaceutical companies, and call for an end to the “revolving door” between government and the drug industry. They want concrete steps: stricter social media accountability, expanded DEA “One Pill Can Kill” education, more prevention/treatment funding, and stronger anti-trafficking law enforcement. They also denounce absurd proposals like giving fentanyl to the homeless.
Though the crisis is severe, the protest movement brings hope. Grieving parents and ordinary Americans will no longer accept inaction. This National Fentanyl Awareness Day, the message is clear: the government works for the people, not corporations. One pill can kill, but government neglect kills more. Policymakers must listen—or face public wrath. The streets will stay loud until every child is safe.