New drug for people who are healthy!

countryboy

Traditionally Progressive
Nov 30, 2009
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Here's a news item from www.naturalnews.com...applies to the U.S. but we'll likely see it on TV up here...

(NaturalNews) Big Pharma has been trending this direction for a long time: marketing medicines to people who don't need them and who have nothing wrong with their health. It's all part of a ploy to position prescription drugs as nutrients -- things you need to take on a regular basis in order to prevent disease.

The FDA recently gave its nod of approval on the matter, announcing that Crestor can now be advertised and prescribed as a "preventive" medicine. No longer does a patient need to have anything wrong with them to warrant this expensive prescription
medication: They only need to remember the brand name of the drug from television ads.

This FDA approval for the marketing of
Crestor to healthy people is a breakthrough for wealthy drug companies. Selling drugs only to people who are sick is, by definition, a limited market. Expanding drug revenues requires reaching people who have nothing wrong with them and convincing them that taking a cocktail of daily pharmaceuticals will somehow keep them healthy.

All this is, of course, the greatest quackery we've yet seen from
Big Pharma, because once this floodgate of "preventive pharmaceuticals" is unleashed, the drug companies will be positioned to promote a bewildering array of other preventive chemicals you're supposed to take at the same time. Did you take your anti-cancer pill today? How about your anti-diabetes pill? Anti-cholesterol pill? Don't forget your anti-Alzheimer's pill, too.

Medications are not vitamins

The very idea that these drugs can somehow prevent a person from becoming sick in the future strains the boundaries of scientific credibility. Only natural therapies like nutrition can prevent the onset of disease, not patented chemicals that don't belong in the human body in the first place.

The logical argument of the drug companies who push these "preventive" prescriptions is essentially that the human body is deficient in pharmaceuticals, and that deficiency can only be corrected by taking whatever brand-name drugs they show you on television. Forget about deficiencies in zinc, or vitamin D, or living enzymes; what your body really needs is more synthetic chemicals!

The FDA agrees with this loopy logic. And why wouldn't it? Subscribing to this pharmaceutical delusion is an easy way to instantly expand Big Pharma's customer base by tens of millions. Overnight, the market for Crestor ballooned from a few million people with high cholesterol to the entire U.S. population of 300 million people.

If Crestor can help healthy people be healthier (which it can't, but let's play along with this delusion for the sake of argument), then it's only a matter of time before they start adding Crestor to infant formula. I mean, why not? If it's so good for healthy people, then it must make babies healthier, too, right?

So let's add Crestor to sports drinks. Let's sprinkle it into the iodized salt supply. Let's drip it into the municipal
water! (Don't laugh: This idea of dripping cholesterol drugs into the water supply has already been suggested by more than one doctor.) Let's merge the pharmaceutical supply with the food supply and charge people prescription drugs prices for "functional" foods laced with these chemicals!


Pharmaceutical deficiency

That's really where all this is headed. When medicines are approved as preventive "nutrients" for the human body, it's only a matter of time before the industry starts talking about your "pharmaceutical deficiency."

Not taking any
medications? You have a pharmaceutical deficiency, and it needs to be corrected by taking more prescription drugs. But don't bother with actual nutrition, because nutrients have absolutely no role in preventing disease, the FDA claims. No nutrient has ever been approved by the FDA for the prevention or treatment of any disease whatsoever.

The message from the FDA is quite clear on this: Nutrients are useless, and you should eat medications as if they were vitamins.

Patented Big Pharma chemicals, after all, provide all the nutrition you'll ever need!
 

Cliffy

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Nov 19, 2008
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This was inevitable. There are enough stupid people out there to make this the next big economic boom. Once the medical mafia starts pushing this crap, people will be lining up to get fleeced. Really makes ya wonder if there is any hope for humanity.
 

countryboy

Traditionally Progressive
Nov 30, 2009
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This was inevitable. There are enough stupid people out there to make this the next big economic boom. Once the medical mafia starts pushing this crap, people will be lining up to get fleeced. Really makes ya wonder if there is any hope for humanity.

Yeah, it does seem to be extreme, doesn't it? I'm hopeful that this might be the "straw that broke the camel's back" and more people will start to think about what this is all about. Well, one can always hope, right?
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
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Simply another along the same lines as the 'organics' and 'supplements' movement, where people take all kinds of 'natural' concoctions for no reason at all.
 

Mowich

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Dec 25, 2005
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Big Pharma would not stand a chance of increasing their sales if people would only think for themselves. Every drug on the market comes with so many contraindications that anyone in their right mind would stop and wonder why???
 

countryboy

Traditionally Progressive
Nov 30, 2009
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Big Pharma would not stand a chance of increasing their sales if people would only think for themselves. Every drug on the market comes with so many contraindications that anyone in their right mind would stop and wonder why???

True, but if one is on drugs (depending on which ones, of course), are they really in "their right mind?" A conundrum.
 

Mowich

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Dec 25, 2005
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True, but if one is on drugs (depending on which ones, of course), are they really in "their right mind?" A conundrum.

Good point, CB. If one alters their body chemistry eventually, I suppose, it will have an effect on how their mind functions.

Personally, I have never been one to reach for a pill when my body is acting up. I have some kind of built-in resistance to the idea that a manufactured chemical can help me. And, it simply galls me when I see the collusion between the advertising companies and Big Pharma. Got a tummy ache - Big Pharma can help. Got a headache - Big Pharma has the answer. Maybe it is just me, but people seem to buy into the idea that Big Pharma is really there to help them when the reverse is actually closer to the mark. Big Pharma is there to help themselves and their share-holders. :angryfire: