klunderbunker
Welcome to My (And Not Sly's) House
So other than the Super Bowl, the biggest story on Sunday was the death of Academy Award winning actor Phillip Seymour Hoffman due to a heroin overdose. Hoffman had a history of substance and alcohol abuse issues and was obviously off the wagon. Police claim they found anywhere from 10-50 bags of heroin as Hoffman was getting ready for a binge.
The most common response has been to call this a tragedy, but there are some who see it differently. One of these is actor Jared Padelecki (Sam from Supernatural) who said on Twitter:
After some backlash, he said:
And
LeVar Burton said something similar and was told that his comments were "not cool." His response:
As harsh as they sound, I can't help but agree with them. Hoffman was a grown man with three children. No one put a gun to Hoffman's head and forced him to stick a needle in his arm the first time. Yes Hoffman was addicted and yes addiction is very real and very hard to break, but there's a big difference between being born with a condition that kills you at 46 and being killed by an overdose of drugs that you injected into yourself.
I certainly do feel sorry for his family and especially his children, but from what I can find he was clean for over twenty and didn't start using drugs again until after his third child was born about five years ago. Again, I understand that it's a lifelong problem, but it wasn't until he started using in the first place. He knew what could happen and did it anyway, which is why I agree with Padelecki.
At the end of the day, this was a man who overdosed on his own free will and left behind a grieving family, not someone innocent who was murdered after doing nothing wrong.
So go ahead and tell me what an insensitive jerk I am and how I don't get it because I've never done anything.
The most common response has been to call this a tragedy, but there are some who see it differently. One of these is actor Jared Padelecki (Sam from Supernatural) who said on Twitter:
"Sad" isn't the word I'd use to describe a 46 year old man throwing his life away to drugs. "Senseless" is more like it. "Stupid".
After some backlash, he said:
I didnt mean PSH is stupid or that addiction isnt a reality. I simply meant I have a different definition of "tragedy".
And
When I think "tragedy", I think of St Judes, of genocide, of articles I read in the paper. But, yes, either way, a death, is sad.
LeVar Burton said something similar and was told that his comments were "not cool." His response:
Not cool is shooting up when you got kids
As harsh as they sound, I can't help but agree with them. Hoffman was a grown man with three children. No one put a gun to Hoffman's head and forced him to stick a needle in his arm the first time. Yes Hoffman was addicted and yes addiction is very real and very hard to break, but there's a big difference between being born with a condition that kills you at 46 and being killed by an overdose of drugs that you injected into yourself.
I certainly do feel sorry for his family and especially his children, but from what I can find he was clean for over twenty and didn't start using drugs again until after his third child was born about five years ago. Again, I understand that it's a lifelong problem, but it wasn't until he started using in the first place. He knew what could happen and did it anyway, which is why I agree with Padelecki.
At the end of the day, this was a man who overdosed on his own free will and left behind a grieving family, not someone innocent who was murdered after doing nothing wrong.
So go ahead and tell me what an insensitive jerk I am and how I don't get it because I've never done anything.