Jacob Sullum | June 1, 2007
A drugstore in Great Falls, Montana, newly acquired by a pharmacist named Stuart Anderson who is active in the pro-life movement, has announced it will no longer fill prescriptions for oral contraceptives. The decision prompted criticism from Planned Parenthood and its supporters, some of it deserved: The drugstore misleadingly cited health concerns in announcing the new policy, when moral objections to contraception seem to be the real motive. A woman who unsuccessfully tried to obtain birth control pills from the pharmacy, Salon reports, "is 49 years old and unable to conceive, but uses the birth control pills for a medical condition." People accustomed to obtaining contraceptive pills from the store are understandably annoyed at the change in policy and may decide not to do business with a pharmacist whose inventory and drug advice are shaped by nonmedical concerns. But some of the criticism goes beyond these points to suggest that Anderson is violating women's rights by declining to carry a product of which he disapproves.
Jill Baker, director of education at Planned Parenthood of Montana, says the woman who could not get birth control pills at Anderson's pharmacy was "denied basic health care." This is like saying that someone who tries to buy eggs at a convenience store that doesn't stock them has been "denied basic food," or that someone who tries to check into a motel that's full has been "denied basic shelter." Anderson is under no obligation to sell any particular drug, although he has to live with the consequences for his business if his choices irritate or offend his customers. Baker likens Anderson's policy to legal bans on contraception such as those faced by her great-grandmother, a German immigrant who had 13 children and died at 40. She calls the decision not to sell birth control a "radical tactic by the anti-choice hardliners to take away a woman's right to decide if and when to bring a child into the world." By this reasoning, an atheist bookseller's decision not to carry the Bible violates freedom of religion, and a sporting goods store's policy against selling guns violates the right to armed self-defense.
A couple years ago Kerry Howley discussed a similar controversy over emergency contraception (a.k.a. "the morning-after pill").
[Thanks to Dave Budge for the tip.]
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Anyone else have the feeling that the same folks decrying the pharmacy owner would be singing a different tune if an ardent vegetarian bought a supermarket and decided to stop stocking and meat products?
I think the case could be made that in exchange for a pharmacist
being licensed by the government to sell otherwise illegal drugs he
should not be allowed to withhold medication based on an arbitrary
opinion.
It's the doctor's job to decide what is the proper medication for a
patient, not the pharmacist's.
Bleh. We need to be able to start buying birth control pills pretty much anywhere, without a prescription, just like we do condoms. Then this problem would go away and the fundies could find something else to bitch about.
"This is like saying that someone who tries to buy eggs at a
convenience store that doesn't stock them has been 'denied basic
food.'"
No, it isn't. Pharmacists are a regulated industry. They provide a
service in addition to goods. State licensing assures people that
the local pharmacist isn't a quack. If a quack like Stuart Anderson
is licensed, that defeats the purpose of licensing.
The libertarian in me thinks that Mr. Anderson has every right
not sell a product that violates his religious beliefs. After all,
the folks who don't agree with him and want/need contraceptives can
go elsewhere for their prescriptions.
On the same tolken, the secularist in me wants nothing more than to
see this fetus fetishist go out of business for allowing his
delusions to spread misery among those who need those
medications.
The libertarian in me thinks that hospitals should be able to run themselves by Christian Scientist standards, by praying instead of treating people.
I can't help but feed the troll.
I think the case could be made that in exchange for a
pharmacist being licensed by the government -SNIP-
Stop right there. The notion that one needs a license, on pain of
PMITA prison, to sell medication is itself a violation of natural
law: "Do as I say, because I've got the bigger guns and will use
them against you if you decide otherwise."
Funny how most people seem to think that the modern, over-governed
West is the peak of civilization. Ubiquitous threats of violence
seem very uncivilized to me.
Kyle
If a quack like Stuart Anderson is licensed, that defeats
the purpose of licensing.
I thought the (stated) purpose of licensing was to make it harder
for people to sell ineffective or dangerous drugs or sell
poor-quality counterfeits of well-known drugs.
Putting aside the issue of whether licensing actually accomplishes
this better than tort or criminal fraud laws would, or whether the
real purpose of licensing is to provide barriers to trade in order
to benefit certain constituencies... how does Mr. Anderson's
refusal to sell certain drugs endanger anyone? Just go somewhere
else to get the drugs.
If he were selling placebos as contraceptives, you'd at least have
an argument. He isn't. You don't.
Kyle
Um, there are like seven other drugstores in a two mile radius... go somewhere else.
The libertarian in me thinks that hospitals should be able
to run themselves by Christian Scientist standards, by praying
instead of treating people.
Methinks such a hospital wouldn't be in business for long: what
rational person would seek treatment there?
Before resorting to force as the answer to every problem, consider
whether the desired outcome simply won't occur naturally as a
result of the laws of capitalism.
Kyle
the woman who could not get birth control pills at
Anderson's pharmacy was "denied basic health care." This is like
saying that someone who tries to buy eggs at a convenience store
that doesn't stock them has been "denied basic food," or that
someone who tries to check into a motel that's full has been
"denied basic shelter."
I don't buy this argument. I've said before that, while birth
control should be over-the-counter, the government has decreed that
instead you can only get it through officially designated
gatekeepers, and thus anyone who decides to become a gatekeeper
should not be able to further add their own requirements concerning
whom they let through the gate.
Make birth control over-the-counter and I'll fully support this
man's right to not sell it. Until then I don't.
I think, ideally, pharmacists would have complete freedom to decide what to sell. The problem is that the government does significantly restrict entry into the market for prescription drugs. As long as that remains so, there's a pretty strong case for requiring pharmacists not to discriminate against selling certain drugs.
"She calls the decision not to sell birth control a "radical
tactic by the anti-choice hardliners to take away a woman's right
to decide if and when to bring a child into the world."
Or she could, ya know, swallow instead.
I agree with squarooticus. Requiring a license to dispense medication is bad enough. Using the license as an excuse to exercise fascist control is worse.
My basic right to food was gleefully violated some time ago by refusals to pick grapes and lettuce. How dare the desires of some over-ride the needs of some others? Where have you gone, Joe Stalin?
Stop right there. The notion that one needs a license, on
pain of PMITA prison, to sell medication is itself a violation of
natural law: "Do as I say, because I've got the bigger guns and
will use them against you if you decide otherwise."
I guess taking that approach means that civilization in general is
a violation of natural law, since it means no behavior can be
prohibited.
Of course, you live in America voluntarily so you are consenting to
the law that requires only people who know what they're doing to
sell dangerous drugs.
There's a valid point that the Pill is not just used for birth control, but for other situations as well. Fortunately, Great Falls is big enough to have more than one pharmacy, so people can easily go elsewhere. However in remote rural communitites the local drug store is a natural monopoly, and women would be gretly inconvenienced if they could travel at all. In any event, the pharmacist is being professionally irresponsible and should be subject to appropriate discipline. If he doesn't like it, he can find another field of work.
"If he were selling placebos as contraceptives, you'd at
least have an argument. He isn't. You don't."
Of course I have a point, silly man. You have to read the post:
"The drugstore misleadingly cited health concerns in announcing
the new policy."
I agree with Jennifer on this. If a pharmacist controls a
medication, and they are licensed healthcare providers, they have
no business withholding medication. If the pill is an
over-the-counter lifestyle choice, then they can choose not to
stock it like any other product. And Bill Pope's comment about
natural monopolies is important to remember.
volcker-
Do you have a source for that number of pharmacists in a 2 mile
radius? I can't read Salon right now, so I don't know if it's in
TFA.
If there is indeed a multiplicity of pharmacists in the area, then
I don't see any issue here. Gatekeeper though he may be, he's
facing non-trivial competition, and consumers have plenty of
options. Given the popularity of the medication in question, and
given that people who can't buy it from him will probably do
all of their purchases elsewhere (and if a married woman
with kids is ticked at him, she'll probably bring all of her
family's business to another store, so he loses 3+ customers there,
not just 1), he's probably going to alienate a lot of clients and
quickly go under.
The "irrational decisions will be swiftly and assuredly punished by
the market" argument might not work in all cases, but it surely
applies here: Ample competition, he's refusing to sell a fairly
popular product, and he's pissing off a lot of people in the
process.
I guess taking that approach means that civilization in
general is a violation of natural law, since it means no behavior
can be prohibited.
I can (rather, "should be able to") prohibit any behavior I want on
my private property. But at the same time, I can't force you to pay
for my private property. This is how the balance is kept in a truly
civilized civilization, rather than by one privileged elite holding
guns to the heads of everyone else.
Of course, you live in America voluntarily so you are
consenting to the law that requires only people who know what
they're doing to sell dangerous drugs.
So now we're back to the already well-debunked "social contract"
theory, the best response to which I'll paraphrase as, "A contract
that can be unilaterally altered by one side at any time without
any consequences? Where can I get in on that deal?"
