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From: Gregory Brown
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Subject: Fwd: Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.... 04/21/2013
Date: Sun, 21 Apr 2013 14:18:50 +0000
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DEAR FRIEND
Reflecting on his legacy Former President George W. Bush described his tenure in the White House
during an interview with the Dallas Morning News published last Sunday, saying that he was
comfortable with his decision-making regarding the Iraq War and had few regrets. "I'm confident the
decisions were made the right way," Bush explained. "It's easy toforget what life was like when the
decision was made." The former president's comments come just weeks after an emotional
observance of the loth anniversary of the Iraq invasion. Bush, former Vice President Dick Cheney
and other members of the administration who played integral parts in the war received heavy criticism
over that period.
Prior to the second Iraq War, the Vietnam War was widely viewed as the biggest disaster in American
military history. Not only was the conflict poorly executed by America and its local allies, but domestic
support for the war effort collapsed, leading to a stark defeat of American strategy. No matter how
President Bush tries to spin it, characterizing his invasion of Iraq as a victory or a good thing, is
ridiculous when in fact, the Iraq war and subsequent occupation may ultimately come to be regarded
as a bigger mistake than Vietnam was.
Vietnam may have been divided between North and South, but it encompassed an ancient culture with
common language and traditions. At that time our reasons for defending it were grounded in a
national strategy called containment that was embraced by both political parties as a necessary
response to communist aggression. Iraq, in contrast, is a country of warring ethnic and sectarian
communities, and our military involvement there resulted from an ad-hoc response to faulty
intelligence in the aftermath of the 9-11 attacks.
The first lesson we learned after toppling Saddam Hussein was that our main reason for invading the
country — Iraq's nuclear-weapons program — didn't exist. We soon determined that another big
reason for going, the supposed presence of Al Qaeda elements, was totally imaginary. But the really
big and enduring lesson was that the Iraqis were not by nature a peaceful people — they had
longstanding scores to settle, not only with each other but also with us, and they proved remarkably
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persistent in pursuing that purpose. And if anything, our presence helped spur recruiting by sectarian
militias and local supporters of Al Qaeda who weren't operating during Saddam Hussein's regime.
When the immediate rationales for invading Iraq were revealed as misguided, the Bush Administration
then defaulted to the argument that a brutal dictator was being deposed to make way for the first real
democracy in the Arab world. That certainly was a laudable objective, but it begged the question of
how Saddam had managed to remain in power for decades. The short answer was that only an
authoritarian leader could have controlled the centrifugal forces inherent in the country's political
culture. Saddam was more brutal than he needed to be, but partly because he feared what would
happen to his own sectarian community if the majority Shiites ever came to power (the Kurds mainly
wanted independence).
Now the Shiites are in power, although prime minister Nouri al-Maliki has made an effort to include
members of the other two major communities — Sunni Arabs and Kurt — in his coalition. We can
take a little satisfaction from the fact that the most recent elections were probably the fairest in Iraqi
history. On the other hand, Maliki would not have won a second term without backing from Shiite
firebrand Moktada al-Sadr, so optimism is not indicated. The New York Times recently noted
Maliki's increasing "authoritarian tendencies,"but that may reflect no more than his efforts to survive
in a very tough neighborhood. He needs to marginalize his enemies and find as many friends as he can.
And now it appears that the single biggest reason why the war and occupation may prove to have been
a huge mis-step for America, is that Iran now has a foothold in Iraq. And the one local government
currently run by Shiites that Maliki can turn to Iran for help when the Americans are gone — a Shiite
theocracy.
And for those who are concerned about Iranian influence in one of the Arab world's premier oil-
producing states aside from 4,48o deaths, 32,000 wounded, more than 100,000 Iraqi civilians deaths
and millions more refugees, a recent Harvard study attempted to put the human cost of Bush's wars in
context, explaining that the expense of covering residual health issues for young soldiers injured in
Iraq, as well as Afghanistan, will continue to weigh on the system long after the official end of those
engagements. According to the paper, the cost of Iraq and Afghanistan together could end up running
somewhere between $4 to $6 trillion. And for President Bush, Vice President Cheney or any other
members of their administration and supporters to claim that they are comfortable with disastrous
War in Iraq, is beyond belief.... But then as my father use to say, 'history is always re-written by the
winner."
With shouts of "Shame on you!" echoing in the chamber, the U.S. Senate failed to muster
sufficient support Wednesday for a gun-buyer background check bill that's supported by
nearly go percent of Americans. It also voted down other key measures and counter-
proposals, defeating a string of amendments in a series of procedural votes that likely
doomed any major legislation to curb gun violence.
