How To Kill 300,000 Americans (And Get Away With It)

Authored by Trey Goff via The Mises Institute,

If someone wanted to kill 300,000 Americans and get away with it, they could not have accomplished it more effectively than our government has accomplished it with the opioid epidemic.

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/2018-02-18_7-52-19.jpg?itok=GNgDr_mE

If someone— let’s say good old Uncle Sam—wanted to kill 300,000 Americans, they would go about it as detailed in this step-by-step guide. This also just so happens to be precisely how our government did go about it.

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Step 1 – In 1996, Uncle Sam would award a 17-year government patent monopoly to Purdue Pharma to be the exclusive supplier of OxyContin, an addictive and potentially deadly opioid painkiller. This would ensure that they had a massive multi-billion-dollar profit incentive to get as many people addicted as possible without any generic competition to keep this profit motive in check.

Step 2 – To further fuel the use of OxyContin, Uncle Sam would cover the cost of it through Medicaid and Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI). This would ensure that there were billions of dollars available to fund the purchase of massive quantities of the addictive and potentially deadly substance.

Step 3- For further assurance more people become dependent on opioids, Uncle Sam would enact growth-retardant public policies such as mountains of regulation and exorbitant taxation, exacerbating the link between depression, poverty, and opioid dependence.

Step 4 – Uncle Sam would make pain the “fifth vital sign” and financially penalize any hospital that got poor reviews or ratings for not adequately treating pain, encouraging hospitals to hand out opioids like candy.

Step 5 – Uncle Sam would ban medical marijuana, depriving those in pain of a viable non-opioid alternative.

Step 6 – Uncle Sam would allow doctors to be sued for medical malpractice for not adequately treating pain, ensuring they prescribed even more opioids.

Step 7 – Uncle Sam would then move many opioid painkillers to Schedule 2, which would prohibit refills. This would ensure that doctors prescribed a 30-day supply for patients that needed a 3-days’ supply, just to “keep the patient from having to come back to get a new prescription if they need it.”

Step 8 – Uncle Sam would then allow the profit motive of the patent monopoly, the free money of Medicaid and SSDI, the “fifth vital sign,” and the fear of being sued for medical malpractice to continue to fuel an increase in OxyContin prescriptions until the year 2010, leaving many millions of Americans addicted to opioids.

After having created a sufficiently massive pool of addicted individuals, it would then be time to turn the “prescription epidemic” into an “overdose epidemic” and drive the death rate up into the stratosphere.

Step 9 – Knowing that many of the millions of OxyContin users were crushing the pills and snorting them, Uncle Sam would go to Purdue Pharma and convince them that they needed to make OxyContin “abuse-deterrent” by making the pills difficult to crush. This would cause a large number of people who were currently crushing the pills and snorting them to start instead melting the pills and injecting them (which is much more dangerous and deadly). This change would also cause many of the users to switch to heroin since it is cheaper and more available than prescription opioids. This would start the process of killing as many of the addicted as possible.

Step 10 – Uncle Sam would then demand that Purdue Pharma remove the old formulation of OxyContin from the market. Considering that Purdue Pharma’s monopoly patent was about to run out, they would be all too happy to oblige and get a brand-new patent on the abuse-deterrent formula, effectively restarting the 17-year monopoly period. Uncle Sam would also prohibit generic versions of the old, crushable formulation since that would allow a crushable generic to remain on the market, which would render the abuse-determine formula superfluous, undermining the efforts to get people to switch to injection and/or heroin.

Step 11 – Knowing that the death rate would rise as people switch to injecting and to heroin, Uncle Sam would then steadily reduce the supply of legal prescription opioids, leaving the millions of Americans that were already addicted with no place to go other than heroin and injection drug use. Uncle Sam would do this by threatening or prosecuting doctors who “prescribed too much.” Uncle Sam would also recommend or mandate the use of Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMP’s) and drug tests to catch and shut off anyone who appeared to be using more opioids than the state-sanctioned arbitrary cutoff amount.

Step 12 – Uncle Sam would also ban doctors from prescribing opioids as maintenance therapy or for gradually tapering patients off, and require doctors to abruptly cut off anyone they suspected of using too many opioids.