Bzzzt. Try to keep up. We move fast here.
Kyle
I am sure that Kerry Howley and the other ladies here will all change their minds about this as soon as they have children.
Lamar mouth-shat:
Of course I have a point, silly man. You have to read the post:
"The drugstore misleadingly cited health concerns in announcing the
new policy."
Best Buy also claims they have the lowest prices, which is
prima facie false. Can I get their executives
imprisoned?
Bill wrote:
However in remote rural communitites the local drug store is a
natural monopoly, and women would be gretly inconvenienced if they
could travel at all.
I guess these pharmacists shouldn't be allowed to retire then,
either. It's kind of like the draft: you exist to serve the state,
not the other way around.
Kyle
People who respond to this by arguing that the government
shouldn't regulate medicine, and that one less regulation is by
definition a good thing, remind me of pacifists.
So, they bombed Pearl Harbor. What do we do?
Sigh, there shouldn't be any wars. On less country waging was is
better than one more country waging war.
Yeah, that's great...in la la land. Allowing licensed pharmacists
to refuse to fill prescriptions that people need to buy drugs
doesn't do a damn thing to make medicine any less regulated, any
more than turning the other cheek after Pearl Harbor would have
reduced war or saved lives.
Actually Kyle, most employers in the US enjoy the right to unilaterally alter a contract without consequences. It's called "employment at will".
I imagine that pacifists sigh a lot.
They're troubled by what they see around them in the world, and
aren't given to violent reactions.
I'm curious what people would say about the only drugstore in town not carrying condoms. What stick do you suggest the state beat them over the head with?
Squarooticus: You're actually comparing Best Buy to a pharmacist? I'll start taking you seriously when you show me a single case of somebody buying a plasma TV, then dying when Best Buy sends them home with an LCD TV.
I can (rather, "should be able to") prohibit any behavior I want on
my private property. But at the same time, I can't force you to pay
for my private property. This is how the balance is kept in a truly
civilized civilization, rather than by one privileged elite holding
guns to the heads of everyone else.
But what makes private property yours, other than your ability to
defend it with force? The whole concept of ownership requires the
oppression of non-owners.
So now we're back to the already well-debunked "social
contract" theory, the best response to which I'll paraphrase as, "A
contract that can be unilaterally altered by one side at any time
without any consequences? Where can I get in on that
deal?"
Who said there are no consequences? If society alters the contract
too far, people will leave or rebel.
The social contract theory is hardly debunked. It's the backbone of
all civilization.
I can't help but feed the troll.
To be fair, this time Dan T. made a coherent, serious point. It is
a question that assumes the existence of the FDA, deciding which
drugs require a prescription, but its not unreasonable for a
practical libertarian to assume that abolishing the FDA is not a
realistic possibility at this time.
Actually Kyle, most employers in the US enjoy the right to
unilaterally alter a contract without consequences. It's called
"employment at will".
But the instant they add a clause to the contract that says,
"Employee shall report to work in chains, shall pay back 50% of
income in tribute to the executive committee and its designees,
shall forfeit life and property at the whim of the executive
committee, and shall give up any right to leave our employ," I will
laugh at them and walk out.
Hard to do that with government. As was pointed out, the IRS will
track you down even if you renounce your citizenship... and who
wants to do that anyway, given what you'll need to give up by
leaving the country?
So we're back to the bundling issue. Why is "take it or leave it"
the answer all statists end their arguments with?
Kyle
Bill Pope,
Except there usually isnt an employment contract. If I hire you for
a period of time x at rate y, I lose the right to fire you at will
during time x.
If I just hire you, x isnt guaranteed.
Stop right there. The notion that one needs a license, on
pain of PMITA prison, to sell medication is itself a violation of
natural law: "Do as I say, because I've got the bigger guns and
will use them against you if you decide otherwise."
Great. Thrilling stuff. A-list material. It's awesome, mate.
Now that that's out of the system -- let's talk reality,
which in this cases consists of a system of government-licensed
pharmacists and isn't going to change in the near future.
Theory's all great and stuff, but sometimes you got to climb down
out of the tower and talk about how things are currently working
and try for realistic assesments of the situation.
joe, I see your point about the fact that as long as gatekeepers
enjoy privileges they should use them responsibly.
However, if gatekeepers are also in meaningful competition (as they
supposedly are in this case), that changes things a bit. Your point
about the ethics of abusing gatekeeper status still stands, but the
necessity of a regulatory remedy is called into question.
I'm not always a fan of the "Oh, don't worry, competition will sort
it out" argument, because sometimes it won't. But we're talking
about a very popular medication. So he's already cutting himself
out of a good chunk of business. Then there's the fact that his
motives are rather transparent and offensive to a lot of his
customers. So it's likely that customers who go elsewhere for birth
control will go elsewhere for everything. (Even if they
aren't turned off by his motives, there's the convenience of
one-stop shopping elsewhere.)
And the customers who go elsewhere probably include a significant
number of married women, some with children, who will take their
entire family's business elsewhere. So he's taking an even bigger
hit on some of those lost customers.
My arguments about competition might not apply in more isolated
areas. But if, as is suggested above, he has several competitors in
close proximity, he's probably shooting himself in the foot, and
I'm just as happy to let nature take its course on that.
I see no reason to compel this idiot to serve his customers when,
if left to his own devices, he will soon drive himself out of
business.
I'll start taking you seriously when you show me a single
case of somebody buying a plasma TV, then dying when Best Buy sends
them home with an LCD TV.
Straw man. I'm talking about Best Buy claiming they have the lowest
prices, when information is easily found to refute such a
statement. Such is true with claiming health problems may result
from the use of contraceptives.
The analogy to your statement is my example of the pharmacist
sending women home with placebos, or (even worse) rat poison. No
such thing was done.
Kyle
The pharmasist is licensed by the government to dispense prescription drugs, he derrives his power from governement regulation and is therefore acting as an agent of said government. So because of separation of church and state he should not let religious reason to determine which drugs to carry and which not to carry. If he can show that by carrying these drugs he would put through economic hardship or can show that these drugs carry real serious health risks(which is not for him to decide) then execeptions can be made. So like some said before, until oral contraceptives are deregulated and sold wherever he should be required to carry them.
It's the backbone of all civilization.
For varying definitions of "civilization". :-P
Kyle
When we're talking about a person's rights, I don't think what's most convenient for everybody should be the determining factor. ...I'm not sure it should be a factor at all.
thoreau,
Tough call. On the other hand, I do like the side effect of
requiring religious-right pharmacists to do business in more
populated areas, where they (or at least their children) can be
properly civilized. ;-)
Squarooticus: It isn't a strawman. I'm highlighting how ludicrous your assertion that the generally accepted advertising norm called "puffery" protects quackery in the medical field. Repeat after me: Best Buy's prices are higher than they claim, nobody dies.
Straw man. I'm talking about Best Buy claiming they have the
lowest prices, when information is easily found to refute such a
statement. Such is true with claiming health problems may result
from the use of contraceptives.
Not the samething either. This would be more equivalent to a doctor
saying that antibiotics can cause complications and then never
prescribing them to his patients. Even those that need them. Except
that a doctor can be sued for malpractice and have his license
revoked.
"Allowing licensed pharmacists to refuse to fill prescriptions
that people need to buy drugs doesn't do a damn thing to make
medicine any less regulated"
I'm not sure. I'd think it could:
- boost black markets, weakening regulated ones
- increase public discontent with the legal regime blocking
self-medication
- increase pressure to make specific drugs OTC (piecemeal
deregulation)
When we're talking about a person's rights, I don't think
what's most convenient for everybody should be the determining
factor. ...I'm not sure it should be a factor at all.
Except that under the current regulatory structure (which I abhor,
BTW), selling medication is not a right, but a privilege and form
of authority granted by the government. Given the current system, I
oppose letting pharmacists pick and choose what medication they
sell or to whom they sell it, for the same reason I think that,
while private security guards should have the right to refuse to
protect a given person, government-agent police officers should
not.
joe,
Maybe the ultimate argument is that even if he doesn't go out of
business, as long as there's competition none of his customers are
hurt. So people who want contraception are fine and he at the very
least makes less money, and perhaps even goes out of business
altogether.
Mapquest shows 8 pharmacies in Great Falls and the Anderson
Family Pharmacy looks to be off the main drag.
It concerns me when pharmacists refuse to fill
prescriptions because of "health reasons" overriding the
doctor's opinion on which drug would best suit the
patient's needs after a private consultation.
If Stuart Anderson runs a meat market, why should he have any philosophical problem with selling birth control?
I think this guy needs a cockpunching, but my opinion on that will probably change after Kerry Howley has children.
The pharmasist is licensed by the government to dispense
prescription drugs, he derrives his power from governement
regulation and is therefore acting as an agent of said government.
