barbos
Contributor
Don't hold your breath.The good news is maybe now the government will get involved in negotiating drug prices.
Don't hold your breath.The good news is maybe now the government will get involved in negotiating drug prices.
At what point does this become criminally actionable?
How many people should have to die first because of this idiot's "muh proffitz"?
Spock would argue that sacrificing the one for the good of the many is the right course of action. Plus that might give pause to the other people currently engaging in this or thinking about engaging in this.
There isn't a case, because then every single drug company that charged more than a penny for a drug would be criminally liable.
There isn't a case, because then every single drug company that charged more than a penny for a drug would be criminally liable.
doubtful
but nice slippery sloppiness!
coloradoatheist said:There isn't a case, because then every single drug company that charged more than a penny for a drug would be criminally liable.
doubtful
but nice slippery sloppiness!
Are you the arbitrary setter of what a drug should cost?
Many drugs would fall into what is called the "gray" area. This is one of those Primetime Drama show levels of black and white.At what point does this become criminally actionable?
How many people should have to die first because of this idiot's "muh proffitz"?
Spock would argue that sacrificing the one for the good of the many is the right course of action. Plus that might give pause to the other people currently engaging in this or thinking about engaging in this.
There isn't a case, because then every single drug company that charged more than a penny for a drug would be criminally liable.
Don't hold your breath.The good news is maybe now the government will get involved in negotiating drug prices.
should != wouldDon't hold your breath.
While not constantly interfering, the government should start investigating the pricing especially if it is market where only one or two have a full monopoly
But it doesn't say that. It says something completely different from that. You do not have any reason to believe that it says what you say it says. In the event that you sincerely believe it means I support him then you are willfully deceiving yourself. You are making a false damaging claim about me with reckless disregard for the truth. You are doing it because you have correctly identified me as a political opponent and have decided on that basis that it doesn't matter if you libel me because your enemies aren't entitled to truthfulness.Seems to be a lot of text to just say, "I support that piece of shit (sp)."
And this, in a nutshell, is everything wrong with the mentality of the left. Everything must be controlled by the collective. Whenever anything bad happens in any activity that is 98% controlled by the collective and 2% controlled by an individual, always blame the 2% of individual control and crank up the collective control to 99.8%. Repeat until nothing bad happens.
Pyrimethamine is available in India for 5 cents a pill. If we had a free market then in the time since this story broke a dozen people would have loaded their suitcases with Indian pyrimethamine and flown it to America. But then, if we had a free market Shkreli would never have bought the "rights" in the first place. So why is all the bile directed at Shkreli and none of it at the thousands of identifiable legislators and unidentifiable apparatchiks who cooperate in throwing a person in jail for flying a suitcase full of Indian pyrimethamine to America?
I saw a post on facebook about this so I figured it was full of crap, being on Facebook and all.
People like this need to put themselves into a safe and dropped to the bottom of the ocean. The drug company had a 750% sale to production cost on it to begin with, and research hasn't exactly been needed for several decades for the drug 60+ year old drug. This is shit that idiot CEO's in television sitcoms on Television do, not real life.
I presume, that previously the reason why there were no generics was the low price vs. demand. And now the manufacturer figures that nobody would start making it because there just isn't enough money in it, and it can further slow it down by ensuring that there aren't enough samples available for clinical trials. While I could understand why law might forbid someone from bringing over a batch from India and selling it, why couldn't another pharmaceutical company do so for research purposes? That's bonkers.With the price now high, other companies could conceivably make generic copies, since patents have long expired. One factor that could discourage that option is that Daraprim’s distribution is now tightly controlled, making it harder for generic companies to get the samples they need for the required testing.
The switch from drugstores to controlled distribution was made in June by Impax, not by Turing. Still, controlled distribution was a strategy Mr. Shkreli talked about at his previous company as a way to thwart generics.
