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- 🇨🇦CA · Documentary#1085K to 30K
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2.5K to 15K🎙 Weekly cadence·65 episodes·Last published 4mo ago - Monthly Reach
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5K to 30K🇨🇦100% - Active Followers
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1.5K to 9K
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On the show
From 10 epsHosts
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Recent episodes
Episode 56: Extraordinary Circumstances
Jan 30, 2026
53m 17s
Episode 55: The Man in the High Castle
Jul 1, 2025
43m 25s
Episode 54: Get Sober or Get Dead
Jun 4, 2025
49m 27s
Episode 53: Goodbye Trey
May 13, 2025
22m 45s
Episode 52: We Will Delete All This
Apr 15, 2025
32m 51s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1/30/26 | ![]() Episode 56: Extraordinary Circumstances✨ | safe supplyhealthcare+3 | safe supply patientsprescribers+1 | BC’s tiny safe supply programprescribed alternatives | — | safe supplyBC+5 | — | 53m 17s | |
| 7/1/25 | ![]() Episode 55: The Man in the High Castle✨ | fascismhousing policies+4 | — | CanadaThe Man in the High Castle | Canada | fascismCanada+4 | — | 43m 25s | |
| 6/4/25 | ![]() Episode 54: Get Sober or Get Dead✨ | involuntary treatmentdrug detox+3 | Angie StainesBrandon Shaw | Crackdown Productions | AlbertaCanada+1 | involuntary treatmentaddiction+5 | — | 49m 27s | |
| 5/13/25 | ![]() Episode 53: Goodbye Trey✨ | harm reductioncommunity+3 | — | Overdose Prevention SocietyCrackdown | — | Trey Heltenharm reduction+3 | — | 22m 45s | |
| 4/15/25 | ![]() Episode 52: We Will Delete All This✨ | drug useheroin+4 | — | Penguin Random HouseCrackdown: Surviving and Resisting the War On Drugs | San Francisco | heroindrug war+5 | — | 32m 51s | |
| 4/7/25 | ![]() Episode 51: Goodbye Shelda✨ | losscommunity+4 | — | CrackdownMusqueam+3 | — | Shelda KastorCrackdown+6 | — | 13m 27s | |
| 3/13/25 | ![]() Episode 50: The Toll✨ | politicsdrug policy+3 | — | — | Canada | CanadaMark Carney+5 | — | 45m 13s | |
| 2/3/25 | ![]() What happens when you give drug users drugs?✨ | drug addictionharm reduction+4 | Garth | Vancouver Area Network of Drug UsersCBC | VancouverEast Hastings | drug usersharm reduction+6 | — | 54m 03s | |
| 12/6/24 | ![]() Episode 49: The Best Place✨ | drug crisisVancouver+4 | Danya FastSarah West | — | Vancouver, British Columbia | Vancouverdrug users+5 | — | 41m 24s | |
| 10/17/24 | ![]() Episode 48: Losing BC✨ | provincial electionpolitical platforms+3 | Scotty Archondous | VANDU | British Columbia | British Columbiaprovincial election+3 | — | 52m 36s | |
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| 9/4/24 | ![]() Episode 47: Low Dead Space | In episode 47, we bring you a brief update on the show and the harm reduction movement. Plus you’ll hear new tunes from Garth’s band. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 7/8/24 | ![]() Episode 46: The Bench | In Canada, alcohol is legal and we have a safe supply of booze. So why do some people drink mouthwash or rice wine? And why does the state over-police poor people for public drinking? In episode 46, we learn how Canada’s alcohol policies drive illicit drinking. And we hear from a group of drinkers who are fighting back with alcohol-based harm reduction. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 5/10/24 | ![]() Episode 45: Recriminalization | Politicians and much of the media have been lying and whipping up a moral panic. And now, decriminalization in British Columbia is all but dead. In this episode, Garth talks with Crackdown senior producer Sam Fenn and VANDU organizer Hannah Dempsey to bring you the straight goods on why drugs have been re-criminalized and what the grim implications of this move are. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 3/22/24 | ![]() Episode 44: Kids on the Block Part 3 – Danny | Right wing politicians say safe supply will hurt kids – that young people will get hooked on drugs they’d otherwise never try. But kids already use drugs. If we want to protect and stabilize the lives of young people who use drugs, we need a regulated, non-toxic drug supply. On episode 44, we hear from Danny – a young queer refugee who shares their story of surviving persecution and toxic drugs. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 2/16/24 | ![]() Episode 43: Kids on the Block Part 2 – Jade | Rightwing politicians and media pundits want us to fear safe supply and harm reduction. They say these interventions are putting children and families in danger, when we know the opposite is true. But there is one thing these conservatives are right about: Canadian kids have never been less safe. Not because of harm reduction, but because toxic illicit drugs might fuck up their lives. Or, because toxic illicit drugs might fuck up their parents’ lives. On episode 43, we tell the story of Jade — a 21 year old harm reduction worker from Saskatchewan whose parents use drugs. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 11/28/23 | ![]() Episode 42: Kids on the Block Part 1 – Bones | Across the country, politicians and the media are fearmongering about children’s safety. They’re using a faux concern about families to attack harm reduction and the drug user movement. And their rhetoric is rolling back life-saving, public health responses to the overdose crisis. But now young people are pushing back. They’re saying they don’t want to see harm reduction attacked in their name. Kids on the Block Part 1 tells the story of Bones, a teenager from a small town in Western Canada as he struggles to survive the overdose crisis and keep his friends safe. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 11/21/23 | ![]() Episode 41: New Front, Old War | Toxic drug deaths continue to break records in BC. We need an immediate expansion on all harm reduction initiatives. More than anything, we need a real safe supply. Instead, the BC NDP is moving backwards. They’ve fallen in line with a nation-wide moral panic and are actively rolling back the province’s hydromorphone prescribing and drug decriminalization programs. Last month, cops arrested DULF co-founders, Jeremy Kalicum and Eris Nyx. Their crime? Doing what the government refused to do — provide a safe supply of drugs to people at risk of toxic drug death. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 8/4/23 | ![]() Episode 40: Boys Don’t Cry | In the trades there’s a zero-tolerance policy on substance use. But the construction industry relies on drugs. Cocaine and stimulants help maintain a demanding rate of production and opioids treat the pain caused by injury and gruelling physical labour. On the 40th episode of Crackdown, we tell the story of one construction industry veteran, Trevor Botkin, in order to explore the culture of exploitation, secrecy, and hypermasculinity that is driving overdoses among men in the trades. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 7/6/23 | ![]() Episode 39: Backlash | A right wing backlash against harm reduction and safe supply is brewing in Canada. Garth Mullins and Sam Fenn tell the story of how we got here — and what needs to be done to fight back. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 6/1/23 | ![]() Episode 38: The Knock | Being a mother who uses drugs can put you under constant scrutiny from the government. Especially if you’re Indigenous. You’re judged and watched. You live in fear of that knock on the door, when they come to take your kids away. Many moms are rightly scared to access safer supply, harm reduction, detox and withdrawal management – so they avoid those life saving services because they don’t want to draw the eye of the state. In this episode Hawkfeather Peterson and Elli Taylor, two leaders in the drug user liberation movement, share their stories of surviving the scrutiny and violence of BC’s family policing system. We also hear from professor Jade Boyd who talks about her research on why overdose interventions aren’t reaching mothers. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 3/22/23 | ![]() Episode 37: Drugstore Cowboy | Diversion: a cold, technocratic word for when we give, trade or sell our prescribed meds to someone else. A ghost story, whispered among doctors and now, a moral panic, hollered by right wing politicians. But really, everyone’s shared their meds. I’ve done it and I bet you have too – as an act of mutual aid, solidarity or maybe survival. But doctors have created all kinds of measures to try to stop it. And politicians have spread lies as part of a pretext to stamp out safe supply before it ever really gets started. In this episode we follow a guy named Pockets, as he finds relief in heroin and eventually gets prescribed Dilaudid and Methadone. Surrounded by death, in the time of fentanyl and benzodope, Pockets starts to share his safe, regulated meds to help save lives. And he’s punished for it. We also hear from professors Thomas Kerr and Geoff Bardwell who talk about their research on diversion, which provides an alternative, evidence-based, perspective on the highly controversial practice. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 2/2/23 | ![]() Episode 36: Some Exceptions Apply | BC just decriminalized drugs. Well sort of. For the next three years, it’s legal to carry 2.5 grams or less of certain illicit drugs. But some exceptions apply. We’ve been fighting for decrim for decades. The goal has always been to stop arrests and get cops out of our lives. We got a watered down version of what we wanted. But the fact that the government did anything at all is because of our long struggle. And that struggle is far from over. Today we dig into the details of British Columbia’s diet decrim, the policy, the punditry, and the backlash. We also talk about what this reform means for the drug user liberation movement and where we go next. Transcript: A complete transcript of this episode will be uploaded here when ready. Call to Action and Political Demands: Nothing about us without us. Drug users need to be at the policy-making table as equal partners, not at the kids’ table as an afterthought. Half the dope out there is benzodope. And benzos are not on the list of illicit drugs now decriminalized in BC. That list must expand. 2.5 grams is not nearly enough. The legal threshold must increase to reflect what drug users carry and use. No police creep into healthcare. Police should not be handing out health information cards. The only role police should play in decrim is to stand down. We want cops out of our lives. Cops must not use this as an excuse to ramp up the drug war against dealers. This only ramps up the Iron Law of Prohibition, making drugs more and more dangerous (ie; opium > heroin > fentanyl). Sharing is illegal under BC’s decrim. Drug users often share or sell their drugs to friends. There is no clear line between a “user” and “dealer.” Ramp up large-scale, pharmaceutical safe supply prescribing and allow community based groups to operate safe supply programs. The success of BC’s decrim needs to be measured by the number of arrests, not referrals to treatment. Collect data on drug arrests and seizures of all types across BC, broken down by race. Learning Outcomes: Crackdown episodes are frequently used as educational tools by teachers and community organizers. Please let us know if your class or group listens to our work. Episode 36 is especially useful for exploring the following themes: What BC’s three year exemption from the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act does and does not mean for drug users. The drug-user advocacy that led to the decriminalization of small amounts of some drugs in BC. Media coverage and political rhetoric on the decriminalization of small amounts of some drugs in BC. Suggested Reading: Bonn, Matthew. 2023. “Why Does BC’s Decriminalization Exclude Benzodiazepines?,” Filter. January 26, 2023. https://filtermag.org/benzodiazepine-decriminalize-british-columbia/amp/. Boyd, Susan. 2017. Busted: An Illustrated History of Drug Prohibition in Canada. 1st ed. Fernwood Publishing. Courtwright, David T., 1952-. 2001. Forces of Habit: Drugs and the Making of the Modern World. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press. Johal, Rumneek. 2023. “No, BC Liberals: Kids in British Columbia Can’t Buy Drugs From ‘Vending Machines,’” PressProgress. January 27, 2023. https://pressprogress.ca/no-bc-liberals-kids-in-british-columbia-cant-buy-drugs-from-vending-machines/. Credits: Crackdown is produced on the territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil Waututh Nations. Our editorial board is: Samona Marsh, Shelda Kastor, Jeff Louden, Dean Wilson, Laura Shaver, Reija Jean. And, rest in peace, Dave Murray, Greg Fresz and Chereece Keewatin. This episode was conceptualized, written, and produced by Sam Fenn, Alexander Kim, Alex de Boer, Lisa Hale, and me, Garth Mullins. Thanks to everyone at VANDU’s Tuesday Education Meeting, including speakers Eris Nyx , Vince Tao, Dave Hamm and Caitlin Shane. Special thanks to Dave Hamm for helping us with the cover photo. Our academic director is Ryan McNeil. Sound design by Alexander Kim. Score by James Ash. This episode was produced with support from the Pivot Legal Society and the Unbounded Canada Foundation. If you like what we do, support us at patreon.com/crackdownpod. Thanks for listening. Stay safe and keep six. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 12/10/22 | ![]() Episode 35: On the Clock | Sex workers who use drugs are doubly criminalized. They have to look out for bad dope and bad dates. And change comes slow. Fights for incremental change don’t get at the big structures that cause so much harm. Are they worth it? We wonder about this when it comes to drug decriminalization. Next year it’ll be legal to carry small amounts of opioids, meth, coke and MDMA in British Columbia. We fought hard for this. Of course, the government’s concession is a watered down version of our original demand. But limiting police discretion to lock us up is a step in the right direction. At least we hope so. The prohibition of sex work began centuries before drug prohibition. Sex workers have long had dangerous working conditions imposed on them by puritanic laws. The criminalization of drug use and sex work has made both unnecessarily risky. But reforms have been won over the years. In 2014, selling sex was decriminalized in Canada. And since 2020, BC has offered a version of safer supply to a few thousand drug users. In the wilderness of laws that continue to criminalize most aspects of sex work and most aspects of drug use – do these reforms matter? On today’s episode I explore this idea with sex worker advocates, Jlynn and Jade, as well as academics, Andrea Krüsi and Jenn McDermid. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 9/22/22 | ![]() Psychoactive Swap | I know you haven’t heard from us in a while. We’ve been busy. There’s a lot going on behind the scenes. So while we’re working on new episodes, we’ve done a swap with another podcast. Crackdown and Psychoactive podcast are swapping episodes. They played our episode on the Drug User Liberation Front. And we are playing their interview with me. In our conversation, we talk about my life as a young drug user, how I got involved in organizing against the drug war and how maybe Canada gets too much credit for harm reduction. You can check out Psychoactive with Ethan Nadelmann here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/psychoactive/id1574548562 Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
| 7/19/22 | ![]() Episode 34: The Iron Law | Drug decriminalization is coming to British Columbia. And that’s a big step forward. Our movement has been fighting for decriminalization for decades. To us, decriminalization means getting cops, courts and jails out of our lives. It means police stop harassing, arresting and seizing dope off of us. For the past year, VANDU sent Garth and others to sit on a government committee and fight for this vision. Unsurprisingly, much of our advice was disregarded. But the cops fought for low thresholds — and won. That means that a big proportion of drug users in BC will remain criminalized. Cops and politicians have also made noise about ramping up enforcement on dealers. On today’s show, I talk to Leo Beletsky about why this is a bad idea that could make the overdose crisis even worse. Further Reading Beletsky, Leo, and Corey S Davis. “Today’s fentanyl crisis: Prohibition’s Iron Law, revisited.” The International journal on drug policy vol. 46: 156-159, 2017. doi:10.1016/j.drugpo.2017.05.050 Harris, Magdalena et al. “”It’s Russian roulette”: adulteration, adverse effects and drug use transitions during the 2010/2011 United Kingdom heroin shortage.” The International journal on drug policy vol. 26,1: 51-8, 2015. doi:10.1016/j.drugpo.2014.09.009 Ivsins, Andrew et al. “Tackling the overdose crisis: The role of safe supply.” The International journal on drug policy vol. 80: 102769, 2020. doi:10.1016/j.drugpo.2020.102769 Peterson, Meghan et al. “”One guy goes to jail, two people are ready to take his spot”: Perspectives on drug-induced homicide laws among incarcerated individuals.” The International journal on drug policy vol. 70: 47-53, 2019. doi:10.1016/j.drugpo.2019.05.001 Rest in Peace I’d like to acknowledge the loss of two amazing community leaders this month. Kat Norris was a comrade and fighter from Lyackson First Nation. I got to know Kat when community groups banded together to fight the extra policing and gentrification that came with Vancouver’s 2010 Olympics. Kat’s been sticking up for people in East Vancouver since the late 1970s and was famous for her fry bread giveaways. We’d also like to say goodbye to Chrissy Brett. Chrissy was from the Nuxalk Nation (New-hulk). She organized and acted as a spokesperson and defender for many tent encampments in Victoria and Vancouver, including at Oppenheimer Park. —Garth Credits Crackdown is produced on Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh territories. Our editorial board is: Samona Marsh, Shelda Kastor, Jeff Louden, Dean Wilson, Laura Shaver, Reija Jean. And rest in peace, Dave Murray, Greg Fresz and Chereece Keewatin. This episode was conceptualized, written, and produced by Sam Fenn, Alexander Kim, Alex De Boer, Lisa Hale, Jade Boyd, and me, Garth Mullins. Sound design by Alexander Kim. Original score was written and performed by James Ash, Sam Fenn, and Garth Mullins. Special thanks to Professor Magdalena Harris for her time and research on the UK heroin shortage. If you like what we do, please consider donating at patreon.com/crackdownpod. Crackdown is funded in part by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. Stay safe and keep six. Share Post reddit Email | — | ||||||
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