Today’s online Wall
Street Journal reports yet another case of drug counterfeiting. Okay. Okay.
I’m sure everyone knows what counterfeiting is. But it’s typically associated
with money, or with a signature. In fact, over intersession, I was walking
through an art museum and I noticed an exhibit in which the artist had
“counterfeited” a US stamp, with the caption asking which was real. I couldn’t
tell, but for the difference in fading which betrayed the older, real stamp.
The point is, counterfeiters are good at what they do.
And although counterfeiting is certainly not a good thing,
at least counterfeiting money doesn’t really hurt anyone, at least not physically.
While I certainly do not condone the practice of printing fraudulent dollar
bills, I can understand why people do it and I recognize that it does little
more than swindle society out of its hard-earned money. But does anyone
remember the melamine scare in China a couple years ago (if you don’t, see http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/4315627/Two-sentenced-to-death-over-China-melamine-milk-scandal.html)?
Now, that was different. People died because of that. And not just any people
died – those counterfeiters killed defenseless, unknowing babies just to make
their “product” look more like the milk from healthier cows. And that’s no
oversimplification. Who drinks milk, predominantly? Children in need of
building bones. Who’s the main consumer, then? Children. Who died? Children.
Were they capable of avoiding their fate? No, at least not knowingly. Counterfeiting
foodstuffs is fundamentally different than printing bills – one kills people,
the other only robs them of their money.
Today’s story is no different than the melamine in China.
Apparently, the Danes caught counterfeit drugs (injectable cancer drugs made by
AstraZeneca) and reported it to the FDA. Another counterfeiter stopped. The Journal puts the number of apprehended
drug counterfeiters at 2003 for the year 2009. That is simply astronomical. And
these aren’t just placebos or fake Viagra that doesn’t sufficiently induce
erection. Now counterfeiters have started to pass false injectable drugs, drugs that cash-strapped medical facilities might
be lured into purchasing for things like cancer treatment. These aren’t
generics, either. Generics are just cheaper versions of drugs that were
previously protected under patent laws. Counterfeiters are worse, because
although generics might not be as pure as the real McCoy, companies that make
them have an incentive to keep those who take their medicine healthy so that
they keep their customers. Counterfeiters operate underground, and have no
concern for their victims.
This must stop. The Journal
mentions several new laws, under consideration all across the globe, that fight
the scourge. But we need to move quickly.
1 comment:
This is all orienting, not an argument. Would not use for R4 unless rewritten
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