In response: Wednesday President Barack Obama delivered a fired-up statement in the Rose Garden
of the White House in response to the a gun-buyer background check bill amendment in the US
Senate which failed 54 to 46, falling short of the 60-vote threshold needed to break a filibuster of the
measure. The President's anger was apparent during his remarks -- "The gun lobby and its allies
willfully lied about the bill." The President said the failure of the background check bill "came down
to politics"and "all in all, this was a pretty shameful dayfor Washington," urging Americans to
pressure their elected representatives to do the right thing to at least pass laws that might make it
more difficult for criminals and people with severe mental illness to buy guns. Please feel free to read
the President's speech below.
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Video: http://on.aol.com/video/obama--nra-willfully-lied-517748614
THE PRESIDENT: A few months ago, in response to too many tragedies — including the shootings
of a United States Congresswoman, Gabby Giffords, who's here today, and the murder of 20 innocent
schoolchildren and their teachers -- this country took up the cause of protecting more of our people
from gun violence.
Families that know unspeakable grief summoned the courage to petition their elected leaders -- not
just to honor the memory of their children, but to protect the lives of all our children. And a few
minutes ago, a minority in the United States Senate decided it wasn't worth it. They blocked common-
sense gun reforms even while these families looked on from the Senate gallery.
By now, it's well known that go percent of the American people support universal background checks
that make it harder for a dangerous person to buy a gun. We're talking about convicted felons, people
convicted of domestic violence, people with a severe mental illness. Ninety percent of Americans
support that idea. Most Americans think that's already the law.
And a few minutes ago, go percent of Democrats in the Senate just voted for that idea. But it's not
going to happen because go percent of Republicans in the Senate just voted against that idea.
A majority of senators voted "yes" to protecting more of our citizens with smarter background checks.
But by this continuing distortion of Senate rules, a minority was able to block it from moving forward.
I'm going to speak plainly and honestly about what's happened here because the American people are
trying to figure out how can something have go percent support and yet not happen. We had a
Democrat and a Republican -- both gun owners, both fierce defenders of our Second Amendment,
with "A" grades from the NRA — come together and worked together to write a common-sense
compromise on background checks. And I want to thank Joe Manchin and Pat Toomey for their
courage in doing that. That was not easy given their traditional strong support for Second Amendment
rights.
As they said, nobody could honestly claim that the package they put together infringed on our Second
Amendment rights. All it did was extend the same background check rules that already apply to guns
purchased from a dealer to guns purchased at gun shows or over the Internet. So 60 percent of guns
are already purchased through a background check system; this would have covered a lot of the guns
that are currently outside that system.
Their legislation showed respect for gun owners, and it showed respect for the victims of gun violence.
And Gabby Giffords, by the way, is both — she's a gun owner and a victim of gun violence. She is a
Westerner and a moderate. And she supports these background checks.
In fact, even the NRA used to support expanded background checks. The current leader of the NRA
used to support these background checks. So while this compromise didn't contain everything I
wanted or everything that these families wanted, it did represent progress. It represented moderation
and common sense. That's why go percent of the American people supported it.
But instead of supporting this compromise, the gun lobby and its allies willfully lied about the bill.
They claimed that it would create some sort of "big brother" gun registry, even though the bill did the
opposite. This legislation, in fact, outlawed any registry. Plain and simple, right there in the text. But
that didn't matter.
And unfortunately, this pattern of spreading untruths about this legislation served a purpose, because
those lies upset an intense minority of gun owners, and that in turn intimidated a lot of senators. And
I talked to several of these senators over the past few weeks, and they're all good people. I know all of
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them were shocked by tragedies like Newtown. And I also understand that they come from states that
are strongly pro-gun. And I have consistently said that there are regional differences when it comes to
guns, and that both sides have to listen to each other.
But the fact is most of these senators could not offer any good reason why we wouldn't want to make it
harder for criminals and those with severe mental illnesses to buy a gun. There were no coherent
arguments as to why we wouldn't do this. It came down to politics — the worry that that vocal
minority of gun owners would come after them in future elections. They worried that the gun lobby
would spend a lot of money and paint them as anti-Second Amendment.
And obviously, a lot of Republicans had that fear, but Democrats had that fear, too. And so they caved
to the pressure, and they started looking for an excuse — any excuse — to vote "no."
One common argument I heard was that this legislation wouldn't prevent all future massacres. And
that's true. As I said from the start, no single piece of legislation can stop every act of violence and
evil. We learned that tragically just two days ago. But if action by Congress could have saved one
person, one child, a few hundred, a few thousand — if it could have prevented those people from losing
their lives to gun violence in the future while preserving our Second Amendment rights, we had an
obligation to try.
And this legislation met that test. And too many senators failed theirs.
I've heard some say that blocking this step would be a victory. And my question is, a victory for who?