Step 13 – Uncle Sam would further decrease the supply of legal opioids for those already addicted by mandating a constant year-over-year reduction in the prescriptions of opioids.

Step 14 – To increase the death rate even further, Uncle Sam would ensure that the Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) options that work, like Buprenorphine (Suboxone) and Methadone, were so heavily regulated and controlled that they were effectively unavailable to the vast majority of addicted Americans. Uncle Sam would also require “prior authorization” by managed care providers to ensure that it took as much as four weeks to get Medication Assisted Treatment. This would ensure that the vast majority of opioid users switched to injection and street heroin before their MAT prescription could be filled. Uncle Sam would also send opioid users to prison or abstinence-only rehab where they would be forced to detox cold-turkey. This would ensure that the patient’s opioid tolerance decreased to the point that when the patient came back from prison or rehab, the patient would easily overdose. Uncle Sam would also ban the use of Medication Assisted Treatment in most drug court programs, also ensuring low opioid tolerance and a high risk that relapse would result in death.

Step 15 – Uncle Sam would ban supervised consumption facilities, ensuring that drug use happened alone, unsupervised, and beyond the reach of most first-responders.

Step 16 – After vast numbers of Americans had switched to injection drug use and street heroin, and were using drugs alone and unsupervised, Uncle Sam would then make the street drugs as deadly as possible. Uncle Sam would do this by “cracking down” on the supply side of heroin, knowing full well that illegal drug manufacturers would respond by making their drugs ever more potent, or finding ultra-potent additives to substitute into their street drugs to decrease the size and weight of the trafficked substance (this is known as the Iron Law of Prohibition). That would ensure that heroin was laced with fentanyl (a substance 100 times more potent than morphine) and that eventually fentanyl was replaced by the even more potent carfentanil (a substance 10,000 times more powerful than morphine). Uncle Sam would then ban drug checking under drug paraphernalia laws, ensuring users had no idea if the substance they were about to use was laced with fentanyl. With each increase in potency and adulteration, the death rate would continue to climb higher, and higher, and higher.

There you have it: the perfect guide to killing at least 300,000 people and getting away with it. It is an absolute tragedy that this also happens to be the precise course of action the US government has taken over the past few decades to create this perfect storm of addiction and death.

Heightening the tragic nature of the crisis is the fact that the government was entirely unaware that the consequences of each step in this plan would lead to the eventual death toll currently mounting in America. This was by no means an intentional, deliberate plan to kill people; however, kill people is exactly what it has done.

It is also worth noting that, although these governmental actions listed above take the lion’s share of the blame for the problem, I am by no means asserting that other factors were not at play. Purdue Pharma clearly deserves much blame for making billions of dollars intentionally rendering people addicted and steadily supplied with opioids. Doctors deserve some blame for blindly following prescriber guidelines without reference to the unique situation of each patient. The economic malaise we currently face that has so exacerbated this crisis is the result of an astoundingly complex myriad of factors that extend far beyond just government meddling in the marketplace.

Still, though, the fact remains that the United States government has enacted and pursued a variety of policies that are directly, tangibly responsible for the severity and intensity of this crisis. It is not a stretch to say the opioid crisis would not exist were it not for the government actions listed above.

In light of this realization, a sharp change in the course of policy is in order. The government can take some actions to immediately alleviate many of the problems it has caused:

