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- Xref: sparky talk.politics.drugs:8238 talk.politics.medicine:679 sci.med:24414
- Path: sparky!uunet!news.centerline.com!mrh
- From: mrh@centerline.com (Mike Huben)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs,talk.politics.medicine,sci.med
- Subject: Re: From _Scientific American_
- Date: 25 Jan 1993 19:56:10 GMT
- Organization: CenterLine Software, Inc.
- Lines: 28
- Message-ID: <1k1gkqINN285@armory.centerline.com>
- References: <1jc3mdINN9mh@mirror.digex.com> <1jkjl4INN3qu@armory.centerline.com> <1993Jan21.095319.28095@muddcs.claremont.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: 140.239.2.36
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- In article <1993Jan21.095319.28095@muddcs.claremont.edu> ebrandt@jarthur.claremont.edu (Eli Brandt) writes:
- >In article <1jkjl4INN3qu@armory.centerline.com> mrh@centerline.com (Mike Huben) writes:
- >>Imagine if everybody was free to market any drug they wanted any way they
- >>wanted. How high would the death toll rise?
- >
- >No need to imagine it -- study pre-FDA history. "Elixir of
- >Sulfanilamide" killed 73; lack of beta-blockers killed a good
- >fraction of a million. Sale of lethal products is self-limiting,
- >while bureaucratic stupidity is self-replicating.
-
- Self-limiting at what level? Tobacco shows no signs of being self-limiting
- because of death of its users at the current level of almost a half million
- a year in the US alone. Remove limitations on advertising, remove
- epidemological studies that show the clear connection, remove programs that
- educate about the hazards, and I suspect that an addictive drug such as
- tobacco could double or triple its toll.
-
- Innumerable other drugs are addictive as well. Addiction itself is harmless
- (except for the cost): it is the toxicity of the drug that is at issue.
-
- What is self-replicating (or even spontaneously generating) is the willingness
- to convince people to poison themselves rapidly or slowly to make a buck.
-
- Mike Huben
-
- "Historians will have to face the fact that natural selection determined the
- evolution of cultures in the same manner as it did that of species."
- Konrad Lorenz in "On Agression" 1966.
-