A victory for what? All that happened today was the preservation of the loophole that lets dangerous
criminals buy guns without a background check. That didn't make our kids safer. Victory for not
doing something that 90 percent of Americans, 8o percent of Republicans, the vast majority of your
constituents wanted to get done? It begs the question, who are we here to represent?
I've heard folks say that having the families of victims lobby for this legislation was somehow
misplaced. "A prop," somebody called them. "Emotional blackmail," some outlet said. Are they
serious? Do we really think that thousands of families whose lives have been shattered by gun violence
don't have a right to weigh in on this issue? Do we think their emotions, their loss is not relevant to
this debate?
So all in all, this was a pretty shameful day for Washington.
But this effort is not over. I want to make it clear to the American people we can still bring about
meaningful changes that reduce gun violence, so long as the American people don't give up on it. Even
without Congress, my administration will keep doing everything it can to protect more of our
communities. We're going to address the barriers that prevent states from participating in the existing
background check system. We're going to give law enforcement more information about lost and
stolen guns so it can do its job. We're going to help to put in place emergency plans to protect our
children in their schools.
But we can do more if Congress gets its act together. And if this Congress refuses to listen to the
American people and pass common-sense gun legislation, then the real impact is going to have to
come from the voters.
To all the people who supported this legislation — law enforcement and responsible gun owners,
Democrats and Republicans, urban moms, rural hunters, whoever you are — you need to let your
representatives in Congress know that you are disappointed, and that if they don't act this time, you
will remember come election time.
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To the wide majority of NRA households who supported this legislation, you need to let your
leadership and lobbyists in Washington know they didn't represent your views on this one.
The point is those who care deeply about preventing more and more gun violence will have to be as
passionate, and as organized, and as vocal as those who blocked these common-sense steps to help
keep our kids safe. Ultimately, you outnumber those who argued the other way. But they're better
organized. They're better financed. They've been at it longer. And they make sure to stay focused on
this one issue during election time. And that's the reason why you can have something that go percent
of Americans support and you can't get it through the Senate or the House of Representatives.
So to change Washington, you, the American people, are going to have to sustain some passion about
this. And when necessary, you've got to send the right people to Washington. And that requires
strength, and it requires persistence.
And that's the one thing that these families should have inspired in all of us. I still don't know how
they have been able to muster up the strength to do what they've doing over the last several weeks, last
several months.
And I see this as just round one. When Newtown happened, I met with these families and I spoke to
the community, and I said, something must be different right now. We're going to have to change.
That's what the whole country said. Everybody talked about how we were going to change something
to make sure this didn't happen again, just like everybody talked about how we needed to do
something after Aurora. Everybody talked about we needed change something after Tucson.
And I'm assuming that the emotions that we've all felt since Newtown, the emotions that we've all felt
since Tucson and Aurora and Chicago — the pain we share with these families and families all across
the country who've lost a loved one to gun violence — I'm assuming that's not a temporary thing. I'm
assuming our expressions of grief and our commitment to do something different to prevent these
things from happening are not empty words.
I believe we're going to be able to get this done. Sooner or later, we are going to get this right. The
memories of these children demand it. And so do the American people.
President Bars& Obama
We have to ask ourselves why there are people in America who believe that everyone in the country
should have access any type of guns, including military grade assault weapons and ammunition
which are use in the killing and wounding of tens of thousands of people in America each year,
(without background checks), when during this week no one thought that it was odd to completely
shutdown a city of more than a million people during a police hun₹for one 19 year-old suspect, who
was possibly wounded.
We also have to ask ourselves if the recent mayhem in Boston and the Newtown massacre four months
ago is the new normal. From Columbine to 9/11 to Fort Hood to Aurora to Oak Creek and the many
other events that were lost in the back pages of history, such as the mass shootings at the Empire State
Building, Clackamas, Seattle University, Oikos University in Oakland, Miami and Chardon, Ohio.... all
which happened last year. Obviously these types of bedlam have happened before, otherwise "going
postal" would not be part of the lexicon in the US. However, between the daily car chases being
shown on the local news, and the fact that it appears that an Elvis impersonator in Mississippi who
sent poison letters to President Obama and Senator Roger Wicker last week almost went unnoticed,
maybe there is a new normal. Obviously, Columbine was a wake-up call for most of America and 9/11,
followed by anthrax scares, interrupted by a plane crash in Queens and then by a would-b shoe and
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underwear bombers -- a cascade that somehow has left several generations forever aware that the
unthinkable is possible.
