https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-02-feds-limit-telehealth-prescriptions-drugs.html
Gee, I wonder if Ivermectin and HCQ will eventually be on the can-not-prescribe list for telehealth providers.
Yet another reason why REGULATION of ANY industry should be done by non-government groups -- think Underwriter Labs or National Fire Safety Foundation rather than the FDA or ATF.
No. Think ADL or all Soros and Gates NGOs -- yes, they are actual regulators behind sold-out government agencies. Gov.agency role is to be auditable, transparent and thus, controlled by people. We need the return of transparency to regulators, removal of all ADLs from their food chain.
Seriously? You think the FDA is controlled by the People? For decades, the FDA has been the single largest cause of death for American citizens. And EVERY federal regulatory agency is "captured" -- controlled for the benefit of special interests, NOT "the People."
Long term, there IS no stopping the dynamic of government agencies becoming used for special interests and against the People. That's why "that government is best, which governs least." Or, as Thoreau put it in Civil Disobedience: "That government is best, which governs not at all." Civil society, not coercive government.
I seriously think the mechanisms of (original) gov.agencies are built to keep them in check and banish those special interests. Yes, currently (at least 60 years!) agencies are taken over, and all checks eluded. Maybe, they must go, to get rid of that capture, but so far I believe we will need some societal bodies to discern snake oil from real ivermectin and let us know what is what. Do you think everyone can research everything on their own? Every invention, every discovery, every, hell, food recipe? Without bodies who can make their living with that research, we'll have all the snake oil salesmen / sinaloas and zero accountability.
On the lighter note tho...
One fantastic management book I read as a kid, was Peter's Principle. Kinda George Carlin thing—sleepy humans can swallow truth only in humorous form. Book postulated everyone strives to reach his/her level of incompetency and will be stuck there forever, as a punishment to whole humanity. Examples? Einstein was unable to reach known incompetency as a physicist, so he took up the violinist hobby, where he reached that level quickly. [Yes, Einstein thing is a separate rabbit hole.] Or a good kindergarten teacher--good because of his/her ways with kids--will inevitably be promoted to supervisor, where those ways are totally non-working, repulsive. And will be stuck there for the rest of the days.
Well, one of the conclusions was that actually, the most valuable thing we can get is «false lighthouse»: an entity SO incompetent it ALWAYS makes wrong choice/decision. So we can safely exclude those versions and just give it a new choice, until we have excluded enough wrong choices to decide, what to implement.
Guess what? We've reached near absolute total of false lighthouses: think of MSM, or CDC/FDA/FBI/…, or Obiden and his minions. The only remaining problem is, they have regulatory power.
Thanks for reminding me of The Peter Principle; like you, I read it a long time ago, and you're right: We've reached the point where shocking incompetence is everywhere. And you're also right that many of those people have power over others.
The older I get, the more I agree with Thoreau and JRR Tolkien: it is POWER, the unfettered use of coercion against other human beings, that is the great danger in the world. Wielding Power over others is hellishly addicting. Power brings out the worst in people. It is tailor made for corruption, and for vile behavior of every type.