So because of separation of church and state he should not let
religious reason to determine which drugs to carry and which not to
carry.
Because murder is illegal, I suppose then I derive my right to life
from government regulation rather than from natural law?
Okay, I think I've made my point, and you all are smart folks,
unlike some other forums on which I've discussed these issues
before, so I think most of you "get" what I'm saying, whether you
agree with me or not.
I'll sum up by stating my opinion that "realistic"---i.e.,
statist---libertarianism, oxymoronic as it seems to me, will
provide you with a very realistic way to ensure your freedoms are
continually eroded. OTOH, the anarcho-capitalist approach isn't
making much progress, either, so in the end we're probably all
fucked... but at least it provides a self-sustainable theoretical
framework, where statist libertarianism is completely ad-hoc and
still relies on the demonstrably- (and provably-)unstable concept
of limited democratic government.
Kyle
Given that orthoevra has uses beyond just contraception (I know
at least one lesbian who takes it to reduce PMS symptoms) this
would seem to be a violation of the principles that we expect the
gatekeepers to meet. Since he's not a doctor, he can't
differentiate between uses, so he's got some serious issues.
Still, as long as he can direct someone to his competitor who does
provide these medications in the same county or less than 15 miles
away, I don't see this as an onerous policy. However, I kinda think
that he should have to have that kind of agreement worked out in
advance, and can only keep this going so long as the competitor is
in business and agrees to supply these drugs to his
customers.
Again, all this is moot if oral contraceptives go OTC, but if
you're going to go into a state-protected industry, you're going to
have to play by SOMEBODY's rules. In libertopia there will be
privately funded fountains of orthoevra provided on a subscription
basis, but in the meantime...
One of the justifications for licensing pharmacists is that they
are supposed to be professionals, able to exercise judgment and
dispense advice to their customers, after suitable education and
training. In this fellow's judgment*, however much you may disagree
with it, oral contraceptives are dangerous. Now, either he's a
professional capable of making such a determination, or he's just a
jumped-up stock clerk, in which case he shouldn't have to go to the
bother of attending pharmacist's school and getting that state
license. One ot t'other, my statist friends.
Oh, BTW, if pharmacists and pharmacies weren't licensed, the "only
pharmacy in a small town" might have some competition. I'd still
prefer to shop at one that was certified by some reputable private
organization, but I could see a local general store having some
limited facilities. I envisage a secure workstation that could
dispense the top 10 most prescribed brand-name or generic drugs to
someone on staff, after transmitting customer info over a secure
link to a full-fledged pharmacist in another town. If Mrs. Douglas
needs the eleventh most popular scrip she might have to go to
Pixley for it, but at least Hooterville would have some
service.
Kevin
"Except that under the current regulatory structure (which I
abhor, BTW), selling medication is not a right, but a privilege and
form of authority granted by the government."
Freedom of exercise and freedom from establishment are definitely
rights. I suppose buying medication is a right.
...but I don't think anyone's arguing that people shouldn't be able
to buy medication. The argument seems to be about whether this guy
should be compelled to sell it.
[A]nyone who decides to become a gatekeeper should not be
able to further add their own requirements concerning whom they let
through the gate.
Jennifer, would the same licensing argument apply to surgeons and
hospitals that refuse to perform abortions (almost all them do, in
fact, refuse)? It seems that by a similar approach one could make
the argument that the state ought not let those that choose to
become licensed surgeons (or perhaps at least OB/GYN's), and thus
act as gatekeepers to surgical procedures, add their own
requirements as to which surgical procedures they choose to allow
through the gate.
I'm not asking that antagonistically, by the way. I'm just
wondering if you, or those who agree with you that state licensing
is enough to preclude this being a simple personal choice issue,
would distinguish these forms of medical care in applying your
standard. At any rate, I am somewhat sympathetic to your argument
about pharmacists (though I also think it is utter nonsense that
birth control is not simply OTC) but I think I still come down on
the side of letting pharmacists sell what they want. As long as
there are enough pharmacists for competition to either eliminate
those that act in a disagreeable manner or at least to allow plenty
of options for people to get the medications they want without
undue difficulty, I just don't see a real need for adding any more
regulation.
Because murder is illegal, I suppose then I derive my right
to life from government regulation rather than from natural
law?
Not really my point at all. Obviously since I suggested that
deregulation is the right course of action here, I would support
the man's right not to sell the pills after they could be sold
anywhere. Just like now I dont really care whether he sells condoms
or not.
I agree, Tim. Anderson needs a good punch in the dinger. But I can't imagine how the springing of fruit from Howley's loins would change my opinion on that.
Um, there are like seven other drugstores in a two mile
radius... go somewhere else.
What if they all make the same "moral" decision? Granted, that
isn't the case so far, but there's nothing to stop it. Would the
answer then be "go to the next town over"? If every drugstore in
the county declines to fill this prescription, is the answer "use
mail order"?
While I understand (and to a certain extent sympathize with) the
argument that a store owner shouldn't have to sell something he
personally disapproves of, what if the pharmacist has a moral
objection to antibiotics? (For that matter, why do I never hear
about pharmacists having a moral objection to filling Viagra
prescriptions? Or have I just missed that story?)
Here's a question: Every day my spam filter probably halts 30
offers of cheap V!@gr@ and C!@l!$. Presumably they've got docs who
will prescribe based on an online diagnosis and pharmacists who
will mail it to you.
Why don't we have something similar for contraception?
"...but I don't think anyone's arguing that people shouldn't
be able to buy medication. The argument seems to be about whether
this guy should be compelled to sell it."
To continue, are there any other situations in which the government
should compel people to violate their religious convictions or is
this the only one?
Here's a question: Every day my spam filter probably halts
30 offers of cheap V!@gr@ and C!@l!$. Presumably they've got docs
who will prescribe based on an online diagnosis and pharmacists who
will mail it to you.
Why don't we have something similar for
contraception?
Apparently, thoreau, we
do.
"To continue, are there any other situations in which the
government should compel people to violate their religious
convictions or is this the only one?"
what unreal bullshit.
business demands go against yer religion, nobody's forcing you to
be in that line of work. he can't guess for what indication certain
meds are for. shutup and dispense, you white coat monkey who
flunked out of podiatry school.
keep yer fucking imaginary friends out of the way of science.
they're separate.
now, Al, go clean up aisle six.
It concerns me when pharmacists refuse to fill prescriptions
because of "health reasons" overriding the doctor's opinion on
which drug would best suit the patient's needs after a private
consultation.
There's a reason why doctors need pharmacists. For example, my
dentist once prescribed an antibiotic for me after a root canal. My
pharmacist saw that I was allergic to that type of antibiotic and
refused to sell it to me. I'm glad he did.
Our governments fund many activities that violate the religious
scruples of sects or individuals, without allowing people to opt
out of paying the taxes that pay for those programs. Then there's
conscription, which we haven't yet restarted, but still remains in
the state's bag of tricks. Yes, one can try to become a
conscientious objector, but the government claims the authority to
decide who is sincere about their opposition to war, and who gets
handed a rifle.
Kevin
"what rational person would seek treatment there?"
Well, that cuts out four percent of the population...
Abdul: Why the fuck didn't you notice that you're allergic to that kind of antibiotic? Isn't it, like, your immune system?
Re: abdul and timothy
Stuart Anderson realized that selling you birth control would send
your soul to hell. You should be glad he's making that decision for
you.
Timothy-
My guess is that Abdul knows which antibiotic he's allergic to, but
the dentist either wrote the name in a scribble that only the
pharmacist can decipher or he prescribed it under a generic name.
Or prescribed a very similar drug that provokes the same response
but has a different name.
Oh, good gravy, it's not like this guy has a monopoly, or even
any market dominance. What is it with you statist busy-bodies that
compels you to dictate terms to a religious busy-body who only
wants to extend his will to the boundaries of his store, and then
only as to what goods he sells? Can it EVER occur to you folks to
simply avoid walking onto the property of those that displease
you?
Sheesh.
There's a reason why doctors need pharmacists. For example,
my dentist once prescribed an antibiotic for me after a root canal.
My pharmacist saw that I was allergic to that type of antibiotic
and refused to sell it to me. I'm glad he did.
Good for your RX'er! I'm glad he did it too.
But, I was thinking more along the lines of a Szasz worshiping
pharmicist who doesn't believe in depression so instead of filling
your Zoloft prescription gives you some St. John's Wart and a big
bottle of Buck The Fuck Up.
It's harder to spell with ASCII.
"Contraception."
Actually, it's pretty easy. :-P
de stijl,
Why would a Szaszian necessarily do that? That perspective doesn't
necessarily view any given drug as bad for any given purpose. Quite
the opposite: it stipulates that anyone should go into a pharmacy
and be legally allowed to buy pretty much anything.