But the intensive search that unmasked the two main perpetrators (26-year-old Tamerlan Tsarnaev
and 19-year-old brother Dzhokhar Tsarnaev) of the Boston bombing and the gun fire captured on
cell-phone by local residents in Watertown, (just across the Charles Riverfrom Boston), on Thursday
night, causing government officials to place the entire city of Boston on lock-down while police and
authorities mounted an intense manhunt for Dzhokhar, after his older brother was killed -- it all
seemed usual for every television network and Internet blog to follow it detail to detail, malting it the
new normal, as they try to explain, compile and often softening the violence which dilutes the intensity
of the panic, allowing us to wake up to the latest news updates, press briefings and commentary from
experts and government officials as if we have learned something.
While the truth is that over and over all that we seem to have learned -- is that we can't protect our
children, that crazies will be crazy, that we can't guarantee tomorrow, that we should treasure today
because tomorrow is not guaranteed as some sort of violence, mayhem of police chase might happen in
your neighborhood. But what does this mean. This is not the first time we have been knocked off our
feet, and we are not the first generation to pick ourselves back up. That is normal. We will mourn and
grieve and re-calibrate. And like the Canadian Mounties' motto, "we always get our man," once
identified, it was just a matter of time before the Tasrnaev brothers were captured and/or killed and
within 48 hours of their identification both happened. Following this, we will demand of our
government for more protection. Then after a safe distance, we will try to assign the blame on Islamic
crazies, mental illness or brainwashing in Chechnya. And then we will demand that any prescribed
changes not affect our lives. This is the new normal, with the only difference from our past is that
today it is televised live Making it more familiar than ever. We live in a selfish violent culture
embraced by ignorance, anger, greed and intolerance, with an obvious disregard of the greater good,
and until we change this nothing else will. The new normal.
THIS WEEK's READINGS
The week environmental writer James Grubel, reported in Reuters - Summer Ice Melt In
Antarctica Is At The Highest Point In 1,000 Years, Researchers Say - that the summer ice
melt in parts of Antarctica is at its highest level in 1,000 years, adding new evidence of the impact of
global warming on sensitive Antarctic glaciers and ice shelves. Researchers from the Australian
National University and the British Antarctic Survey found data taken from an ice core also shows the
summer ice melt has been to times more intense over the past 5o years compared with 600 years ago.
"Ifs definitely evidence that the climate and the environment is changing in this part of Antarctica,"
lead researcher Nerilie Abram said. Abram and her team drilled a 364-metre (400-yard) deep ice core
on James Ross Island, near the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, to measure historical
temperatures and compare them with summer ice melt levels in the area. They found that, while the
temperatures have gradually increased by 1.6 degrees Celsius (2.9 degrees Fahrenheit) over 600 years,
the rate of ice melting has been most intense over the past 5o years.
That shows the ice melt can increase dramatically in climate terms once temperatures hit a tipping
point. "Once your climate is at that level where it is starting to go above zero degrees, the amount of
melt that will happen is very sensitive to anyfurther increase in temperature you may have," Abram
said. Robert Mulvaney, from the British Antarctic Survey, said the stronger ice melts are likely
responsible for faster glacier ice loss and some of the dramatic collapses from the Antarctic ice shelf
over the past 5o years. If this is true we may be pass the tipping point and who knows what the real
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consequences will be but if scientists are right the world's oceans will rise to unprecedented levels
creating havoc to island nations and coastal areas around the world.
******
In 2009 the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) started the process of creating a National
Broadband Plan by holding thirty-six public workshops held at the FCC and streamed online, which
drew more than 10,00o in-person or online attendees, provided the framework for the ideas contained
within the plan. These ideas were then refined based on replies to 31 public notices, which generated
some 23,000 comments totaling about 74,000 pages from more than 700 parties. The FCC also
received about 1,100 ex parte filings totaling some 13,000 pages and nine public hearings were held
throughout the country to further clarify the issues addressed in the plan which was released in 2010.
And although broadband has spread across most populated areas in America, not one American city
made the list of "fastest cities in the world" and as Blair Levin and Ellen Satterwhite wrote this week —
in The Washington Post - Thefastest way to speedy networks: ignore Uncle Sam —
there is no project of any joining the list in the foreseeable future.
In 2012 the fastest city in the US is Boston at 8.4 Mbps; fractionally ahead of North Bergen, NJ for
average connection speed. Jersey City, NJ came in third at 8.3 Mbps, Monterey Park, CA fourth at 8.2
Mbps and Clifton, NJ fifth at 8.o Mbps. And the fastest county in the world based on the average
connection speed, was South Korea coming in at 17.5 Mbps, in contrast the US ranked 13 at 5.8 Mbps.
In terms of the fastest cities in the world, Taegu, South Korea ranked first at 21.8 Mbps. In general,
Akamai found that cities in the Asia Pacific region held 69 of the top 100 spots on the list of fastest
cities in the world. Japan tops the list with 61, while there are 22 from the US. Needless to say this
should obviously concern us as the list means far more than simply being the fast. America needs a
critical mass of communities with world-leading bandwidth in order to develop the human capital
required to design, build, operate and, above all, innovate on top of the best networks in the world.