But it doesn't say that. It says something completely different from that. You do not have any reason to believe that it says what you say it says. In the event that you sincerely believe it means I support him then you are willfully deceiving yourself. You are making a false damaging claim about me with reckless disregard for the truth. You are doing it because you have correctly identified me as a political opponent and have decided on that basis that it doesn't matter if you libel me because your enemies aren't entitled to truthfulness.Seems to be a lot of text to just say, "I support that piece of shit (sp)."
A free market is very resilient against this sort of abuse. But people who dislike free markets as you and ksen do dismantled the free market in pharmaceuticals and replaced it with a hyperregulated system that is consequently fragile and easily susceptible to crackers like Shkreli who know how to spot vulnerabilities in the systems people like you create, and can invent ways to exploit them. And you have the gall to make sarcastic quips like "Yup, the free market will eventually take care of it", when there is no free market because your own allies got rid of it.
The good news is maybe now the government will get involved in negotiating drug prices.
But it doesn't say that. It says something completely different from that. You do not have any reason to believe that it says what you say it says. In the event that you sincerely believe it means I support him then you are willfully deceiving yourself. You are making a false damaging claim about me with reckless disregard for the truth. You are doing it because you have correctly identified me as a political opponent and have decided on that basis that it doesn't matter if you libel me because your enemies aren't entitled to truthfulness.Seems to be a lot of text to just say, "I support that piece of shit (sp)."
But it doesn't say that. It says something completely different from that. You do not have any reason to believe that it says what you say it says. In the event that you sincerely believe it means I support him then you are willfully deceiving yourself. You are making a false damaging claim about me with reckless disregard for the truth. You are doing it because you have correctly identified me as a political opponent and have decided on that basis that it doesn't matter if you libel me because your enemies aren't entitled to truthfulness.
In other words, par for the course for JH
This thread is extremely ironic for the free market bashers, as the same time they rail against the free market, they support a law that says "you may not buy that drug from India for $.25/pill or Europe for $1-5/pill, or South America, or Mexico, we are forcing you to buy it from only domestic licenced producers, in which case for this drug we are forcing you to pay $750/pill."
In other words, par for the course for JH
This thread is extremely ironic for the free market bashers, as the same time they rail against the free market, they support a law that says "you may not buy that drug from India for $.25/pill or Europe for $1-5/pill, or South America, or Mexico, we are forcing you to buy it from only domestic licenced producers, in which case for this drug we are forcing you to pay $750/pill."
We do?
We do?
With your bashing of the "free market" apparently so.
I've seen you talk about bringing out the gulag, but not a peep about allowing imports, which would be far more effective.
Not a peep from your heroes Bern and Liz about imports either. Just the same old leftist rhetoric of "investigations into gouging" and "we'll look into price caps", or other such bullshit.
With your bashing of the "free market" apparently so.
I've seen you talk about bringing out the gulag, but not a peep about allowing imports, which would be far more effective.
Not a peep from your heroes Bern and Liz about imports either. Just the same old leftist rhetoric of "investigations into gouging" and "we'll look into price caps", or other such bullshit.
Wow, you seem much more upset about this than about Shkreli . . . like you don't even care at all and don't see the problem.
I guess its more fun to attack one's enemies than to actually fix the problem?
It wouldn't have to be manufactured outside US. The patents have expired, there is no reason the generic form couldn't be done completely within US borders. My understanding is that even the pills sold in India or Europe are made by the same company, and not generics. I could be wrong though.It is perfectly possible for a manufacturer outside the USA to start making this drug and exporting it to the US market. All they need to do is to ensure that their manufacturing facility meets the requirements of the US code of Good Manufacturing Practice for pharmaceuticals (cGMP); that their testing facilities meet the Good Laboratory practice rules; Then they can have the FDA inspect their plant and laboratories; they can develop a formulation and manufacturing process, and have that approved by the FDA; then they can start making tablets, and can apply for the relevant import and export permits (these are probably not required - if the supplier is in a country with MFN status, and as the pharmaceutical in question is not a potential drug of addiction). The entire process could easily be approved in a year, if the FDA decided to fast-track it; but would more likely take about two to five years.