Hey, I wanted to get a ham sandwich at a restaurant owned by Muslims last week, and they wouldn't sell me one! Bastards!! How dare they force their religion on me! And they have to have a license to operate a restaurant! The Horror! The Horror!
Will, I see your point, but I think that there's a certain
amount of gray here rather than pure principle.
If licensing is sufficiently strict that in practice most licensees
enjoy a local monopoly (or something close to it) on products with
few (or no) substitutes, then I don't have a problem with insisting
that they use their gatekeeper status responsibly.
But the responsibility attached to the license should be
proportional to the privilege granted. If there is greater
competition, so the privilege granted is lower, then with less
privilege should come less responsibility.
All of this is second-best, of course, with the ideal being no
mandated gatekeepers and free competition. But if that isn't on the
table, then I guess indexing responsibility to privilege makes
sense, with privilege being defined as "artificial market power
that one would not enjoy in the absence of legally mandated
gatekeeper status."
I would note, however, that none of these considerations seem to
apply here, as Great Falls apparently has several competing
pharmacies in close proximity to the one in question. So I'm
prepared to let the guy shoot himself in the foot and pay the
price.
About that Kerry Howley scenario that Timothy brought
up...
Hypothetically, if she had a baby, she would probably do whatever
it took to look good afterwards. Libertarian babes are OK with all
the technologies of beauty.
I really and truly cannot believe what I am reading here.
I will ask again...
What if the only store in town did not carry condoms? What stick
would you suggest the state beat them over the head with?
Brian Courts and Will Allen raise interesting points. This made
me think of some other potential government licensees:
- lefty lawyer forced to defend Walmart
- anti-tax accountant forced to do tax returns
- Jewish truck driver forced to haul sour cream & salsa pork
rinds
- feminist plastic surgeon forced to perform elective breast
enhancement
That's my point, thoreau. This guy is deriving negligible, if not non-existent, market power from his license. The fact that anyone would even want to take the time to dictate terms to him is indicative of something really pathetic. Endeavor to obtain a life, busybodies; at least this guy's lack of a life is only manifested within his store.
That's the pharmacist's job. Pharmacy is probably the toughest
of the allied health professions.
...they look for allergies along with things like bad drug
interactions. Patients don't always tell a doctor every medication
they're on, and doctors aren't specialized in that area
anyway.
I don't want my cardiologist wasting a whole lot of time thinking
about allergies.
grylliade: stop ruining my bad jokes with your pesky "facts" and
"reason."
thoreau: fair enough, but shouldn't one have the presence of mind
to ask, "hey, I'm allergic to X, does that matter?" I really think
people have a responsibility to keep up with that themselves, can't
expect others to do it. I mean, good for the pharmacist catching
it, but still. Although I do sincerely believe doctors don't read
the chart. SEE: Tim's latex allergy and the dentist for more on
this.
To add on, Thoreau, I can see the point of not allowing cabbies to exercise religous discretion when picking up fares; medallion holders do have the significant market power where their services are most in demand, like airports. So, "no" to Muslim cabbies declining to pick up fares who are holding a bottle of wine, "yes" to Muslim eateries who decline to serve a nice bottle of chianti with their felafels.
"What if the only store in town did not carry condoms? What
stick would you suggest the state beat them over the head
with?"
Honestly, I don't see how my right to buy condoms outweighs a store
owner's right not to be compelled by government to violate his
religious convictions.
Honestly, I'm a little taken aback by some here (not you
necessarily) who seem to think that the only rights that should be
protected are the ones they themselves find reasonable.
To continue, are there any other situations in which the
government should compel people to violate their religious
convictions or is this the only one? Should compel? That's
debatable. I think it's in Minneapolis where Islamic taxi drivers
wanted to get a "our religion forbids us from transporting
passengers with visible alcohol" exception to the rules that if you
declined a passenger, you went to the back of the (very long) line.
I think that raised some stories of the occasional store cashier
who would call someone else over to swipe pork products, in order
not to touch something unclean.
Does compel? Maybe not since the draft ended. There are probably
lots of examples of sincerely held religious beliefs that are
trampled on by laws, though. (Religious use of peyote, for
example.)
Oh, good gravy, it's not like this guy has a monopoly, or even
any market dominance. What is it with you statist busy-bodies that
compels you to dictate terms to a religious busy-body who only
wants to extend his will to the boundaries of his store, and then
only as to what goods he sells? Can it EVER occur to you folks to
simply avoid walking onto the property of those that displease
you?
My biggest problem is that I have a (in my opinion reasonable) fear
that people like this pharmacist won't really be happy until
there's no pharmacy that will sell me contraception. After all, he
thinks contraception is immoral, no matter who sells it. He doesn't
want to sell it, and his morality tells him I shouldn't be taking
it. To what extent is he going to feel moral about knowing I'm just
walking into another store to buy it? The fact that the store
"misleadingly cited health concerns" reinforces that idea.
So, for me it's self-interest. I value my right to buy a legal drug
more than his right to combine practicing as a pharmacist with his
moral opinion about contraceptives. Does that give me some moral
highground? Probably not, but I'm not the one trying to claim one -
he is.
Honestly, I'm a little taken aback by some here (not you
necessarily) who seem to think that the only rights that should be
protected are the ones they themselves find reasonable.
Not me certainly! If it wasn't clear, I am appalled by the
blatantly fascist attitudes I am seeing here.
"The government regulates something for some reason. Even though I
think they shouldn't be regulating it, they should use that
regulation for a completely unrelated cause that I happen to
support!"
MikeP @ 5:32pm:
"I really and truly cannot believe what I am reading here.
...
What if the only store in town did not carry condoms? What stick
would you suggest the state beat them over the head with?"
Are you suggesting the State administer a Peter-Beater?
SOP for Planned Parenthood, it would seem. Their poster child
for this campaign is a woman who can't conceive but uses birth
control pills for other medical reasons. I'd guess she represents a
tiny, tiny portion of the market for Da Pillz.
Sort of like they use a 15-year-old girl raped by her father and
pregnant with a Down's baby as the poster child for abortion
"rights".
Tell ya' what, jen. Until he starts lobbying to have his competitors' goods restricted, I really don't care what your fears are, nor should anyone else.
"Given the current system, I oppose letting pharmacists pick
and choose what medication they sell or to whom they sell it, for
the same reason I think that, while private security guards should
have the right to refuse to protect a given person,
government-agent police officers should not."
If we limited the freedom to act within your conscience to only
those whose professions were untouched by government regulation,
how many people would be free to act within their conscience?
Re: lefty lawyer forced to defend Walmart
I know this is a hypothetical, but if a judge appoints you to
defend Walmart, and you don't have connections, your
sorry-left-leaning ass is going to defend Walmart whether you like
it or not. And you're going to do a good job because your license
is on the line.
It's interesting to see the rapid polarization when this is
obviously a tough issue. On the one hand it does seem wrong to
copmel these people to go against their deeply held beliefs, no
matter how silly they are. On the other hand if the only library in
a 30 mile radius refused to stock the Bible or an athiest book "on
principle" then that would effectively deny some folks the only
real ability to follow their beliefs. In really rural areas you'd
be effectively putting a substantial burden on women's exercise of
their liberty (the ones who want to use the pill).
I'll rush to polarization though on the the nutty suggestion that
the state not lisence pharmacists. That would equal many, many dead
people. Not much Liberty in oblivion. I can just imagine the
voluntary networks of information sharing that hard core
libertarians would conjure in their feverish imaginations to keep
people from dying from the many quacks that would shoot up. Get
real!
What if the only store in town did not carry condoms? What
stick would you suggest the state beat them over the head
with?
None, because condoms are not available only via prescription, and
therefore there are no government-mandated gatekeepers standing
between you and your ability to buy them.
Let me define what I mean by "hard core" libertarians: those who think that any government action is per se a bad thing. Sometimes a little government coercion creates much more liberty for the mass of humanity (in this case I can go into any pharamcy, even when traveling, and rest assured to get competent safe treatment, whereas if the hard core libertarian did away with liscensing we would have to be in constant anxiety guessing when we would get a quack who would kill us; ditto for foods, drugs, etc.)
None, because condoms are not available only via
prescription, and therefore there are no government-mandated
gatekeepers standing between you and your ability to buy
them.
Government-mandated gatekeepers or no, you can't get condoms in
that town because the sole storekeeper refuses to stock them.
Government-mandated gatekeepers or no, there are scores of mail
order pharmacies that will deliver birth control pills.
So how does the situation change due to the government-mandated
gatekeeper? And what on earth makes you think that the existence of
this mandate gives you the right to use it for personal reasons
frankly unrelated to the government's reasons for it?
Look... The only hook on which you Stuart Anderson haters are
hanging your arguments is that the state has a stick to beat this
person over the head with -- a stick you believe the state should
not even have. But, since the stick is there anyway, you advocate
using that stick to force this individual toward your own
aggrandized vision of how society should be.
Does this make you throw up right on the keyboard, or can you at
least make it to the bathroom first?
"in this case I can go into any pharamcy, even when
traveling, and rest assured to get competent safe treatment,
whereas if the hard core libertarian did away with liscensing we
would have to be in constant anxiety guessing when we would get a
quack who would kill us; ditto for foods, drugs, etc."
Hate to break it to you, but if you'd be in 'constant anxiety'
then, you probably still should be now. Quacks who want to kill you
don't let things like government licensing get in the way.
"Guaranteed competent, safe treatment" in this case only means that
the government will punish them by sentencing them to jail AND
revoking their license. Not exactly the disincentive you're looking
for.
From "a lowly pharmacy student":
'There is a legal loophole for pharmacists who do not want to
prescribe a certain drug or brand of drug: don't stock the drug in
the pharmacy's formulary. Then it becomes a simple issue of telling
the patient that "we don't stock that drug here," and it's
perfectly legal.'
Of course, you live in America voluntarily so you are
consenting to the law that requires only people who know what
they're doing to sell dangerous drugs.
Fuck an A dan...this devils advocate crap is really freaking me
out.
So how does the situation change due to the
government-mandated gatekeeper?
I'll answer your question by repeating part of what I wrote in my
first post on this thread:
while birth control should be over-the-counter, the government
has decreed that instead you can only get it through officially
designated gatekeepers, and thus anyone who decides to become a
gatekeeper should not be able to further add their own requirements
concerning whom they let through the gate.
"But, since the stick is there anyway, you advocate using
that stick to force this individual toward your own aggrandized
vision of how society should be."
We should be careful about projecting motives on to people around
here. Most of 'em mean well and even in Libertopia, reasonable
people will disagree on such issues.
We all come with our own baggage too. Some see protection of their
religious convictions from the rest of society as one of the few
legitimate functions of of government; others see protection from
other people's religious convictions as one of the few legitimate
functions of government.
...I can see how some of the latter group might see this issue as a
natural extension of that. I just happen to think they're wrong
rather than mis-motivated.
Except for Jennifer. She's a Jezebel.
while birth control should be over-the-counter, the
government has decreed that instead you can only get it through
officially designated gatekeepers, and thus anyone who decides to
become a gatekeeper should not be able to further add their own
requirements concerning whom they let through the gate.
And so we go down the road to serfdom
hey Jenifer don't you need a business license to sell just about
anything in this country? And so by your metric the government has
made any sale of any product required to be sold by a designated
gatekeeper and therefore the government has the right to force
vendors to sell any product it deems must be made available for
sale?
Anderson is under no obligation to sell any particular drug,
although he has to live with the consequences for his business if
his choices irritate or offend his customers.
Sadly, no. The regulated profession / public health / public
accommodation crowd will win this one.
I don't want to pick a fight with Jennifer here, but I don't see
the logic of her position. If I get a beer and wine license for my
restaurant, am I obligated to get a liquor license, too? Medicine
is regulated, must every ob / gyn perform abortions? Law is
regulated, must a lawyer represent criminals or labor unions if she
is competent to do so?
As a related matter, I don't see the proximity of other pharmacies
as an issue as long as other pharmacies could, if they chose, open
up.
I think the sticking point here is that our implicit expectations
of a pharmacy based solely on experience is that they will stock or
quickly order any medication prescribed. Certainly a "full service"
pharmacy should reasonably be expected to do that, but does it
follow that every pharmacy must?
Except for Jennifer. She's a Jezebel.
I didn't know the reference so i put "a Jezebel" in a google
search...here is what i got:
Jezebel -- whose name means 'Where's the prince?' in Hebrew --
has gone down in history as the most wicked woman in the entire
Bible.
Now that is comedy.
After a quick googling, it looks to me like there are at least
30 places to get prescriptions filled in great falls. That's like
one pharmacy for every 3 gun stores - just about right. This
potential customer ought to get a subscription for her prescription
(mail order) and save some money at the same time she solves her
"mean pharmacist" problem. Or she could cry to the media, as there
is now a publicity whore position that has opened up.
But if she really is unable to conceive, perhaps she should spend
more time thinking about a solution.
Jennifer,
You really didn't get to my point about my condom example, though
joshua has.
What stick would you have government hold over the storekeeper's
head to force him to carry condoms?
You could always mail-order condoms. But then you could also
mail-order birth control pills. One differs from the other only
because of the stick the government is holding! Why advocate the
further illibertarian use of it?
BTW, in the real world judges never assign cases to lawyer as hypothetically described, nor can a lawyer ethically take a case if he decides that his animus toward the case or client is such that he cannot provide effective assistance of counsel in a criminal proceeding or meet the standard of practice in a civil case. Might his refusal to take such a case result in a contempt citation? Yes. Would he win on appeal? Almost certainly. Would his license be at risk? Not a chance.
We should be careful about projecting motives on to people
around here. Most of 'em mean well and even in Libertopia,
reasonable people will disagree on such issues.
You might be right. I have been using inflated language because I
have a strong reaction to suggestions that government impose its
will on private actors.
On the other hand, if this were a situation where they didn't
strongly disagree with the private party, I wonder if they'd be
advocating the expansion of government regulation they otherwise
find objectionable.
One differs from the other only because of the stick the
government is holding! Why advocate the further illibertarian use
of it?
Because I don't consider it an extension of libertarian principles
to let government-mandated authority figures unduly wield their
power over others. As I've said already, if birth-control pills
were over the counter I'd support his right to not sell them.
And if there's no place for 100 miles where a woman can buy them
I'd advise her to make the drive anyway and buy twenty times as
many as she needs, so she can sell them for a nice profit back
home.
All these pharma ads say "Ask your doctor if Mycoxadud is right
for you."
What if your doctor says, "In my opinion, that poison isn't right
for anyone"? Should he have his medical license removed.
Should Dr. Ron Paul be forced to perform abortians?
The drugstore misleadingly cited health concerns in
announcing the new policy, when moral objections to contraception
seem to be the real motive.
And this is where he screwed up. This, to me, is no different than
the whole "medical" marijuana debate. No one feels like they can
just front an argument that says "yo, we wanna smoke weed".
Instead, they have to couch in terms of health and welfare. If the
owner had just said "Don't believe this is a moral product", then
an honest debate can ensue. But when they start suggesting health
concerns (and has anyone noticed that this has become an absolute
universal
tactic) it turns into old fashioned B.S.
If the owner had just said "Don't believe this is a moral
product", then an honest debate can ensue.
I gather by "honest debate" you mean he gets crushed by the powers
that be.
He should be able to refuse to sell the product for a good reason,
a lame reason, a bad reason, or for no reason at all. It is
irrelevant to the issue at hand -- although it may reflect on his
competence as a pharmacist.
Except for Jennifer. She's a Jezebel.
I didn't know the reference so i put "a Jezebel" in a google
search...here is what i got:
Jezebel -- whose name means 'Where's the prince?' in Hebrew -- has
gone down in history as the most wicked woman in the entire
Bible.
Ah! Jabel, Jabel! Who else writes so wildly well as our sweet(?)
Jezebel? La belle dame sans merci. ;-) *
*(yes, I'm having quite a good time - thank-you very much!)
Say, I've got the solution to this whole problem: If the guy won't sell birth control pills in his damned drugstore, then take away his license and shut him down. That's right - put his ass out of business! Then where ya gonna buy birth control pills - or any other medications? Idiots!
If I can't get my Baby Repellant there, you can't buy your antibiotics there. Period.
joshua corning,
Jezebel wasn't a Jew, she was from one of the neighboring pagan
nations (which is why she pushed Baal-worship so much), so I'm
pretty sure that wasn't what her name was intended to mean.
Jezebel wasn't a Jew, she was from one of the neighboring
pagan nations (which is why she pushed Baal-worship so much), so
I'm pretty sure that wasn't what her name was intended to
mean.
My bet is that she never existed at all, and was therefor neither
Jew or Baalist pagan but fiction.
Anyway that part "where is the prince" was just sort of there on
the google search page and made it in my comment by virtue of cut
and paste...the part about being the most wicked women in the bible
is what caught my eye and explained Ken's joke to me.
"in this case I can go into any pharamcy, even when traveling,
and rest assured to get competent safe treatment, whereas if the
hard core libertarian did away with liscensing we would have to be
in constant anxiety guessing when we would get a quack who would
kill us; ditto for foods, drugs, etc.)"
Ken,
lurk moar
Seriously, you do know why "hard core libertarians" do not think
that State forced professional licensing is either necessary or
desirable?
I second, or third, or possibly fourth, the comments of disbelief on how self-described libertarians believe they can control another's private property based on some flimsy definition of privileges given to the property owner by the all powerful philsopher kings.
