{"id":227857,"date":"2017-07-14T05:41:24","date_gmt":"2017-07-14T09:41:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/a-small-town-police-officers-war-on-drugs-new-york-times.php"},"modified":"2017-07-14T05:41:24","modified_gmt":"2017-07-14T09:41:24","slug":"a-small-town-police-officers-war-on-drugs-new-york-times","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/war-on-drugs\/a-small-town-police-officers-war-on-drugs-new-york-times.php","title":{"rendered":"A Small-Town Police Officer&#8217;s War on Drugs &#8211; New York Times"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Those years spent guarding prisoners, and later kicking down    doors, changed Adamss thinking. So many of the drug users he    saw had made one bad decision and then became chained to it,    Adams realized. Or they had begun on a valid prescription for    pain medication, after an injury, and then grew addicted. When    refills grew scarce, they turned to alternatives. Many were no    longer even using to get high, only to avoid the agony of    withdrawal. They were teenaged, middle-aged and elderly; they    were students, bankers and grocery clerks. They were    businesswomen with six-figure salaries and homeless men with    shopping carts. Arresting a person like this did no good,    because there was always another to replace him or her  and    regardless, any jail sentence had limits. Afterward, Adams saw,    everyone landed right back where they started.  <\/p>\n<p>    Were not getting anywhere, he told his chief, Christopher    Adams (the two men are not related), and his lieutenant. It    turned out that they had already reached a similar conclusion.    Until recently, Christopher Adams told me, he couldnt recall    ever hearing of a heroin case. Now its every day, he said.    Its a majority. Not just in Laconia. Its all over. He and    his lieutenant sat down to consider what their department might    do. It seemed that there were three conceivable approaches to a    drug problem: prevention, enforcement and treatment. To    accomplish all three would mean regarding drug users, and    misusers, as not only criminals. They were also customers who    were being targeted and sold to; they were also victims who    needed medical treatment. To coordinate all those approaches    would require a particular sort of officer.  <\/p>\n<p>    In September 2014, Eric Adams became the first person in New    England  to his knowledge, the only person in the country     whose job title is prevention, enforcement and treatment    coordinator. I never thought Id be doing something like    this, he told me. I learned fast. The department printed    him new business cards: The Laconia Police Department    recognizes that substance misuse is a disease, they read.    We understand you cant fight this alone. On the reverse,    Adamss cellphone number and email address were listed. He    distributed these to every officer on patrol and answered his    phone any time it rang, seven days a week. Strangers called him    at 3 a.m., and Adams spoke with them for hours.  <\/p>\n<p>    The department assigned him an unmarked Crown Victoria, and in    it he followed the blips and squawks of a police scanner,    driving to the scene of any overdose it reported and    introducing himself to the victim, as well as any friends or    family he could locate. Residents like these often shrank from    the police or stiffened defensively. But when Adams told them    that they werent under arrest, that he had only come to help,    they seemed to sag in relief.  <\/p>\n<p>    People who work with addicts generally agree that this moment,    immediately after an overdose, offers the greatest chance to    sway an addict, when he or she feels most vulnerable. Youre    at a crossroads right then and there, a local paramedic told    me. If an addict agreed to Adamss help, Adams drove him to a    treatment facility, sat beside him in waiting rooms, ferried    his parents or siblings to visit him there or at the jail or    hospital. He added the names of everyone he encountered to a    spreadsheet, and he kept in touch even with those who relapsed.    Were they feeling safe? Attending support meetings? Did they    have a job? A place to sleep?  <\/p>\n<p>    In the nearly three years since, as overdose rates have climbed    across New Hampshire, those in Laconia have fallen. In 2014,    the year Adams began, the town had 10 opioid fatalities. In    2016, the number was five. Fifty-one of its residents    volunteered for treatment last year, up from 46 a year before    and 14 a year before that. The county as a whole, Belknap, had    fewer opioid-related emergency-room visits than any other New    Hampshire county but one. Of the 204 addicts Adams has crossed    paths with, 123 of them, or 60 percent, have agreed to keep in    touch with him. Adams calls them at least weekly. Ninety-two    have entered clinical treatment. Eighty-four, or just over 40    percent of all those he has met, are in recovery, having kept    sober for two months or longer. Zero have died.  <\/p>\n<p>    On most mornings, Adams arrives at his office    well before 9 to answer email. By then, his phone is already    chiming. I thought when I got this position: Monday through    Friday, day shifts, weekends off. Im going to see my kids and    wife more, Adams said, laughing. Thats not the case.    Pinned to the walls of his office, a windowless room on the    second floor of the department, are pamphlets and resource    guides for homelessness, peer-support groups and addiction    hotlines, as well as a dry-erase board listing drug-treatment    centers statewide. In December, when I visited one morning, the    floor was cluttered with toys for local families in preparation    for Christmas: doll sets, wireless headphones, a pillow the    color of sorbet.  <\/p>\n<p>    As soon as he began the job, Adams researched what    social-service organizations the region had to offer and drove    to their offices to introduce himself. A few employees at    places like these knew one another from previous referrals, but    many didnt, so Adams went about acquainting them. At health    conferences, he arrived to the quizzical frowns of social    workers and realized that, of some 200 attendees, he was the    only police officer. A network gradually sprouted around him.    One morning in December, his first call was from Daisy Pierce,    the director of a nonprofit organization whose doors opened two    weeks earlier; Adams is its chairman. Might Adams help her get    a teenager into the Farnum Center, a treatment facility in    Manchester, an hour south? Adams dialed a pastor he knew, who    phoned a recovery coach. For the first year and a half, I was    the only transportation around here, he told me when he hung    up. I would drive people down to Farnum all the time.  <\/p>\n<p>    Next, Adams turned to a matter unresolved from the day before:    a woman the county prosecutor had phoned about, asking if Adams    could find her housing. Until recently, the woman had been    staying at a homeless shelter, but that stay had ended and,    because she was on probation, with nowhere else to sleep,    Adamss fellow officers had taken her to jail, though they    could hold her for only one night. She would be released that    day, still with nowhere else to stay. The next 48 hours would    be critical, Adams felt. Here was a person who wanted to get    sober but for whom the local authorities had little to offer.  <\/p>\n<p>    From his desk, he dialed a treatment center, then various    landlords and nonprofit directors he knew. Hi, this is Eric    Adams over at the Laconia Police Department. Im calling to see    if you have anything. ...  Then he tried calling back the    county prosecutor, tapping his fingers impatiently as the phone    rang. When no one answered, he pulled a cellphone from his    pocket and looked through it for numbers to dial on his office    phone, while scribbling notes on two different legal pads. A    cup from Dunkin Donuts sat on his desk, but he hadnt had time    to sip from it. After a half-dozen calls, he hung up the phone    and sighed. This is the biggest problem in the area, he    said. Its housing. There are only a handful of landlords    that own so many properties. Adams tried to be up front with    landlords, and he didnt blame them for sometimes rebuffing    him, because they had to look out for their other tenants. But    it meant limited options for a woman like the one he was trying    to help.  <\/p>\n<p>    He swiveled toward his computer and began scrolling through    notes. Finding nothing, he rubbed his eyes with frustration,    propped his elbows onto his desk and rested his chin on his    hands to think. Oh! Let me try  I havent talked with her in    a while. He dialed another number. Hi, this is Eric Adams    over at the Laconia Police Department. ...  A moment later,    he hung up. All right, this is the last one I can think of.    He dialed again. I was wondering if you had any rentals    available for a female. Oh, really? Thatd be great. He    recited his email address. Thank you!  <\/p>\n<p>    Good news?  <\/p>\n<p>    Adams shook his head. Not for a couple weeks. He stood,    pushing back his chair, and cursed. Out of the office he strode    to make a lap around the building to clear his head, then    returned and looked at the clock  9:40 a.m. He had a meeting    at 10 at the local branch of the Bank of New Hampshire to help    Pierce, the nonprofit director, apply for a new line of credit    for their organization. Halfway to the door, he backtracked to    pluck the Dunkin Donuts cup from his desk and sipped. My    coffees cold.  <\/p>\n<p>    On a glass table in the bank lobby lay that    mornings copy of The Laconia Daily Sun. Drug Sweep in    Laconia Results in 17 Arrests, its front page read. Headlines    like that had become increasingly common, especially as the    drugs themselves changed  first to opiates, then to opioids.    They werent the same thing, Adams had learned. Opiates are    derived from nature, and there are only so many, drugs like    morphine, heroin and codeine. By contrast, opioids  though the    word is now often used as an umbrella term for all these    substances  technically means synthetic drugs like Vicodin,    Percocet, fentanyl and OxyContin, all of which were invented in    a laboratory. This is why detectives sometimes encountered new    opioids that were 20, 50, 100 times as potent as heroin. In a    lab, you can do nearly anything. A dealer, even if he or she    knows the difference, rarely bothers labeling, so a dose of    so-called heroin might include fractions of nearly anything     meaning, of course, that the potency might be nearly anything.    Overdoses happen not just when a person knowingly ingests a    large dose but also when he or she ingests a dose of unknown    composition.  <\/p>\n<p>    After the meeting at the bank, Adamss phone rang, and he    vanished briefly. The call was from a woman whose son was    arrested on charges of dealing meth. She wanted an intervention    and hoped Adams might help. Steering toward the Belknap County    jail, past homes spangled with Christmas lights, Adams admitted    that he felt wary. He had already met this young man, who    wanted nothing to do with him. Still, Adams would try. He never    knew when an addict might begin saying yes to him.    Sometimes this happened quickly: Adamss phone would ring, and    it was someone he met the previous day. Im exhausted, the    person would confess. Others waited a year or longer. All that    time, they had hung onto his card. I think Im ready now,    they said. Occasionally an addict used similar words even in    rebuffing him  I dont think Im ready yet  a phrase that    implicitly acknowledged a problem even as he or she denied one.    It was the kind of sign Adams kept on the lookout for. Possibly    this moment had come for the young man in jail.  <\/p>\n<p>    When we arrived, Adams hustled through the drably carpeted    lobby, hardly slowing before a receptionist and a guard waved    him inside. A half-hour later, he returned, his face tight with    frustration, and strode past me to the car without speaking.    He doesnt have a problem, he told me. Thats what he    said. He doesnt have a problem.  <\/p>\n<p>    Inside, he told me, guards had brought the young man from his    cell into a windowed conference room, where he recognized    Adams, as Adams predicted. You know why Im here, Adams    began gently.  <\/p>\n<p>    Youre trying to be nosy, the man replied.  <\/p>\n<p>    If you want to think of it that way, thats fine. Adams    glanced at the young mans file and explained that the mans    mother had called. So I wanted to talk to you a little bit.    This is an opportunity for you to get some help. The young    man went silent. I mean, you got arrested, Adams added,    gesturing toward the file.  <\/p>\n<p>    The man told him that he didnt do the stuff, just sold it. He    didnt need help.  <\/p>\n<p>    O.K., Adams told him, crossing his arms and leaning    forward. Was the young man on any weight-loss program, then?    Because when I saw you before, to now, youve lost a lot of    weight. He nodded toward the young man, who was twitching    uncomfortably in his chair. And youre all over the place,    just sitting there.  <\/p>\n<p>    When the man told Adams he was innocent, Adams reminded him    that he was always available and slid him another one of his    cards. Adams wished him well, then he asked guards to briefly    fetch the woman they were holding overnight  the one for whom    Adams was searching for housing  to check in and promise that    he was trying.  <\/p>\n<p>    Even as Adams nosed the Crown Vic out of the parking lot, he    couldnt get the episode out of his head. Why wont you just    say, I need this? he asked aloud, thinking of the young    man. Your life is going this way. Youve been arrested.    Youre homeless. Its all drug-related. He sighed. The    thing I had the hardest time learning was youre not going to    save everyone. That was very hard for me to accept. A common    sentiment among the police was that officers interacted with    just 5 percent or so of the residents they served. In certain    communities, that fraction was smaller. Laconia wasnt a large    town. You think, mathematically, Adams began, before    pausing, why cant I? Why cant I fix this?  <\/p>\n<p>    For several miles he steered quietly, past muddied snowbanks.    It bothers me, but Ive done what I can do right now. I cant    force him to want help. He turned into the lot of the    department and slowed into a parking spot.  <\/p>\n<p>    Is there such a thing as an addict you have no sympathy    for? I wondered.  <\/p>\n<p>    Adams considered this, letting the engine idle, and dropped his    hands into his lap. Eleven seconds passed in silence. I dont    think so, he said finally. There are reasons they are the    way they are.  <\/p>\n<p>    Adams could list, from memory, addicts who had opened their    lives to him, had volunteered for treatment, had wept in relief    and gratitude. Already I had met two young adults who were    newly in recovery and partly credited Adams for the lives they    had regained. But those werent the names that tormented him.  <\/p>\n<p>    Inside his office, he noticed two new voice-mail messages. The    first was from a woman who read of Adams in the newspaper. If    you could tell me what to do? Im more than willing to do    whatever I need. Adams scribbled something on a legal pad,    then played the second voice mail. The same voice filled the    room again, but now it broke into tears. Could Adams please    tell her what to do?  <\/p>\n<p>    Adams jotted another note, then checked his watch. Just past    noon. Because he knew the work schedule of the mother of the    young man he visited in jail, he knew she would be off soon and    expecting his call. Shes not going to be happy, he said,    mostly to himself. Rubbing his forehead, he sat down and    dialed.  <\/p>\n<p>    In so many towns all across the country, it is    difficult to talk about an issue like heroin, not only because    there is a stigma or because people worry about sounding    impolite, but because everyone calibrates differently, based on    neighbors and co-workers they see all day, how much of a    problem it is or whether it is a problem at all. There were    towns near Laconia  diplomatically, Adams declined to name    them  that denied they had any drug crisis, even as the    numbers they had showed otherwise. When presented with those    numbers, some officials found alternative explanations. Those    were residents from other towns who just happened to cross the    border, they argued. This reasoning just contributed to the    problem, Adams said. Between 2004 and 2013, the number of New    Hampshire residents receiving state-funded treatment for    heroin addiction climbed by 90 percent. The number receiving    treatment for prescription-opiate abuse climbed by 500    percent. But in terms of availability of beds, New Hampshire    ranks second to last in New England in access to    drug-treatment programs, ahead of only Vermont. The number who    still need treatment is probably much higher. In October 2014,    New Hampshire became the second-to-last state in the country to    begin a prescription-drug-monitoring program, leaving only    Missouri without one.  <\/p>\n<p>    Not everyone saw things Adamss way. In his office in City    Hall, I met Laconias mayor, Edward Engler. Engler, who was    cautious and businesslike, with slicked hair and a graying    goatee, had been mayor for three years, though he had lived in    Laconia for almost 17 and owned The Laconia Daily Sun. Over his    dress shirt he wore a fleece vest embroidered with the papers    logo. Engler referred to what was happening in Laconia as    this so-called heroin epidemic, his tone melodramatic,    raising his hands defensively above his head. Were the    county seat, Engler told me. Were also the home of the    regional hospital. Towns in New Hampshire are extremely close    together. I think we tend to get credit for more things than    are directly attributable to our residents. Though he thought    highly of Eric Adams, he also felt skeptical that heroin    deserved to be considered an epidemic, regardless of the    statistics. When I go to a Rotary Club meeting, I dont hear    people sitting around talking about, Woe is us, everybodys    dying of heroin.  <\/p>\n<p>    Might that be because, in a setting like the Rotary Club,    heroin was not a topic of polite conversation?  <\/p>\n<p>    There could be something to that, Engler admitted. Still,    an overdose death was an overdose death  it would appear in    the news that way, and Engler would have heard of it. I dont    believe there has been a huge, communitywide reaction to this.    