Like electricity a century ago, broadband is a foundation for economic growth, job creation, global
competitiveness and a better way of life. It is enabling entire new industries and unlocking vast new
possibilities for existing ones. It is changing how we educate children, deliver health care, manage
energy, ensure public safety, engage government, and access, organize and disseminate knowledge.
Fueled primarily by private sector investment and innovation, the American broadband ecosystem has
evolved rapidly. The number of Americans who have broadband at home has grown from eight million
in 2000 to nearly 200 million last year. Increasingly capable fixed and mobile networks allow
Americans to access a growing number of valuable applications through innovative devices.
But broadband in America is not all it needs to be. Approximately 100 million Americans do not have
broadband at home. Broadband-enabled health information technology (IT) can improve care and
lower costs by hundreds of billions of dollars in the coming decades, yet the United States is behind
many advanced countries in the adoption of such technology. Broadband can provide teachers with
tools that allow students to learn the same course material in half the time, but there is a dearth of
easily accessible digital educational content required for such opportunities. A broadband-enabled
Smart Grid could increase energy independence and efficiency, but much of the data required to
capture these benefits are inaccessible to consumers, businesses and entrepreneurs. And nearly a
decade after 9/11, our first-responders still lack a nationwide public safety mobile broadband
communications network, even though such a network could improve emergency response and
homeland security.
Last week Google announced that it is is bringing its Google Fiber product to Austin, the news that the
North Carolina Next Generation Network (NC NGN) project had eight bidders, and similar projects in
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communities including Chattanooga, Chicago, Seattle and Gainesville, suggest that local leaders are
starting to crack the code for how to drive network upgrades in their communities. What these efforts
have in common is leadership that understands that world-leading connectivity is the foundation for
future economic development and competitiveness. Though still nascent, anecdotal evidence is
mounting of success stories, from the bond rating increase Kansas City received (thanks in part to
Google Fiber), to the miraculous turnaround of Chattanooga, which as Tom Friedman reports has
changed the city from "a slowly declining and deflating urban balloon, to one of thefastest-growing
cities in Tennessee."
Local leaders are learning to build agreements with private enterprise that work for both the private
and public interests. These efforts lower deployment and operating costs as well as risk, while at the
same time creating numerous public benefits including attractive service levels and reasonable
consumer pricing. These agreements, in effect, are new versions of the social contracts that enabled
phone companies and cable companies to build out their networks in the last century. While the
network upgrade may seem to be only about speed, in actuality it will also drive other public
improvements as well. Expectations are that the upgrade Kansas City is now enjoying will result in
increased adoption of information technologies, more effective government use of broadband for
education, health care, public safety and other public goods — as well as creating competition.
Even with government assistance this type of build out does not work without private sector entities
willing to find a ways to provide abundant bandwidth. Google deserves much praise for leading the
charge, and the fact that the Research Triangle's NC NGN project received a number of bids —
including from the incumbent cable provider Time Warner Cable — suggests others are finally starting
to figure out the new math. Without a doubt, the build out of world class broadband should be a
priority in every community in America. And although companies such as Google and Time Warner
are leading the charge and the article suggesting that the private sector not wait — for the universal
deployment of state-of-the-art broadband — federal, state and local governments have to do
everything that they can to make its development attractive to the private sector, even if this means
direct investment and/or tax support. For more information, please feel free to read the Executive
Summary of the National Broadband Plan.
******
For decades, pharmaceutical companies have deployed an array of tactics aimed at preventing low-cost
copies of their drugs from entering the marketplace. And now the latest strategy is to use creative
interpretations of drug safety laws to make them illegal. The Federal Trade Commission recently
weighed in on a legal case over the tactic involving the drug maker Actelion, and earlier this month a
federal suit was filed in another case in Florida. "We definitely see this as a significant threat to
competition,"said Markus Meier, who oversees the commission's health care competition team.
The new approach is almost elegant in its simplicity: brand-name drug makers are refusing to sell their
products to generic companies, which need to analyze them so they can create the copycat versions.
Traditionally, the generic drug makers purchased samples from wholesalers. But because of safety
concerns, an increasing number of drugs are sold with restrictions on who can buy them, forcing the
generic manufacturers to ask the brand-name companies for samples. When they do, the brand-name
firms say no. Brand-name companies say they are protecting themselves — and patients — in case the
drugs are somehow used improperly. They say no law requires one company to do business with
another. While advocates for generic drugs say the practice could limit access to the low-cost drugs,
which they say have saved more than a trillion dollars over the last decade. They say the companies
that have most aggressively pursued the tactic tend to be those with drugs that are nearing the end of
their patent life.