If the guy won't sell birth control pills in his damned
drugstore, then take away his license and shut him down. That's
right - put his ass out of business! Then where ya gonna buy birth
control pills - or any other medications? Idiots!
Jeez Ellis, I don't even agree with those that want to make selling
birth control a condition of the license, but allow me to suggest
an answer they might offer to your question: um... how about from
the pharmacist at the store across the street who does
sell birth control?
Perhaps it would be better for those of us that come down on the
non-requirement side of the debate if you would let MikeP et al.
handle it...
"Hate to break it to you, but if you'd be in 'constant anxiety'
then, you probably still should be now. Quacks who want to kill you
don't let things like government licensing get in the way."
Again, yes the current system is not perfect, but it would be far
worse if we did not even try to screen out the nuts.
SIV
I'm afraid I have no idea what you're talking about. Does it have
something to do with cocks?
I gave my guess as to why hard core libertarians don't think
liscensing is necessary:
"I can just imagine the voluntary networks of information sharing
that hard core libertarians would conjure in their feverish
imaginations to keep people from dying from the many quacks that
would shoot up."
Recently people here on HR argued with I can only guess straight
faces that the functions of the EPA (keeping us from dying, for
example) could be met by voluntary consumer reports type networks.
I haven't heard anything that nutty since Rothbard advocated that
voluntary militia units could replace national militaries.
Jeez Ellis, I don't even agree with those that want to make
selling birth control a condition of the license, but allow me to
suggest an answer they might offer to your question: um... how
about from the pharmacist at the store across the street who does
sell birth control?
If there is a store across the street where birth control is sold,
why in the blue blazes of hell don't they go there in the first
damned place?!
Perhaps it would be better for those of us that come down on
the non-requirement side of the debate if you would let MikeP et
al. handle it...
Perhaps it would be better to let such as you go piss up a rope,
too - you patronizing, sanctimonious piece of crap.
I love the demonstrations of tolerance here.
Some things are not to be tolerated - elitist attitudes of
patronizing condecension are among them.
So...
OB/GYN's and surgeons, being govt licensed (privileged)gatekeepers
and all, should be forced to perform abortions, or else, be
stripped of their govt gatekeeper privilege? Got it.
Some things are not to be tolerated - elitist attitudes of
patronizing condecension are among them.
I am so ashamed. I shall emulate your example from now on.
I'm fine with letting the gatekeepers refuse to sell contraception, as long as we just remember that putting a gatekeeper together with a keymaster would be EXTRAORDINARILY BAD.
Oh, just two questions, Ellis Wyatt: Why are elitist attitudes of patronizing condecension not to be tolerated, and how is intolerance of them to be enforced?
Some things are not to be tolerated - elitist attitudes of
patronizing condecension are among them.
Ill-considered attempts to deride the arguments of another
commenters, especially when accompanied by a gratuitous "Idiots!"
blast, are, on the other hand, always welcome!
If there is a store across the street where birth control is
sold, why in the blue blazes of hell don't they go there in the
first damned place?!
Uh... I don't know. Now that, unlike your previous post,
is a reasonable argument for not requiring the dispensing of
contraceptives.
At any rate the question is irrelevant to your implication that
putting a pharmacist out of business who refuses to sell birth
control (which I disagree with) would leave people with no place to
get it (or any other medications, as you say), which is just
nonsense.
Jennifer brings up a good point. This is an argument we shouldn't even be having. Make the contraceptives available over the counter, and then every pharmacy will reserve the right to sell them or not.
Hey, the market is about to take care of the problem. Through the web, no less.
Yet another patronizing, sanctimonious piece of crap | June
1, 2007, 10:07pm | #
Oh, just two questions, Ellis Wyatt: Why are elitist attitudes of
patronizing condecension not to be tolerated, and how is
intolerance of them to be enforced?
Why? Because some of us poor proles have enough self-respect,
self-esteem - whatever - that we figure we're competent enough to
hold and voice an opinion on our own without asking your permission
first. That's right - the darkies be gettin' uppity, Massa.
And how is it to be enforced? Why...we gonna backsass... every.
friggin. time. we. feel like it.
I'm not quite sure if anyone adressed this or not (too damn lazy to read through the posts) but the reason why it is alright to allow him to refuse sell these items is because it would set a bad precedent for other regulated industries to force him to do otherwise.
I am so humbled. You make so much sense. Thank you, Ellis Wyatt!
Ill-considered attempts to deride the arguments of another
commenters, especially when accompanied by a gratuitous "Idiots!"
blast, are, on the other hand, always welcome!
Ah! Glad to see that you're a long-time H&R reader, too.
Ill-considered? I thought it a fairly cogent and successful attempt
- one that cut right to the heart of the matter. Gratuitous blast?
Hardly. If people think they can bite the hand that feeds them ie.,
force the only store in town to carry something it's owner doesn't
care to sell, without suffering any consequences - then they
are idiots. And someone should tell them so.
Look, I don't have anything against selling birth control, but I
don't care whether the guy sells it or not. However, I do care
whether he is forced by a government to sell things that violate
his conscience, or for that matter, any other reason he cares not
to sell them.
At any rate the question is irrelevant to your implication that
putting a pharmacist out of business who refuses to sell birth
control (which I disagree with) would leave people with no place to
get it (or any other medications, as you say), which is just
nonsense.
It isn't nonsense at all. As I understand it (from having read the
entire thread) the situation is/was that this is the only
place to obtain prescription medicine in the town and its vicinity
- that there is no convenient other way to obtain them - thus the
desire to force the druggist to carry a certain product. That was
one of the given parameters of the hypothetical as it was set
up...by others, not I.
Now if it's all the same to you, I'm going on to bed.
Goodnight.
Yet another patronizing, sanctimonious piece of crap | June
1, 2007, 11:47pm | #
I am so humbled. You make so much sense. Thank you, Ellis
Wyatt!
Nah, you're just Bulgarized, bugger. ;-)
Now if it's all the same to you, I'm going on to
bed.
The same. Why that's exactly what it is! It's the very same!
Because your rhetoric distracts us from your otherwise sound
opinions on the matter at hand, to the extent that you make your
misguided opponents look better than they deserve. And that's when
you're being intelligible (backass? bulgarize? do we even care what
these mean?). Thanks for nothing.
"...the reason why it is alright to allow him to refuse sell
these items is because it would set a bad precedent for other
regulated industries to force him to do otherwise."
I don't think anyone brought that up, Grotius, but someone should
have.
Let's see if I can sum up the libertarian POV as expressed on
several of these posts:
1) If a statist law causes bad consequences, we should have statist
lawmakers pass another law to fix the first set of consequences,
with serene confidence that the second law won't have any bad
consequences of its own.
2) If someone refuses to sell me a product I want, I have the right
to use government force to make them sell me that product, rather
than inconvenience myself by driving to someone who will
voluntarily choose to sell me that product.
3) My right to contraception allows me to use the government to
force my unquestionably correct views on people who wrongly believe
that selling the product I demand they supply is a form of
murder.
I was afraid this website might have some lefty statists lurking on
it. It is so refreshing to find that I was wrong, that only people
devoted to freedom post here.
those crazy libertarians, allowing lefty statists to express their opinions! they shouldn't be allowed to allow lefty statists to express their opinions!
Erroneous keystroke on the previous post led to a premature posting while revising post -- I meant to say "... to use those same literary tools to rebut my arguments"
Pharmacists are licensed and as such, being as they've been
given this privilege, they oughta just dispense the fukien pills
already.
I have ranted before that if a doctor prescribes the 'morning
after' pill and collects his $300 fee and leaves the poor woman to
race around trying, racing against the clock, to get some
pharmacist in her benighted jesus-fetus state to sell her the
pills, the doctor is to blame too. Competent docs in an area where
they KNOW this shit is going on should carry a supply of pills
themselves. A friend of mine is a doctor. She does that. And it's
not even a conservative area, she just wants to make sure they get
the pills on time.
But yeah pharmacists. I wanna be a pharmacist and refuse to sell
antibiotics because bacteria have rights too. Maybe I can avoid
carrying chemotherapy agents because cancer has it's own genome, it
has as much right to live as the host. Maybe I can not carry pain
pills cuz I believe that patients should offer their suffering to
Mary instead.
But if I was President I'd have an amnesty plan. Any pharmacist who
wished to not dispense pills he disagreed with could have his/her
student loans forgiven. In exchange they would turn in their
license and promise never to try to do pharmacy ever again.
I would like to excuse my 1:32 post on the grounds of chronic
alcoholism, except I'm Mormon and sober. What I really meant to say
was:
reduction, you're wrong. These two statements are clearly
identical:
"I will use sarcasm and logic to eviscerate your arguments, while
giving you the opportunity to use those same literary tools to
rebut my arguments"
AND
"I forbid anyone to challenge me, and invoke the right to censor
any contrary remarks on an open thread that I have no ability to
control."
