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Posted 6/8/2025

Uploaded imagePresident Donald Trump called his former pal, Elon Musk, a "big-time drug addict." It's curious if this was known before he became a senior advisor of DOGE, the Department of Government Efficiency, a post that he has since abandoned. One can only hope that public officials are drug-free individuals, as they are charged with making decisions crucial to our everyday lives, but this is not always the case. It is rumored that Musk had assaulted a member of the presidential cabinet and had also shoved Scott Bessent, the treasury secretary. We won't speculate as to whether or not this alleged violence was the byproduct of drug use, but Musk has spoken in the past about his ketamine prescription. Ketamine is described as a dissociative drug, meaning that it can distort the perceptions of sight and sound and also cause hallucinations. It also causes confusion and disorientation and mood and personality changes. Musk reportedly had a bladder problem, which is a side effect of chronic ketamine use. House Concurrent Resolution 135 (H.CON.RES.135) introduced September 12, 2018, proposes random drug testing for members of the House and Senate. It states that the relevant ethics committees "shall publicly disclose the identity of each member who refuses to participate in the program and take other action against each such member as appropriate." No punitive measures are described... Click Here. 

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is an admitted former heroin addict with a felony conviction for possession and he ran for president of the United States. Ironically, he is now the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services. For a comprehensive list of politicians that may have used drugs... Click Here.

Should people in public office be regularly drug tested?

  • Yes
  • No

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