Fair Elections bill would go a long way toward ending today's corrupt political system
How to Get Our Citizens Actually United
By DREW WESTEN, NYT
IMAGINE you're the closest living relative of a child who just inherited $100 million after her parents died in a car crash. You're a distant cousin, but if something happened to her, you'd be next in line.
She has juvenile diabetes. So you "adjust" her insulin prescription a bit yourself, doubling the dose. When that doesn't work, you tell her a different drug works just as well, and when she's reluctant, you offer her a trip to Disney World.
What would happen if you got caught? You'd probably be convicted of attempted murder and spend several years in prison.
Earlier this month, the Justice Department announced a settlement with the pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline. The company had, among a host of criminal actions, helped publish falsified data in a medical journal, failed to report the dangers of a drug and used "favors" like trips to Jamaica to persuade doctors to use its medications for unapproved - and unproven - purposes on children.
(More here.)
IMAGINE you're the closest living relative of a child who just inherited $100 million after her parents died in a car crash. You're a distant cousin, but if something happened to her, you'd be next in line.
She has juvenile diabetes. So you "adjust" her insulin prescription a bit yourself, doubling the dose. When that doesn't work, you tell her a different drug works just as well, and when she's reluctant, you offer her a trip to Disney World.
What would happen if you got caught? You'd probably be convicted of attempted murder and spend several years in prison.
Earlier this month, the Justice Department announced a settlement with the pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline. The company had, among a host of criminal actions, helped publish falsified data in a medical journal, failed to report the dangers of a drug and used "favors" like trips to Jamaica to persuade doctors to use its medications for unapproved - and unproven - purposes on children.
(More here.)
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home