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Originally posted by valkeryie
Getting drugs from Canada is cheaper for you, but maybe Canadians are getting sick and tired of being taken advantage of anymore. Fix your own regulations, as in price fixing and limit profits. We don't want your missiles or your sick people getting all our drugs. Fix your own country before trying to make every other country "free".
Originally posted by Jamuhn
Dude, that's how capitalism works, you have cheap drugs and a lot of them. Your whole isolationist attitude towards economy would ruin your country in a second. I'm sure your druglords wouldn't mind selling to us.
More than 100 top regulatory officials represented industry as lobbyists, lawyers... - Denver Post
1. Mon, 24 May 2004
To understand why government policies affecting healthcare, drug safety, food safety and the environment appear to promote industry interests at the expense of public safety and health, the Denver Post has investigated the administration's top regulatory officials (excerpt below). Anne Mulkern found that 100 top government regulators appointed by President Bush are advocates for the industries they are supposed to regulate.
"In at least 20 cases, those former industry advocates have helped their agencies write, shape or push for policy shifts that benefit their former industries. They knew which changes to make because they had pushed for them as industry advocates."
Daniel Troy, FDA's chief counsel was a pharmaceutical company litigator who sued the FDA.
Originally posted by valkeryie
Getting drugs from Canada is cheaper for you, but maybe Canadians are getting sick and tired of being taken advantage of anymore. Fix your own regulations, as in price fixing and limit profits. We don't want your missiles or your sick people getting all our drugs. Fix your own country before trying to make every other country "free".
A look at the brand-name and generic drug companies lobbying expenditures and campaign contributions shows how outgunned the generics drug industry is when it comes to currying favor with the Capitol's lawmakers.
1. In its attempts to influence Congress, the brand-name industry has spent more than $423 million during the last three election cycles while the generic drug industry has spent about $10 million, or 2 percent of what the brand-name industry spent.
Originally posted by marg6043
Brand names versus Generic