I apologize for my attempt at censorship. My bad. ;)
How is this even a debate?
If a person does not want to sell a product, for any reason, nobody
should have the right to make him.
Whether the person does not want to sell certain products (such as
in this case) or to certain people (even for racist reasons), it
doesn't matter.
Any arguments to the contrary are simply attempts to bend another
to your will. YOU know whats best, so EVERYONE ELSE better shut the
fuck up and fall in line.
You are seeking to violate another persons right to do as he
pleases--given that he is harming nobody else. And by doing so, you
inflict the greatest harm possible against another...compulsion of
one's will over another.
It amazes me how so very few people here are anything close to
being libertarian in any true sense of the word....
And that's when you're being intelligible (backass?
bulgarize? do we even care what these mean?). Thanks for
nothing.
The word was "backsass. If you don't know what that means,
apparently your mommy and daddy neglected their parental
duties.
"Bulgarize"? What? Not as well educated as you thought you were? It
simply means the same thing as to bugger. Its derivation is from
the reputed practice of the midieval Bulgarians when in battle. The
derivation of "bugger" is in turn from Bulgar.
Tony said:
"It amazes me how so very few people here are anything close to
being libertarian in any true sense of the word...."
Darn straight. It's an uphill battle in this statist society. Even
people who are nominally against central planning and pro-freedom
think that people in general are so stupid that they need a law to
tell them not to kill themselves.
My goodness, everyone, do some reading! Go to mises.org. Use the
search box. In the age of the internet, you are the only one who is
intellectually responsible for advocating the murder and/or
enslavement of those you disagree with.
Thanks on both counts, hyphen. I wish it made a difference
though.
jh, it was biologist, not you, that reductio addressed.
It's good to see there are still a few people of principle like
jh, Tony, and Nasikabatrachus here.
I don't actually know for sure, but I suspect the term
"anarcho-capitalism" was coined by Rothbard because "anarchy" has
the bad connotation of "lack of order", and because he had the
foresight to predict that "libertarian" would eventually become
associated with statist thought.
I still refer to myself as "libertarian" in public, because the
general public is completely ignorant of Austrian economics and I
don't want to have to explain the specifics of anarcho-capitalism,
but it troubles me that it puts me in the same boat as the majority
of you, who are simply lesser statists and not opposed to the use
of compulsory force on principle.
Kyle
Ummm...hello? Drugstore.com? Hello? Bueller?
http://www.drugstore.com/templates/browse/default.asp?catid=10663&trx=GFI-0-ROTABS&trxp1=10663&trxp4=60
I suspect the term "anarcho-capitalism" was coined by
Rothbard because
Johnsson: Some say you're an anarchist; is that
true?
Rockwell: The term anarchist is mostly used to
mean someone who believes that if the state and law are gotten rid
of, all property would become collectively owned. It was the great
insight of Murray Rothbard that this is not the case: private
ownership and the law that support it are natural, while the state
is artificial. So he was an anarchist in this sense but to
avoid confusion he used the term anarcho-capitalist. This
doesn't mean that he favored somehow establishing a capitalist
system in place of the state. What he said is that capitalism is
the de facto result in a civilized society without a state. Has
this position made advances? Yes, but not so many that we can use
the term anarchism without causing confusion. If the purpose of
words is to communicate, I'm not sure that the term does that
well.
Kewpie doll manufacturing plant hier.
I think that some of the people posting in this thread are being
mischaracterized.
I don't think that the issue for most people here is "I should have
a right to force somebody else to sell me something!" They may very
well reach similar conclusions to somebody who shares that view,
but the underlying concern is quite different. Now, some might say
"Motives, even good ones, shouldn't matter." OK, fine. However,
when we're getting statements in some of the comments like "It
amazes me how so very few people here are anything close to being
libertarian in any true sense of the word...." then motives are
already under discussion, so I'm just going to point out that the
motives are being misinterpreted.
The issue here is whether the license constitutes a state-granted
privilege, and whether the acceptance of a privilege from the state
should carry some strings. When viewed as a matter of
principle, I can see it both ways: Adding strings can make
a bad situation worse, but at the same time the abuse of
state-granted privilege is an abuse of power.
So we can argue either way if we just look at principles.
As soon as we look at facts on the ground, however, it becomes
clear that this man's abuse of privilege causes no actual harm to
anybody except himself, because he has ample competitors who can
service the customers that he's refusing to serve. No harm, no
foul.
thoreau - clearly reasoned, thank you, and how about this: Those who would cut the state and its strings entirely out of the picture question the motives, however underexamined they may be, of those who would not.
Another question is, how did baby repellant suddenly come under the heading of "medication". That only makes sense if pregnancy is a disease.
if pregnancy is a disease
Is a headache caused by a deficiency of aspirin? ...
Headaches are caused by a number of conditions including tension,
stress, lack of drinking enough water, eating the wrong foods,
caffeine-withdrawal, to name a few.... I developed breast cancer,
but it was NOT caused by having too many breasts
http://www.drday.com/crs.htm
Headaches are caused by a number of conditions including
tension, stress, lack of drinking enough water, eating the wrong
foods, caffeine-withdrawal, to name a few
Reading H&R, to name another... ;-)
M-
I see your point, but I would also observe that cutting the state
entirely out of the picture is probably not an option at this
point. Medications will be regulated for the forseeable future, and
available only via gatekeepers.
Now, I do see a trend toward allowing a greater choice in
gatekeepers (e.g. you can go to a nurse practicioner for certain
things that only an MD could do once upon a time), so maybe we
could look at allowing birth control (and other medications) to be
dispensed in other settings than a pharmacy, perhaps under the
supervision of a nurse. That's not a zero-state solution, but it's
at least a step toward greater competition.
However, as long as the state is involved, we'll also have to look
at matters of fact as well as matters principle. Fortunately, I
would say that in this case there's no harm so no foul, and no need
to look for a state solution.
I should also note that I've heard calls to expand the roles
that a pharmacist can play, perhaps allowing pharmacists to
dispense certain medications without a prescription. The most
familiar context is the "morning after pill."
I suspect that this has come up in the context of the "morning
after pill" due to both the time-sensitive nature of the drug and
also the politics of the issue. However, if the idea catches on I
suspect it will be applied to other drugs as well.
It may seem paradoxical to denounce gatekeepers and then call for
giving pharmacists more powers, but the idea is that the pharmacist
could cut another gatekeeper out of the loop, and dispense without
the approval of an MD.
In general, I'm in favor of anything that gives consumers more
choice in gatekeepers, and more ways to circumvent gatekeepers.
It's a second best solution, admittedly, when compared against the
ideal principled solution. But it's a first-best solution when
compared to the politically feasible options at the moment.
M, maybe I'm just obtuse, but I don't see how what you posted is related to what I posted.
It may seem paradoxical to denounce gatekeepers and then
call for giving pharmacists more powers
For the foreseeable future I hope, denouncingly, to give Dr. Ron
Paul more powers, be they ever so homeopathic, at 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue's gate.
To all you folks who are arguing that because the pharmacist
cannot lawfully do business without a license from the state, that
he should not be allowed to pick and choose which products he will
sell:
You are obviously forgetting that a license from the state is
required to engage in most retail businesses, especially
food-related ones. So the argument could just as easily be made
that no grocery store should be allowed to refuse to sell kumquats.
Or no restaurant should be allowed to refuse to prepare certain
meals. Indeed, the "refusal" to sell may only be based on an
evaluation by the owner that she can't make enough money selling
certain products.
Sorry, crimethink; whether or not you are obtuse, which I have
some reason to doubt, I can be inadvertantly obscure.
Pathologizing the product of an unwanted pregnancy in pursuit of
immediate societal convenience :: pathologizing other products of
underlying disorders, such as the site of a carcinoma; babies
drained with bathwater. Unwelcome pregnancies result from
unregulated disordered human passions, and "antidotes" that extend
beyond voluntary chastity are cosmetic.
Better? (The question is addressed only to crimethink.)
"Another question is, how did baby repellant suddenly come under
the heading of "medication". That only makes sense if pregnancy is
a disease."
If, as a certain female person with whom I am acquainted will, you
characterize the incipient baby as a "parasite," it does.
-and-
If I, a Ferrari mechanic, refuse to work on your Ford, should you
be allowed to turn to the courts to compel me to do so?
If I, as a properly licensed attorney who prefers to restrict his
practice to water law, refuse to take your drunk and disorderly
driving case,should you be allowed to compel me to do so?
Und so weiter.
Wouldn't it be a lot easier to just say, "Jesus, that guy is an
ASSHOLE," and go find somebody else to ease your pain?