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We are talking about huge dollars. Example: Actelion, a Swiss company, is withholding samples
of its flagship product, Tracleer, which treats a lung disorder. Its patent is set to expire in 2015. The
company's other product in question, Zavesca, has a patent that expires later this year. Tracleer costs
about $79,000 a year, while Zavesca costs about $229,000.
The issue has its roots in a 2007 law that allowed the Food and Drug Administration to require
detailed safety programs for drugs with serious side effects or the potential for abuse. In many cases,
those programs simply direct the company to educate doctors or patients about risks. But in other
cases, they require that distribution be limited to approved pharmacists and health care providers.
About 70 drugs carry mandatory drug safety plans, and of those, 34 have more restrictive
requirements, according to the F.D.A. Although the 2007 law said the programs should not be used to
block development of generic drugs, brand-name companies said the language was vague and began
restricting access to drug samples soon after it was passed.
In 2009, generic companies began complaining that Celgene had refused to sell them samples of
Thalomid, the drug better known as thalidomide that is now used to treat cancer and leprosy, and a
related drug, Revlimid. Lannett, a generic company, sued Celgene, claiming its practices were anti-
competitive, and the case was settled. The trade commission and the Connecticut attorney general
started investigations, which Celgene has said are still under way.
At least one company, Gilead Sciences, explicitly restricts access to samples. Pharmacies and other
institutions that buy its drug Letairis, which treats a serious lung condition, must agree not to "use
product in clinical trials or other studies without the prior written consent of Gilead Sciences,"
according to an order form sent to customers by Accredo, a specialty pharmacy that distributes Letairis
for Gilead. A spokesman for Gilead declined to comment.
Brand-name manufacturers are also limiting access to drugs even when the government does not
require it. In a federal lawsuit filed April 1 in Florida, Accord Healthcare, an Indian generics
manufacturer, said the drug company Acorda refused to turn over samples of its multiple sclerosis
drug Ampyra, even though there are no restrictions on its distribution. In a letter to Accord from
Acorda that was submitted to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, in
Fort Lauderdale, Acorda echoed other companies' positions and said it was under no obligation to sell
its products to another manufacturer. Apotex, a Canadian company, said the drug maker Novartis
denied it access to Tasigna, a leukemia drug, until Apotex threatened to sue. Another company,
Lundbeck, has so far declined to provide Apotex with samples of the drug Xenazine, which treats a
movement disorder caused by Huntington's disease. Julie Masow, a spokeswoman for Novartis, said
Apotex ultimately purchased samples of Tasigna through the drug's sole distributor. She said the delay
was the result of a misunderstanding, adding "generic companies arefree to buy Novartis products
through distribution channels."
Representatives of brand-name manufacturers say there are good reasons to restrict drugs to approved
pharmacies or health care providers. Lundbeck said it sells Xenazine, also known as tetrabenazine, to
a limited network of specialty pharmacies because it treats fewer than 25,000 people nationwide. `blot
many retail pharmacies would stock the productfor so small a patient populationfsaid Sally
Benjamin Young, a spokeswoman for Lundbeck. She said Lundbeck was seeking guidance on the issue
from regulators because "it is not clear under the applicable laws and regulations that Lundbeck is
permitted to sell tetrabenazine to any person or entity without a prescription."
Some within the industry have been forthright about how these drug safety programs can be turned to
a company's advantage. At a conference in 2010, one speaker delivered a presentation that listed life
cycle management options" as one benefit of such safety programs. "Life cycle management" is
industry jargon for maximizing the length of a brand's patent life. Obviously safety should be the #1
priority in the manufacturing pharmaceuticals. And it is important that drug companies protect their
intellectual property. But generic drugs are generally much cheaper than their branded counterparts
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allowing more people to have access to these life saving medicines. See Katie Thomas' article in the
New York Times — Drug Makers Use Sqfety Rule to Block Generics.
This week in The Washington Post Richard Cohen wrote — The gun bill's misdirection — he
points out that the Senate's gun control bill would do absolutely nothing to avoid another Newtown
massacre. Yes it would expand background checks and increase the penalty on illegal gun sales. But
remember — that the Bushmaster XM15-E2S rifle belonged to Nancy Lanza, the mother of 20 year-old
Adam Lanza. It was purchased perfectly legally. A shotgun was used by Adam to kill her. It too was
legal. He then used the Bushmaster at the school, reloading frequently. For some reason,
he didn't always expend all 3o rounds in the magazine but rather paused to reload. He also had two of
his mother's handguns, one of which he used to kill himself. The guns, after all, were not even his, so a
background check of Adam would never happen under the proposed law.