Theres not 100 people showing up at City Council meetings    saying: You have to do something about this. This is    terrible. The papers arent full of letters to the editor. Not    at all. And I think theres a reason for that. The reason for    that is  Engler paused and crossed his arms  since we    have been in the so-called heroin epidemic in New Hampshire, I    dont believe there has been an instance in the Lakes Region,    in Belknap County, where we have had a tragic story involving    the son or daughter of someone from a prominent family. All it    takes is one, usually. Somebody in Londonderry, some girl who    was valedictorian of her class, her dad was a doctor or a    lawyer or something like that, overdoses and dies, and suddenly    its a crisis to everyone in town.  <\/p>\n<p>    That very week, I told Engler, while tagging along with Adams    for a meeting at the high school, Id heard teachers mention a    current student, a well-liked senior athlete, a team captain,    whose sister had struggled with addiction and who had been open    about the experience. Another member of the same graduating    class, a girl whose grades ranked her in the top 10, had been    walking with a friend in 2012 when a local mother, high while    driving to pick up her own child from the middle school,    swerved and struck them on the sidewalk. The girl survived. Her    friend was killed.  <\/p>\n<p>    The mayor was unmoved. That was oxycodone, Engler said    dismissively. Here, locally, the heroin epidemic, whatever    you want to call it, has not crossed over in any obvious way    from the underclass to the middle, middle-upper class.  <\/p>\n<p>    Later that week, another prospective client    phoned Adams. Im at wits end, the man said. For the woman    who needed housing, Adams helped track down a relative, at    whose home she could stay until an apartment opened. On Friday    evening, two more residents overdosed. Adams intended to visit    them. Whether either one would accept Adamss card, would call    him, would enter treatment, would achieve recovery, would some    day relapse, Adams couldnt predict. There were no guarantees    in this sort of work.  <\/p>\n<p>    Early in his tenure, Adams made a presentation to some    prominent people in the community  he didnt want to name    anyone  and afterward, as much of the room applauded, a man    approached to shake Adamss hand. As he reached out, the man    said: Its a really good job youre doing. I think its    great. But my opinion is, if they stick a needle in their arm,    they should die.  <\/p>\n<p>    Im sorry you feel that way, Adams said, startled. Id    hope you would feel differently if it was your own family    member.  <\/p>\n<p>    But the man shook his head. That will never happen.  <\/p>\n<p>    This sort of thing happened all the time when Adams began.    Today it happened far less frequently. So many others had grown    into Adamss approach: fellow officers, downtown business    owners, the captain at the Belknap County jail. Police officers    from around New England and even farther away had phoned or    traveled to Laconia to learn what Adams was doing, and whether    the model could be replicated. Other towns, independently, had    been pressed by the crisis to conceive approaches of their own.    Manchester had turned its firehouses into safe stations.    Gloucester, across the border in Massachusetts, had a network    of community volunteers. A city as large as Philadelphia or    Boston could sensibly implement a PET approach too, Adamss    supervisors argued; a community like that would simply need    more than one officer, with each assigned to a geographical    area. But the shift this required would be profound, asking    departments that for so long had thought mainly of enforcement    to think differently. In Adamss daily work, it was unavoidable    that certain values competed. A client might divulge a crime to    him, and he would be forced to interrupt her to give a Miranda    warning. If there is a crime, that individual needs to be    held accountable, he said. But this is where our    prosecutor, our judges, come into play. Some attorneys had    expressed discomfort with him and had insisted on being present    when he met their clients. Im totally fine with that, he    said, because its an opportunity for me to educate the    attorney, to let them know what I do, how I do it, what the    processes are. In a role so complicated, with so much at    stake, clearly it was vital that the right officer held the    job.  <\/p>\n<p>    In an empty conference room on the first floor of the    department, I met a young man named Chadwick Boucher, an early    client of Adamss. The two men hugged when they saw each other,    and then Adams disappeared upstairs to make calls while Boucher    and I spoke. He was 27, though he had the calm demeanor of    someone two or three times as old. As early as middle school,    Boucher began sneaking his parents liquor, partly to fit in    with older boys he admired, he told me. Soon he added    marijuana. He played hockey then, and played well  invitations    came from showcases in Boston and scouts from Division I    colleges, including the University of New Hampshire, a national    power. Instead, Boucher quit. It was too much pressure. He    finished high school and moved in with a friend, who introduced    him to OxyContin.  <\/p>\n<p>    What followed was difficult to align into a neat chronology. He    bounced from one friends apartment to another, from Oxy to    Percocet and finally, when pills grew scarce, to heroin. There    was a criminal distribution charge, probation, two treatment    programs that he abandoned, feeling as though he didnt belong.    There were short-term jobs tending bar or waiting tables,    collecting paychecks before inevitably being fired. Suddenly he    was high behind the wheel of his fathers Cutlass  not in the    road, but in a driveway  startling awake to the police rapping    on his window. Then he was at the Laconia police station, in a    room with a plainclothes officer named Eric Adams.  <\/p>\n<p>    He opened his arms to me, Boucher recalled. It had felt    bizarre, sharing the truth with a cop. But things had changed    so quickly. Most of his family had stopped returning his calls,    and all his friends had vanished. The only people around him    now were strangers who shared his addiction, and he didnt like    or trust them. The difference in meeting someone like Adams was    obvious. He cares about my well-being, Boucher said. I    needed that.  <\/p>\n<p>    Adams wanted him to call every day, so Boucher called every    day. Then every week. He entered another treatment program, and    this time he graduated. He was now nearing a year sober. He    owned a business and was caught up on his bills. He lived up    the road in an apartment and had friends again, some of whom    were in recovery, too. They made a point to talk openly about    it, to keep an eye out for one another. Some he referred to    Adams. He knew that recovery demanded his full attention, that    it probably always would. If he lost anything else in his life     an apartment, a business  he lost that one thing only and    could do without it. If he lost his recovery, he would lose    everything, all at once.  <\/p>\n<p>    I asked Boucher how he preferred to be named in this article     by only Chad? Or would he prefer anonymity? But he shook    his head. It was important to him to be honest about who he    was. He hoped this would send a message to other addicts and to    those who encountered them. Its important that people know    theres a way out. Recovery from addiction was an achievable    thing and, having discovered this fact, having discovered Eric    Adams, Boucher intended to share it. The news might save lives.    He knew it was possible that a business client might discover    his unflattering past, that he might lose an account or two.    Ive come way too far for that, he said.  <\/p>\n<p>        Benjamin Rachlin is the author of the forthcoming        nonfiction book Ghost of the Innocent Man: A True Story        of Trial and Redemption. This is his first article for        the magazine.      <\/p>\n<p>        Sign up for our        newsletter to get the best of The New York Times        Magazine delivered to your inbox every week.      <\/p>\n<p>      A version of this article appears in print on July 16, 2017,      on Page MM22 of the Sunday      Magazine with the headline: You Know Why Im Here.    <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>See the original post: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2017\/07\/12\/magazine\/a-small-town-police-officers-war-on-drugs.html\" title=\"A Small-Town Police Officer's War on Drugs - New York Times\">A Small-Town Police Officer's War on Drugs - New York Times<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Those years spent guarding prisoners, and later kicking down doors, changed Adamss thinking. So many of the drug users he saw had made one bad decision and then became chained to it, Adams realized. Or they had begun on a valid prescription for pain medication, after an injury, and then grew addicted <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/war-on-drugs\/a-small-town-police-officers-war-on-drugs-new-york-times.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[431672],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-227857","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-war-on-drugs"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/227857"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=227857"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/227857\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=227857"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=227857"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=227857"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}