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To: EKrusling
When you get a bad chip from AMD you can return it for a working one, and no harm is done. Some time and money are lost at the very worst. When drugs are made poorly, folks tend to end up dead or disabled.

Selling products at different prices in different markets is a common practice, and is not a problem so long as buyers have a countervailing right to shop around for the best deal. Neither is there anything unique about the safety issue with drugs either. A large percentage of the products we import are potentially dangerous. When we import a shank of New Zealand lamb or a Mercedes, we need to be concerned about product safety. Many products need to be tariffed and inspected, but we still routinely import them. The one exception is medications.

Were you aware that Clinton carved out a special exemption from the drug import ban for homosexuals? Yep - if you're of that politically-important minority, you get a free pass to order medication by mail from overseas. Why don't the rest of us have this right too?

44 posted on 05/08/2007 12:28:02 PM PDT by BlazingArizona
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To: BlazingArizona
Neither is there anything unique about the safety issue with drugs either. A large percentage of the products we import are potentially dangerous. When we import a shank of New Zealand lamb or a Mercedes, we need to be concerned about product safety. Many products need to be tariffed and inspected, but we still routinely import them. The one exception is medications.

A manufactured good has a place of origin which can be traced. The safety of an entire product line can be appraised from a fraction of the whole lot. If a portion of the line is defective in some way, other units can be identified as potentially defective and recalled.

Food items lie somewhere between pharmaceuticals and manufactured goods. Appropriately, importation of food is restricted somewhat less than drugs, but more than most other products. Beef, for instance, has posed a particularly significant health risk in recent years and its import has been limited by point of origin.

Your comparison is misleading because drugs are unique among products. It is not the case that all drugs used in this country must be manufactured here. If a pharmaceutical company makes their product somewhere else it can usually be brought here, subject to quality control similar to domestic drugs. What is currently banned is reimportation -- import of drugs which are not factory-direct, that have exchanged hands several times and have not been monitored for tampering in that in-between time. It is simple to turn a profit by adulterating them in some way, actual concentration and date of expiration is easily disguised, and it is difficult distinguish the origin of one lot of a drug when compared to another.

Now it might be fair to reimport drugs with inspection. However, in my own opinion, anything less than an assay of every single reimported unit would be inadequate.
49 posted on 05/08/2007 7:11:17 PM PDT by EKrusling
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