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Daily Dose
November 19, 2005
A Reality We Can't a-Ford to Dodge
The other day, I stumbled across something online that struck
me as perhaps the best, most succinct illustration of how
corrupt and ungovernable the drug industry profit machine has
become. It was a "list" type article that directly compared
the U.S. pharmaceuticals business to the automobile
manufacturing industry.
The piece makes 15 points of comparison between the two
industries, with the aim of showing just how unbelievably
profitable and unaccountable the domestic drug biz really is.
Of course, I've made this point many times over the years in
my newsletter and in the Daily Dose, but never before have I
seen the picture painted in such a vivid and easy-to-grasp
way. Simply brilliant.
Among the points of comparison:
- Based on the drug industry's typical
30,000% mark-up, the average car would set you back 4.5
MILLION DOLLARS. The same car in Mexico or Canada would cost
less than $5,000 - 1/900th of the price. (This seems a bit
of stretch, even to a quick-to-damn-Big-Pharma firebrand
like me. The article doesn't specify exactly how this number
was calculated - but even if across-the-border drugs are
only a third or half the price of U.S. medications, this
still makes the point)
- Vehicles without safety systems of
any type - bumpers, seatbelts, airbags, crumple zones, etc.-
would be deemed safe by the National Transportation Safety
Board (the car-biz equivalent of the FDA).
- Less-then-favorable crash test
results would be suppressed from the public (100% legally, I
might add), and any researcher that publicized these
negative findings would be blackballed from the industry
(like what happened to the man who blew the whistle on Vioxx,
Dr. David Graham).
- Detroit would hype "new" cars that
are virtually identical to those made in the 1970s. (Drug
makers change drugs slightly once their patents expire, then
re-sell basically the same meds to the public at premium
prices).
See what I mean about this perspective
being a very illustrative one about the true nature of the
prescription drug racket? What's even more telling is what the
piece claims would happen if the car biz got what the drug
makers are close to getting in the way of collusion in their
corrupt money-lust from the U.S. government. Keep reading...
If the efforts of the U.S. auto makers to monopolize the
domestic market and immunize themselves against accountability
for the quality of their products mirrored the maneuverings of
the drug business, here's what we'd be up against...
- All imported cars would be banned.
You'd be forced to buy a domestic car at nearly 900 times
what a comparable model from Nissan, Toyota, VW, BMW or
Subaru would cost. Further, if you went to Canada to buy a
car and drove it home, you could be stopped, searched, or
otherwise harassed (see Daily Dose, 6/11/2004 for more on
this).
- All forms of alternative
transportation - bicycles, motorcycles, busses, subways,
skateboards, whatever - would be outlawed (just look at how
aggressively Big Pharma is lobbying Congress for stricter
regulation of supplements).
- Lawsuits against carmakers for faulty
or nonexistent safety systems, poor performance, or false
advertising would be illegal, or next to impossible. Think
this can't happen with the drug business? They're lobbying
Congress aggressively for it right now to make sure another
Vioxx snafu can't harm their wallets.
Does any of this sound like a free
market to you? It doesn't to me. Yet this is the kind of sway
the world's most profitable business, the pharmaceutical
industry, has over our limp-wristed and corrupt FDA...
Kinda makes you want to pull up stakes and get the hell out of
Dodge, doesn't it?
Always driving the point home,
William Campbell Douglass II, MD
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