The other pertinent mass murder, the killing of 12 people in an Aurora, Colo., movie theater, also
entailed the use of legally purchased weapons — a Remington Model 870 shotgun, a Smith & Wesson
M&P 15 semi-automatic rifle and two Glock handguns. James Holmes bought them all — and 6,000
rounds for the Glocks and the Smith & Wesson — while he was seeking psychiatric treatment and
undergoing a clear psychological breakdown. Yet since he had never been convicted of a felony or
involuntarily institutionalized, he was entitled to his weapons — and would be under the proposed bill.
So much for background checks.
As Cohen says, every little bit helps. And if background checks can be extended to gun shows and
private-party transactions, this would be a benefit. So would better mental health programs. But
unless a patient comes to see a shrink armed like Pancho Villa, crossed bandoleers on the chest and
two pistols on the hips, nothing is likely to be done. Mental health experts are far from expert in
predicting violent behavior. Both Holmes and Lanza had been seen by experts — and Holmes's
university psychiatrist had, in fact, alerted campus police. They did nothing.
Obviously The Newtown and Aurora tragedies are, in fact, anomalies. They get our attention, but the
real threat to us all is day-in-day-out gun violence. Having an estimated 310 million firearms around
is a prescription for mayhem. The truth is that being killed by an assault rifle as rare as death by a
lightning strike. Handguns are a different story. Lets imagine them under the seat of the car that is
cut off or in the waistband of some kid who can't tell the difference between a "diss" and a lethal threat.
The sheer ubiquity of guns is frightening.
New York City has half the suicide rate of the nation a whole. Could this be because New Yorkers are
jolly, happy-go-lucky types, singing "Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah" as they pack themselves into the subway?
Nay. It is because very few New Yorkers have guns. In New York, only 12 percent of residents who
commit suicide use a gun. (They prefer hanging.) While west of the Hudson, the number is a robust
51 percent. "People who have ready access to guns are more likely to kill themselves with guns than
people who do not," said Thomas Farley, the city's commissioner for health (and tautologies), in a
news release. Usually, it's a good thing to make it difficult for people to kill themselves. In the
morning, inevitably, the sun comes up.
In 1959, Gallup reported that 60 percent of Americans favored a total handgun ban. Nine years later,
Milton Eisenhower, Dwight's younger brother and the former president of Johns Hopkins University,
proposed the confiscation of nearly all handguns. Today, only 24 percent of Americans would support
such a ban. The Milton Eisenhowers of our own time read the polls and go quiet or cheer the mere
consideration of a bill that would do very little. You could call it a beginning but, as we all must know,
it is really the end.
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And the argument that everyone in America should be armed for self-protection is a fairy tale as
Nancy Lanza was killed by her own gun and so are hundreds of Americans each year. Finally the 2nd
Amendment myth, that we (Joe/Jane public) need access to firearms to insure that an overbearing
government doesn't take away our freedoms — when the truth is that the only way to protect our
collective liberty is with the ballot box and free speech under the 1st Amendment. If we really want to
end gun violence, we need to get rid of guns.
Anything less is smoke and mirror.... And a watered down Public Safety Second Amendment Bill will
do nothing to make sure that Newtown, Aurora, Oak Creek, Carson City, Grand Rapids, Tucson,
Manchester, Fort Hood, Binghamton, DeICalb, Omaha, Blacksburg, Meteor, Wakefield, Honolulu, Fort
Worth and Littleton/Columbine.... How many more mass shootings or simple homicides by firearms
do we need before Americans and our elected officials see that gun violence has to seriously be
addressed and more guns are not the answer. As for those of you who believe that having a gun in
one's home provides protection, the CDC did a comprehensive study that concluded that having a gun
in one's home increased by three times the chances that someone in that home would die, ie Nancy
and Adam Lanza. The truth is that other then gang violence or the occasional crazed person going
postal, most people are killed by people who they know and many by family members, which should
end the myth of gun ownership for self-protection. We don't allow people to keep hand grenades,
dynamite or poison gas in their homes, so why in the 21st Century are we afraid to ban guns which kill
more people than any of the aforementioned combined?
******
As Arianna Huffington wrote this week in the Huffington Post — The Jobs Crisis: It May Not
Be "Breaking News," But It's Definitely "Broken News" — one of the major stories — our
still broken economy — has been lost in the media, and this was before the tragic bombings in Boston
which now dominates the headlines and lead stories. Yes, gun control, immigration and the current
North Korean machinations are important, as Arianna Huffington points out, on the news programs
last Sunday, virtually unmentioned was the economy and the long-term jobs disaster that's been
enveloping the country for five years now. It is hard to believe that what the Center on Budget and
Policy Priorities calls the "longest, and by most measures worst economic recession since the Great
Depression" didn't warrant a mention on shows ostensibly devoted to the biggest news stories last
Sunday.
And just because it is not new news it doesn't mean our broken economy should not be a top priority.