  • Follow the recommendations of Human Rights Watch and end the drug war immediately. Although there are a plethora of other reasons to do this, addicted individuals need medical care, not jail time, and bringing the drug trade out of the shadow economy and into the formal market would solve many of the consistency, purity, and quality problems currently causing so many of the deadly overdoses.
  • Along with ending the drug war, legalize supervised consumption facilities so that addicted individuals can utilize the drugs under safe, clean conditions, enabling them to lead relatively normal lives. These have been wildly successful in other parts of the world.
  • Abolish all intellectual property laws, especially patent and copyright laws, immediately. Not only does intellectual property stymie economic prosperity and innovation to an astounding degree, but it is also philosophically incoherent. Without a patent on Oxycotin restricting the supply of alternatives and generics, the opioid crisis would never have occurred in the first place.
  • Considering the admittedly difficult prospect of ending IP law, a good intermediary solution could be to abolish all patents on addictive substances. This would prevent the creation of the circumstances wherein a firm like Purdue Pharma can so aggressively market their product and have such an outsize influence on the formation of medical policies. This would also have the happy side effect of massively increasing the levels of innovation of new, more effective drugs in the pharmaceutical industry.
  • Remove all legal restrictions on the use of medication-assisted treatment programs for opioid dependency so that people can receive the help they truly need.
  • Remove any and all legally enforceable prescriber guidelines (especially laws against maintenance therapy doses) so that doctors are free to adjust their prescribing habits about the latest peer-reviewed guidelines and the unique circumstances of each
  • Abolish Medicare and SSDI entirely, allowing mutual aid societies to re-emerge and innovative market healthcare solutions to take their place.
  • Alternatively, reform these entitlement programs to preclude the use of government funds to purchase addictive substances.

Although many of these solutions sound quite radical, it takes a radical solution to rectify a radical problem of this magnitude. It’s time to stop pursuing the same failed policies that created this crisis in the first place. It’s time to start for the government to start saving lives instead of ending them.

 

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29 Comments
Iska Waran
Iska Waran
February 18, 2018 1:06 pm

When I left the hospital last year after five days in intensive care, with four broken ribs and a severed collarbone, they gave me 7 OxyContin pills to last 7 days and let me know that at most I could get it refilled for one more 7 day stretch.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Iska Waran
February 18, 2018 2:28 pm

But, your personal provider could get you more … that’s all the hospital was going to ok.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
  Iska Waran
February 18, 2018 4:27 pm

I was told more or less the same after ankle surgery….twice. When the first surgery failed and left me worse off I went back to the surgeon. He shrugged his shoulders and said: “I can get you some narcotics”. I saved those oxy’s in case I ever get shot and it it hurts real bad.

After the second surgery, which worked, I took two oxy’s. One for the 9 hour ride home and one the next morning when it felt like my ankle was being crushed. Turned out the cast had slipped down so the narrowest part of the cast was now squeezing the most tender part of my ankle. I used a belt round the bottom of the cast to pull it back up and the pain stopped immediately. Never took another oxy. That shit is fucked up and that’s coming from a guy who used heroin/opium and other narcotics recreationally. Those two surgeries were my first and only experience with oxy. I’d much rather take heroin.

Maggie
Maggie
February 18, 2018 1:11 pm

It is an astounding problem which might require drastic solution.

Is it any relation to the issue that there is such an increase in heroin poppy production in some areas of the world? Hmmmm. Where did I see a chart about that somewhere with some information about soldiers standing guard?

rhs jr
rhs jr
February 18, 2018 1:15 pm

Every cranny of the social and medical community in Florida has testified this session that millions more dollars must be added to the state HHS etc budget because of this addiction (on top of all the AIDS and STD costs). Each addict needs $1,000 of medicine alone per month forever. We also have a huge Dope industry growing up here and constant hearings about what the state must do yesterday to help; and Dopers demanding their rights to smoke Dope. This is Capitalism and Liberalism gone totally berserk. The last thing we needed to do was throw the barn door open to Dope and Dopers. The NYC “Investors” will reap billions and the taxpayers will reap The Whirlwind. If God doesn’t send a couple Liberals on the SCOTUS to Hell soon and Trump replace them with people with good sense, they will make it The Law of The Land: destroying your own brain with Dope etc is Freedom of Speech and speaking out against Dope is not a Freedom of Speech (but is Hate Speech especially if you also happen to be a Christian).

starfcker
starfcker
  rhs jr
February 18, 2018 3:02 pm

It’s time to figure out a way to crush all these liberal “institutes.” We don’t need bow-tied wankers writing articles like this and then coming up with these genius solutions. We have too many junkies, so let’s abolish all patent law (wut???) and figure out ways to make life more plush for junkies. Liberalism is a mental disorder.

Stucky
Stucky
February 18, 2018 1:36 pm

Really??? Someone in our Ass Klown gooberment is THAT smart to even draw up that convoluted SIXTEEN STEP plan …. and then successfully implement it …. all for the purpose oh killing 300k Americans??

