There
is a connection between the degradation of the human environment and
the cost of the medications that will mitigate, if not cure, the
maladies caused by impure drinking water, dirty and toxic air, and
food that is grown in soil that is depleted of its nourishing
qualities, and Big Pharma is raising the prices seemingly on a daily
basis.
How
much of the connection between the cause and the cure is intentional
and how much is just a by-product of a capitalist “free market”
system? That is the question that should be on the minds of every
person who enters a pharmacy to buy prescription drugs. Everyone who
is overtaken by the “epidemics” of diabetes, heart
disease, cancer, and other typical American maladies should be asking
one question. Why?
And
the other question is: Why does it cost so much for medications that
cause people who are ailing to choose between eating and paying rent,
and buying the needed drugs? There are people who routinely have to
choose between the necessities of life and what purports to be
life-saving drugs? For many, it's a decision made on a daily basis.
As
for the first question, just look at the environmental degradation
that is rampant in the U.S. For generations, the rivers and many
lakes of the nation were used as sewers, as if the toxins and filth
that were poured into them by industries and municipalities would
have no effect. After all, they eventually flowed into the oceans
and weren't they vast enough to absorb it all? We're seeing the
answer to that now, with threats of extinction of marine life on a
scale never seen since humans walked the earth. It's that walking on
the earth by humans that has caused the demise of species on a scale
that has not been seen for millions of years. In the aggregate,
there is very little clean drinking water in the U.S.
Destruction
of the forest cover of the earth, especially the rainforests, has
damaged the “lungs of the earth,” so that they do not
purify the air as they did for eons before human activity, especially
since the industrial revolution. The relentless massive use of
chemicals for fertilizing and protecting the plants from pests and
disease has depleted the soil such that the food that is forced from
the ground does not contain the nutrients that are needed to keep
people healthy. Those chemicals are toxic to most living things,
including the eaters of that food. Even though the quality of the
food is not as good as in generations past, there are millions in the
U.S. who are food insecure, if not starving. Food insecurity means
that a family wonders every day where their next meal is coming from,
and we do not count fast food as a substitute for nutritious meals.
One answer to the corporate food that is presented to the people is
organic farming and gardening, but that method still is a very small
portion of U.S. agriculture.
Considering
that it will take years for that kind of change in the country's food
system, if it ever comes to pass, 325 million people will have to
depend on the big business of prescription drugs, which are more and
more priced out of the ability of wage working men and women to pay.
They sometimes don't fill the prescription, or they cut their pills
in half, or they skip days. Or, they just don't take any
medications, preferring to feed their children or grandchildren or
keep a roof over their heads. Why are the drugs out of sight in
price?
Dean
Baker, a macroeconomist and founder of the Center for Economic and
Policy Research in Washington, D.C., has ideas about curing the
constant rise of drug prices. He wrote recently, “The first
one, 'The Prescription Drug Price Relief Act,' would end the patent
monopoly for any drug that sold for a price exceeding the median
price in five other major countries: Canada, the United Kingdom,
France, Germany, and Japan. This would allow large savings since drug
prices in these countries are roughly half as much as in the United
States. Drug companies would have a choice of either lowering their
prices or losing their patent monopoly.”
Another
bill in Congress now would allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices
with pharmaceutical companies and, as Baker pointed out, since
Medicare spends about $100 billion a year on drugs, it would give the
government program great bargaining power to lower prices. The U.S.
Veterans Administration, while it does not negotiate as the term is
understood, but it has ways of buying its drugs at a lower rate than
that which the general public is forced to pay. Negotiation,
however, would be a great benefit to the people. Also, because drugs
very often are much cheaper in other countries, a bill has been
introduced that would allow everyone to import drugs from those
countries that, as Baker noted, have comparable safety standards on
drugs as the U.S.
Big
Pharma is sure to bring out its big guns, many of whom have been in
government, either as elected officials or have worked in the very
agencies that are supposed to regulate monopolistic industries like
the pharmaceutical corporations. And, be sure that those
corporations will open their formidable war chests of money that they
have received from their overpriced drugs.
The
pharmaceuticals are not the only ones who fleece the people. They
just take from the percentage of the population that has health
insurance and try to get their outrageous prices from individuals who
have no insurance. What wage-working man or woman can pay $1,000 a
dose for medicine? Who can pay $10,000 a dose? Their television
commercials tell the audience that, if they can't pay, there is help
available, but that “help” is not going to come close to
paying such high prices. Drug prices must come down, if people are
going to try to survive in a degraded environment.
One
example of the way people are being sickened is to study the
statistics of ground water and the pollution of that water and the
water that is taken from lakes and rivers. There is little to drink
that has not been tainted by various chemicals, most of which are
there without the peoples' knowledge. A year ago, USAToday reported,
“The problem of
contaminated drinking water extends far beyond Flint, Mich. A study
found tens of millions of Americans could be exposed to unsafe
drinking water in any given year, consuming a wide spectrum of
contaminants, including fecal coliform, lead and arsenic. In 2015,
nearly 21 million people relied on community water systems that
violated health-based quality standards, according to the study,
published (in February 2018) in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.”
While
corporations across the country are contaminating water supplies, the
U.S. Military poisons groundwater with impunity. According to World
Without War (WWW), “America is experiencing one of the greatest
public health crises in its history with up to 110 million people
potentially exposed to drinking water contaminated with Per and Poly
Fluoroalkyl Substances, or PFAS. A major source of the chemical
contamination comes from the aqueous film forming foam (AFFF) used in
routine fire-training on military bases. The military allows the
poisons to leach into the groundwater to contaminate neighboring
communities which use groundwater in their wells and municipal water
systems.”
WWW
pointed out that the Pentagon “assumes no liability and refuses
to pay for cleaning up the contamination it has caused.” In
just one aspect of military operations, firefighting, Army Col.
Andrew Wiesen, the Department of Defense's director of preventive
medicine for the Office of Health Affairs, told the Marine Corps
Times, “We don't do the primary research in this area...the EPA
(Environmental Protection Agency) is responsible for that.”
The
U.S. Military has been widely reported (when it is reported at all)
to be one of the most egregious polluters wherever it exists and the
U.S. has some 800 bases around the world. If they feel that they can
be so cavalier in its leaving trails of poison in its home country,
imagine how they must treat people near its bases around the world,
especially the poor countries whose inhabitants are reviled by the
U.S. president, Donald Trump. Since the military mind runs to dreams
and plans of conquest, no one should be surprised at the U.S.
services' attitude about their spreading pollutants and toxins
liberally on the earth.
That
attitude is merely a reflection of Trump's perverted view that the
earth is for exploitation without end and that nothing should stand
in the way of making profit. And, that's the sole purpose of
corporations in the U.S.: Making profits for shareholders...without
end. Consequently, to make it possible for companies to do that,
unfettered, he put Scott Pruitt in charge of the EPA. Pruitt, as
attorney general of Oklahoma, sued the EPA time and again to bring an
end to regulations that protected the people and the planet, but
hampered Corporate America from making their accustomed obscene
profits.
In
agency after agency after federal department, it's what Trump did in
his nominations and appointments. He named people to posts whose
main purpose was to destroy the effectiveness of the agency they
supposedly were to lead. It's what Trump, as president, set out to
do and what he has done every day of his presidency: Contamination
of water and air and soil and adding to the worst mass extinction the
world has seen in millions of years. All of this is less than than
the tip of the Trumpian iceberg, but he doesn't care as long as money
can be made by the rich through his efforts. What he doesn't seem to
have noticed is that humans are a part of what is being destroyed and
he has visited even more suffering on the American people.
Worst
thing is that he seems incapable of understanding, but, if he does
understand yet continues to act in the manner in which he's acted in
the first two years of his presidency, he's mad.
|