Invisible Super-Glitches & The Shield of the Law
The Safety Net · Section 5 of 8

Invisible Super-Glitches & The Shield of the Law

Benzo-Dope, Nitazenes, and Good Samaritan Legal Armor

15-20 minInteractive Section
Invisible Super-Glitches Alert
Threat Intelligence Briefing

The Asteroid Field Is Getting Crowded

The supply is no longer a simple "Opioids vs. Stimulants" map. Invisible Super-Glitches are entering the field — substances that are harder to navigate because they bypass or overwhelm our standard Shield. A master Pilot knows their new enemies.

Benzo-Dope

Dual Sedation Hack

Nitazenes

Super-Potent Synthetic

Your Response

Same Shield — More Doses

Threat Intelligence

Invisible Super-Glitches

Tactical Gear Assessment

Tactical Over-Provisioning

ARP recommends every Pilot carry at least two boxes — four doses of Narcan. The modern supply demands more Shield than the old supply. Use the gear check below to assess your current load.

Gear Check Simulator

How Many Narcan Doses Do You Carry?

Basic Load
Doses in your kit:2
01234

Adequate for a standard Fentanyl crash. Still short for a Nitazene event requiring 3–4 doses.

Scenario Coverage

Standard Fentanyl Overdose

Requires 1 dose

Benzo-Dope Event (ongoing monitoring)

Requires 2 doses

Nitazene Super-Glitch

Requires 4 doses

"It is better to have surplus gear and not need it than to run out during a high-intensity rescue." — ARP Tactical Over-Provisioning Protocol

Good Samaritan Legal Armor
Legal Armor Protocol

Good Samaritan Laws: Your Shield of the Law

Fear is the Glitch's second weapon. When someone is afraid that calling 911 will lead to an arrest — and hesitates — ships crash permanently. In the Astraea universe, fear should never be the reason a soul is lost.

The Law Briefing

What You Are Protected By

Pilot's Field Notes

Holding the Line With the Authorities

When emergency services arrive, your own Amygdala may still be firing. Keep your Pilot Voice steady. You are not a suspect. You are a first responder who just saved a life.

Without the Law Briefing

Fear of arrest overrides the rescue instinct. The hesitation costs 3–5 minutes. The lungs stay offline. A permanently preventable crash happens.

With the Law Briefing

You know your rights. Fear is removed from the equation. You call immediately. You give the handoff data with confidence. You bring the squad home safe.

Your Mission Focus

When the paramedics arrive, give them the technical data: "I found them unresponsive. I gave them [N] dose(s) of Narcan [X] minutes ago. They started breathing but haven't woken up."

This data is vital for their mission. You are a first responder who acted correctly. You have nothing to hide.

Interactive Builder

Paramedic Handoff Script Builder

Pre-load your handoff data. The Pilot's Logic should already have the words when the Amygdala is firing.

Tactical Comms Builder

Build Your Paramedic Handoff Script

Pre-load the exact data paramedics need. When your Amygdala is firing, your Pilot's Logic reads from a pre-loaded script.

Hacking the System

"By understanding the Good Samaritan Laws, you are effectively Hacking the System to protect your squad's future."

You are a high-stat Pilot who doesn't let a bad situation become a total system wipe. You are the one who knows the rules of the airspace. You are the one who brings the squad home safe.

"By understanding the Good Samaritan Laws, you are effectively Hacking the System to protect your squad's future. You are a high-stat Pilot who doesn't let a bad situation become a total system wipe."

Navigator Affirmation · Section 5

Reflection Prompt 1

First Look — What Lands for You?

"Benzo-Dope crisis: If you administered Narcan and someone started breathing but did NOT wake up — what would you do in the next 30 seconds? Write out your real, honest reaction. Would you panic? Stay? Call 911? How does knowing about the Benzo component change what you would do versus not knowing?"

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"You are the Guardian of the Fleet. By knowing your rights, you remove the Signal Noise of fear. You are using the Justice code to ensure a medical emergency doesn't become a legal disaster."

— Youth Navigator Path · The Safety Net

Reflection Prompt 2

Deeper Look — Applying It to Your Orbit

"Has the fear of legal consequences ever played a role in a situation you know about — where someone hesitated to call 911 during an overdose or health emergency? Even if not in your direct life, do you think fear of police is a real barrier for people in the communities you know? How does knowing the Good Samaritan Law change that calculation?"

Navigator Creed · Section 5

"You are the one who knows the rules of the airspace. You are the one who stays steady while others are screaming. You are the one who brings the squad home safe."

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Pilot's Log · Section 5

Navigator Journal Entry

Prompt: Write your Legal Armor & Super-Glitch Protocol in your Navigator's Log. Include: (1) Your Benzo-Dope response plan — what you do when Narcan works but they don't wake up. (2) Your Nitazene response — how many doses you carry and why. (3) Your commitment to calling 911 without hesitation, using your Good Samaritan Legal Armor. (4) The shift from being afraid of the system to using the system to save a life.

This entry is saved privately to your Dashboard — ARP Youth Journals.

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Section 5 Conclusion

The Legal Armor is equipped and the Super-Glitch threat intel is filed. Section 6 moves to the long-game: Recovery Architecture — how to build a life that doesn't require constant emergency protocols.

Section 5 of 8 · The Safety Net