Ok, whatever. Let’s blame the government … it soooo easy. And, it feels gooooood.

Lemme tell you the REAL reason there’s an opiod epedemic. Listen closely, cuz apparently no one else knows this. It’s because of the STUPID MOTHERFUCKERS WHO MISUSE THE DRUG TO GET HIGH!!

It’s no different than libtards blaming guns for gun violence. No difference at all!

Meanwhile, people who honestly NEED the medicine … like, my mom who has crippling and painful bone degeneration, and would go crazy from the pain without her Tramadol …. well, those people are forced to jump through time consuming and expensive hoops to get their medicine. Oh, and now they only give a 30 day supply — it used to be 90 days. So, legitimate patients need to go through this shit every fucking month!!

Yeah, I’m so glad this fucking government is doing something. Where would we be without their caring ways?

Maggie
Maggie
  Stucky
February 18, 2018 1:57 pm

There is precedent in doing some pre-invasion therapy … how many times has opium been used to enslave the underclass in order to overthrow social norms? You will find some of the most decadent behavior known to mankind in opium dens and you will find some important men there involved in the money end of it all.

Realestatepup
Realestatepup
  Stucky
February 18, 2018 2:50 pm

I agree. I have a friend with a severed muscle from a surgery gone bad that leaves her in constant pain and reduced mobility. She has used her opioid prescription correctly for over 1o years yet also must jump through hoops to get them.
Most people are over-prescribed for injuries that only require opioids for about 5-7 days for SEVERE pain, and then after a healing period, could step down to motrin or tylenol in conjunction with heat therapy.
When I was 12, I had my appendix removed. The pain was bad after surgery for about 3 days. After that, I really only needed tylenol. I had an abscessed tooth…now THAT hurt like hell and I was taking Norcos 4 times a day until the root canal, then I didn’t need anything. The norcos made me sick and dizzy, but the paint was worse.
People in real pain, constant intensity pain, do not get addicted, at least that was what we were taught in nursing school back in the 90’s.
I find anyone who I run into who is not really in chronic pain has more of a psychological addiction going on, and even the thought they might go without triggers something, and I have seen these people supposedly go through “withdrawal” that basically is them having anxiety about the meds, not true withdrawal like flu-like symptoms, sweats, bone pain, throwing up, etc.
Now anytime you get hurt for real or have real dental pain every Doc or dentist treats you like a drug seeker and runs you through this list of questions like you are a criminal.
On another note, I have a family member who has been on Methadone (100 MG a day which is a lot) for over 20 years. He’s on a ton of meds like Seroquel and Xanax, and basically leads a useless life of doing nothing in a drug-induced stupor. Sure, he’s not buying heroin, but given his current existence, what does it matter? He hasn’t held a job in 15 years. Every time his docs have tried to step him down he cries “anxiety” and they put him right back up there. Plus his health is so rotten from years of bad food, smoking, and all the other meds he now has high blood pressure and it’s actually dangerous to step him down.
Watch the documentary “Methadonia”. It’s just another racket to get money from the government. They don’t want you to stop, or reduce. They want you on it for life.
Withdrawal sucks, absolutely. But which will you remember more? Sweating and puking with your bones aching for 3-7 days or blithely showing up at the “clinic” for your dose every morning and then skipping off to breakfast with your clinic klatch?
Opioids are just one facet of the shit triangle that is the US Pharma business.

Maggie
Maggie
  Realestatepup
February 18, 2018 3:00 pm

the other two?