Think about it, there were only 88,000 new jobs were produced last month, and the only reason the
unemployment rate ticked down to a still-alarming 7.6 percent is because so many people left the work
force altogether, which sent the labor force participation rate down to 63.3 percent, the lowest point
since 1979. If we were to include in the calculations those who have given up looking for work, the
unemployment rate would actually be 9.8 percent. As of February, there were 12 million workers
officially unemployed, but only 3.9 million job openings, which means a little over three unemployed
job seekers for every open job. And of the nearly nine million jobs lost during the recession, only about
six million have been recovered, leaving us with nearly three million fewer jobs than we had at the
beginning of the economic downturn. At the current rate of growth, we're not due to get back to full
employment until around 2020.
And even for those who have found jobs, it's still a "BROKEN"story. As Jed Graham of Investor's
Business Daily writes, 'As bad as the current job recovery has been -- and it's byfar the weakest
since World War II -- the recovery in wages has beenfar worse." Graham notes that in the last
recession, in 2001, the wage recession lasted only two and half years, much less than the four-year jobs
recession that accompanied it. In that recession, at the point where we are now, relative to the start of
our current recession, wages were up 8 percent over their previous high. But not this time. Graham
cites a study last year that found that low-wage jobs made up 21 percent of this recession's losses but a
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whopping 58 percent of the recovered jobs. Which is one reason why real annual median household
income continues to fall, most recently to just over $45,000 -- down from around $51,144 in 2010.
The America's middle-class jobs have been decimated since 2007, replaced largely by low-wage jobs.
According to the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, when middle class workers lose their jobs
and find new ones at lower wages, over the next 25 years they'll earn an average of 11 percent less than
workers who kept their jobs. And since our so-called recovery started, almost 4o percent of new jobs
have come in low-wage areas like food service, retail and clerical jobs. For the long-term unemployed,
the situation is verging on hopeless. According to The Atlantic's Matthew O'Brien, the long-term
unemployment picture is "the scariest thing in the world." It's an alternate economy, he writes, that's
"horribly dysfunctional" -- and comes with consequences for the entire country. "The worst possible
outcome for all of us is if the long-term unemployed become unemployable," he writes. "That would
permanently reduce our productive capacity."
In fact, given our lack of recovery so many years after the start of the recession, that permanent
reduction might already be happening. In the last quarter of last year, our actual GDP was around
$975 billion less than the potential GDP our economy has the capacity for. Nearly a trillion dollar gap.
A consequence is that there are currently 46 million Americans living in poverty, over 16 million of
them children. "Yet," as HuffPost's Jennifer Bendery writes, "the issue has all but disappearedfrom
the legislative agenda in Congress as lawmakersfocus squarely on deficit reduction. President
Obama, too, has been largely silent on the issue, and has even proposed cutting Social Security -- a
key toolfor combating poverty." To Rep. Marcia Fudge, an Ohio Democrat who is also chairwoman of
the Congressional Black Caucus, it's "unfathomable" that the issue isn't "at the top of everybody's
priority list" Though it's a bit more fathomable when it's not at the top, or even the bottom, of any of
our Sunday news shows.
We have to make sure that poverty and the jobs crisis is a national priority and not just how big of an
austerity hit that we are going to impose on ourselves. According to the CBO, the sequester and payroll
tax hikes could cut growth by 1.5 percent over the course of this year . "Unless the government takes
steps to boost growth, we will be seeing millions of people needlessly denied employmentfor over a
decade," writes Dean Baker. "That should be the centralfocus of everyone in Washington." Somehow
it is hard to imagine our jobs disaster will get the attention -- and the solutions -- it deserves if our
media doesn't think it's a story worth telling. Arianna Huffington: I know it's not "BREAKING
NEWS!" but it's "BROKEN NEWS" to the tens of millions whose lives are still being turned upside
down by it.
******
This week Burton Newman starts his article - The NRA's Fraud: Fabrication ofSecond
Amendment Rights - in The Huffington Post with the Second Amendment in the U.S.
Constitution - "A well-regulated Militia being necessary to the security of afree state,
the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." Following the Sandy
Hook massacre, gun rights, gun laws and the Second Amendment have been the subject of a national
dialogue. Any discussion of these topics is severely tainted by calculated messaging by the NRA to
deceive and mislead our citizens to believe that the Second Amendment grants far reaching gun rights
which have not and do not exist. The Second Amendment became part of our constitution in 1791.
For well over two centuries the Supreme Court never decided that the Amendment granted a
constitutional right to individuals to bear arms. The widely held notion that such a right existed was a
myth fabricated by the NRA for its own self interest and for the corporate profits of gun
manufacturers. This fabrication altered the mindset of most Americans to accept fictional Second
Amendment rights that permitted the proliferation of all manner and kind o
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