Mad as hell
Mad as hell
  Stucky
February 19, 2018 10:46 am

Could not agree more with Stucky! Dead on. This is yet another story of unintended consequences. Just like every other thing the government sticks their nose in that is not specifically defined by the US Constitution as a job of government.
I propose we don’t need all of the list of changes the author lists, we just need to simply get the government – Federal, State, Local etc. OUT OF THE BUSINESS OF BUSINESS AND PERSONAL MORALITY. Period.
This is very simple. If a drug user breaks the law – IE; robs a home, then they are arrested for burglary. If a drug user kills someone – they get arrested for murder. There is no NEED for the drug laws. We already have all of the laws, and then some, to keep the peace, even in a 100% drug legal society. Like the ridiculous hate crimes, and terrorism crimes, which were simply created by some self serving politician that has to prove to his constituency that he / she is “doing something”. Whether a person is killed by someone using drugs, or high on Islam makes no damn difference – the victim is still just as dead.
These command and control do-gooders, like AG – moral high ground at gunpoint – Session’s with their ridiculous logic that somehow a drug user killing someone is worse than a psycho killing someone, and we need more laws and more “enforcement”, are as flawed as the gun grabbers that swear if we just get guns out of everyone’s hands, somehow we will all live in peace and sing together in paradise. These asshats are either grand standing liars, or hopelessly naive.
Bottom line – less government in all aspects of people’s personal choices is better for everyone.

Maggie
Maggie
February 18, 2018 2:50 pm

You wanna know something CRAZY, Stucky? Something that will really piss you off?

Well, if NOT, then quit reading.

My big dog, Jacob, second born and favored child now, has arthritis in his knees due to his being a giant dachshund with his Commodore spine and Great Pyrenese legs and shoulders. He has a lot of weight on his knees and so are experimenting with laser treatments weekly to see if it helps. My Nick says he has three (3) $30 trips to the Vet to show improvement or the trips to the spa end.

[imgcomment image[/img]

In any event, the Vet is authorized to prescribe Tramadol for Jake. I pick up a script for 60 or so of the tablets once in a while and give him some for a few days, usually forgetting because I don’t see a difference. I could pick up a new bottle of 60 50mg tablets once a month for my dog… what dosage does your mother need? By the way? The bottle of 60 tablets costs me $8. Same thing as the medication my doctor prescribed for a bruised/broken toe, but my insurance was charged $37 for 30 tablets.

I wanted you to see the label where it says Tramadol and Jacob Canine. Let me know, pal, if you need some spare Tramadol for an emergency. I know a dog who can get some for you.

I tried to take a picture of the dog’s medicine bottle with my information blacked out… I may have overexposed it, but you get the idea. They are the same thing. Period.

[imgcomment image[/img]

Stucky
Stucky
  Maggie
February 18, 2018 3:05 pm

Indeed. That is infuriating. Dogs get meds easier than humans? Wow.

I hope you’re kidding about sending me some my way! Yes, that would be highly illegal, … not something I would never ask of anyone. But, thanks anyway!!!

To be clear … she can still get them. It’s just a bullshit process involved … you would hardly believe it if I spelled it out.

Maggie
Maggie
  Stucky
February 18, 2018 3:10 pm

I believe it, because we went through the same bullshit with my Poppa Grooch. But, I knew you would appreciate the FACT that I could call the vet’s office tonight, leave a request for a refill, stop by and pick it up at the front desk tomorrow, paying the gal there $8.00, no tax. I might just do that.

Our society is going insane slowly, but it appears to be getting to the “and then all at once” phase.

doug
doug
February 18, 2018 2:55 pm

Good article. Agree with it all. Some narcotics are more tempting than others because of the quality of the “high” Oxycontin is one of those. Choose the correct drugs for pain and addiction becomes less of an issue. AND we need to stop the DEA from poisoning the practice of medicine by preventing doctors from prescribing out of fear of loosing their license. Legalization is common sense which ,of course, is in short supply among bureaucrats who want to justify their jobs instead of working for the public good.

starfcker
starfcker
  doug
February 18, 2018 3:42 pm

Doug, you’re insane. “we need to stop the DEA from poisoning the practice of medicine by preventing doctors from prescribing out of fear of loosing their license.” No we need to fucking put them in jail and take away everything they have. I have a couple good buddies that are doctors. They stay waaaaaay away from this shit. First do no harm. Ever hear that, Doug?

Maggie
Maggie
February 18, 2018 3:04 pm

Does UK have this problem? Aren’t the pharmacists the ones who determine opiate purchase? My Irish friend says she keeps a small amount (can get 20 8mg tablets every month, I think) but rarely uses them as they do make her dizzy and nauseous. Is this a problem in Ireland?

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 18, 2018 3:26 pm

The solution to illegal use of opioids is simple, just legalize them the same way alcohol and tobacco are legal.

Tim Wyllie
Tim Wyllie
February 18, 2018 3:35 pm

You left out the part about the FDA outlawing generic Darvon pain killer which had been used for decades without sufficient evidence of side effects. FDA used the opinion of a Swedish doctor that Darvon posed a cardio risk. One doctor. 1. V 100,000s of US doctors and dentists.

Maggie
Maggie
February 18, 2018 3:39 pm

Can we talk about Ambien, under the influence of which my husband got up and sleep-drove miles and hit a concrete embankment? Can you explain why it is still on the market?

Rdawg the fascist
Rdawg the fascist
  Maggie
February 18, 2018 8:45 pm

My wife took Ambien for years. Holy hell, that shit is the worst. I would get ready for work in the morning, wander into the kitchen and it looked there was a fire-fight in there. Darling wife got up for a late night snack and had no recollection of trashing the place. Other times she would get online and order stuff. Like a lot of stuff. Like weird stuff. Tons of other stories. That Ambien is scary.

Maggie
Maggie
  Rdawg the fascist
February 18, 2018 8:47 pm

All documented side effects to many people. And they give it to soldiers and airmen to adjust their sleeping schedules when deploying to the middle east.

Nice to know.

starfcker
starfcker
  Maggie
February 18, 2018 10:11 pm

You’re married to Tiger Woods?

Maggie
Maggie
February 18, 2018 5:42 pm

This article on Lew Rockwell regarding the antidepressant connection to all the shootings/suicides is worth a read, not necessarily a full post.

More Horrific Killings

TC
TC
February 18, 2018 6:26 pm

Sackler brothers are making a mint, and nobody has mentioned that it’s mostly white people getting addicted and dying from opiods and heroin. Sure it’s just a cohencidence.

Annie
Annie
February 18, 2018 6:43 pm

300,000? In the US or world-wide? Over what time span? Not such a big deal.

The medical industry kills 200,000+ each year, and that’s legally prescribed medications and “properly” executed procedures. You add in malpractice and it’s more than that. Doctors and hospitals and pharmaceutical companies have absolutely no reason to cure you, they don’t make any money on that. They don’t make as much money if you die, but most people don’t die right away, they just need more medications and procedures to take care of the side effects of the previous ones. It’s basically a Ponzi scheme.

There are 600,000+ abortions in the US each year. Half of them are done by Planned Parenthood, but of course Planned Parenthood doesn’t use any of the government money that it gets on abortions because it’s not supposed to (wink wink).

So the 300,000+ overdose deaths aren’t really that much. They don’t bother me nearly as much as the people who are in pain and can’t get enough of the proper medications to relieve the pain because of this overdose bullshit.

There are people in the government who are damn well aware of what is going on and, at a minimum, are doing things to obscure and/or facilitate all of the above. How many are in on it? How many are being blackmailed into compliance? How many believe the hype? I don’t know. I find it suspicious that we haven’t heard a peep from Trump in a long time about looking into Vaccines.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
February 18, 2018 8:09 pm

There is no such thing as addiction. There is only preference based on what you think will make you happiest at the time. For a good read into the subject please read “The Freedom Model for Addictions” by Steven Slate. The addiction-disease-lifetime recovery system is a complete sham. Hasn’t worked better than going it alone and guilts you into a lifetime of misery if you don’t comply. Fuck AA.

Maggie
Maggie
  ILuvCO2
February 18, 2018 8:25 pm

I believe everything anyone needs to understand about addiction can be found here.

https://rational.org/index.php?id=36

https://rational.org/index.php?id=1

Bullets for the Beast (listed bullet)
https://rational.org/index.php?id=155

Maggie
Maggie
February 18, 2018 8:36 pm

I’m dropping the index to Rational Recovery Org here to help me find it easier tomorrow after a good night’s rest. Has been a rather dreary day here in Narnia.

However, this is truly a powerful method of confronting one’s addictive nature, called the Addictive Voice in this program, completely self-directed.

Learning to recognize and control the Beast within is empowering.

https://rational.org/index.php?id=1