If I, a Ferrari mechanic, refuse to work on your Ford,
should you be allowed to turn to the courts to compel me to do
so?
"Alfas rule, Ferraris drool," my late brother would have said. But
too, he was fond of saying "they're all junk!"
Anderson is an asshole, but the appropriate response to his
refusal to dispense contraceptives is to buy them elsewhere. The
fact that he benefits from governmental interference with his
potential competitors doesn't change this.
If he were the only druggist in the area where he does business,
then anyone who cares about their property values would be well
advised to do what they could to attract another pharmacy to open
for business in their town, lest their economic prospects be
stifled by acquiring a bad reputation (eg "you don't want to live
in bible-thumperville! You can't even buy contraceptives
there!")
-jcr
Another analogy to perhaps help clarify my point: while I
support the freedoms of religion and speech, I also think that cops
who are in uniform and on duty should not be allowed to proselytize
to the people they're supervising/patrolling/handing a ticket
to/whatever you wish to call it.
I suppose some here could argue that my position argues in favor of
undermining somebody's freedom of religion and speech; I say it
places necessary constraints on those given authority by the state,
concerning how much power they have to inflict their own personal
opinions on those over whom they have been given authority.
There is a stark difference between the agent of the state and a
party which is regulated by the state.
Ken Shultz,
Whatever we think of the regulation of pharmacies, it seems
problematic at best to add another layer of regulation to their
activities.
Whatever we think of the regulation of pharmacies, it seems
problematic at best to add another layer of regulation to their
activities.
True dat, wie man sagt. Assisting patients achieve what
pharmaceutical advertising calls "regularity" can have paradoxical
effects.
In response to thoreau's elegant arguments: After seven years of reading thousands of scary/goofy legislative bills at our state legislature, I have yet to see a single instance where an attempt to fix a previous expansion of government power by yet another expansion of government power, however well-intentioned, made things better. Perhaps some one can give me a real-world example to the contrary. Absent that, my default belief is that artificially restricting competition by giving a pharmacist a license will automatically cause problems, such as the one that sparked this thread, but that to fix or at least alleviate this problem, any effective libertarian will only consider as a solution something that waters down the ability of those licenses to restrict competition. That is, the root problem must be addressed -- promulagating new, largely unrelated government powers, such as the ability to regulate what products a regulated business can sell, will have severe blowback because the actual problem of limitation of competition wasn't fixed. So, unless you wish to slide bit by bit into statism, I would urge those who believe in freedom to ditch any belief that granting the government abusive new powers will alleviate prior abusive grants of power, however torqued off you are at the current abuses.
jh - have you found it ever working the other way round, namely adverse consequences to repealing legislation?
In response to squarooticus' 8:46am post: I don't spend a lot of
time worrying about whether I'm "merely" a libertarian or a full-on
anarcho-capitalist. I think the easier, more obvious stuff like
ending public schools or ending all licenses would be tackled
before trying to completly end the really difficult problems of
national defense, roads, or police. But the reality is that partial
solutions that slightly reduce government powers can be tackled in
all areas. We already have some private toll roads, and so a few
more such would be a good thing, even if we don't have the
technology yet to handle the trickier case of infrequently used
side streets. We already have private security guards, and more
such would be an improvement, even if we haven't yet figured out an
acceptable way to privatize some situtions. And my gut feeling is
that no one has yet come up with a detailed, workable way of
handling national defense that would prevent other statist
governments from taking over a free market solution piece by piece,
so maybe I'm not an anarcho-capitalist by some people's lights --
but I'm open to the possibility that someone smarter than me will
come up with a partial or even complete solution.
It's gonna be a long fight. The statists have gained a lot of
ground, and most people are heavily statist. But, any victory,
however small, is still a victory. So, let's not hand those statist
buggers a victory by us proposing new powers for government.
M | June 2, 2007, 2:10pm says: "jh - have you found it ever
working the other way round, namely adverse consequences to
repealing legislation?"
(Spews OJ over keyboard laughing) I live in Hawaii, one of the most
statist states around. Repeal legislation? HAHAHAHAHA!
Seriously, the state legislature repeals about one bill a year, and
only the goofiest stuff that the public is completely outraged
about -- the van camera bill, the gas price control bill, the
extra-strong HIPPA bill, the health insurance rate regulation bill.
Aaaand, some unrepentant legislators are still trying to reinstate
those bad ideas. So, no. Haven't seen any bad consequences yet from
those rare repeals.
The solution is to let people buy prescription medicine online and bypass the entire retail drug industry. This guy is just exploiting licensing requirements, so give everyone a license to live their lives. www.OlympicParty.org
What I wonder here is just how difficult is it to obtain a license to open a pharmacy. Are the requirements really so onerous as to preclude anyone from competing with this guy? Or does the lack of competition stem from the local market being unable to support an additional drugstore? If it's the latter, it sounds to me like a case of dog in the manger: "I don't like the way you run your business establishment, but I don't want to go into competition with you either, because it's unprofitable." That would seem to be someone's wanting to eat one's cake and have it, too.
A partial libertarian solution in addition to the one proposed by L. Kraus: If no pharmacy within a certain area sells these prescription medicines, permit private individuals to drive somewhere that does sell them, buy in bulk, and resell in the area lacking retail outlets for the medicine. That is, instead of a futile quest to take on entrenched special interests protecting their government quasi-monopoly by repealing the licensing laws themselves, go for a partial solution and carve out an exception to address the narrow situation of no local markets currently meeting the demand. That'll still arouse the ire of statists who want to impose their notion of no birth control, but you'll nullify the opposition of the pharmacists themselves, maybe getting to the 51% of legislative votes needed to win passage.
This is not a matter of criminal law, but of professional
ethics...
The guy lied. He broke the ethics rules for his profession...
http://students.washington.edu/prepharm/articles/codeofethics.pdf
"A pharmacist acts with honesty and integrity in professional
relationships.
Interpretation: A pharmacist has a duty to tell the truth and to
act with conviction of conscience."
Since the American Pharmaceutical Association is involved in
licensing its members, the sanction should come from them if
appropriate. Lying to patients about the dangers of medication is
worth a sanction, imho. Losing his license to practice (or
suspending it) seems appropriate to the violation.
The above has nothing to do with his decision not to stock a
certain medication, which is within his rights.
Responding to my calling nonsense his claim of people being
unable to obtain medication if the government revoked the license
of, and shut down, a pharmacist who refused to sell contraception
(again for the record, I would not support such a rule) Ellis Wyatt
says,
It isn't nonsense at all. As I understand it (from having read
the entire thread) the situation is/was that this is the only place
to obtain prescription medicine in the town and its vicinity - that
there is no convenient other way to obtain them
Huh? How could anyone who "read the entire thread" come to that
conclusion?? To the contrary, several comments have stated
precisely the opposite.
Um, there are like seven other drugstores in a two mile radius... go somewhere else.
volcker June 1, 2007, 3:52pm
Fortunately, Great Falls is big enough to have more than one pharmacy, so people can easily go elsewhere.
Bill Pope June 1, 2007, 4:00pm
But if, as is suggested above, he has several competitors in close proximity, he's probably shooting himself in the foot, and I'm just as happy to let nature take its course on that.
thoreau June 1, 2007, 4:19pm
Mapquest shows 8 pharmacies in Great Falls and the Anderson Family Pharmacy looks to be off the main drag.
de stijl June 1, 2007, 4:30pm
I have yet to see a single comment that suggested this guy does not
face any competition or that people would have a hard time finding
another pharmacy nearby. What thread were you reading??
I think I'll stand by my initial assessments of nonsense and
ill-considered.
Are the requirements really so onerous as to preclude anyone
from competing with this guy?
Absolutely not.
Or does the lack of competition stem from the local market
being unable to support an additional drugstore?
There is no "lack of competition" - see the previous comments. Or
better yet, pull up a quick check of the yahoo yellow pages to see
22 pharmacies listed in Great Falls, MT.
The drugstore misleadingly cited health concerns in
announcing the new policy, when moral objections to contraception
seem to be the real motive.
I doubt it. The only evidence for that is the word of a feminist
activist, which is no evidence of all. The material evidence (the
note from the pharmacy) doesn't say any such thing.
Dan T. said:
"Of course, you live in America voluntarily so you are consenting
to the law that requires only people who know what they're doing to
sell dangerous drugs."
By that logic, the east coast of the U.S. still belongs to the
royal family of England, and most of the western U.S. still belongs
to Mexico, since both areas were not purchased but taken by force
from other "social contract" organizations. Not to mention that the
louisiana purchase was invalid, because Napoleon did not own the
louisiana territory.
Positing the "love it or leave it" social contract theory requires
both radical alterations on our maps AND it means that, if you do
not shoot someone who is robbing your house, then they own whatever
they take. Interestingly, those who talk about social contract
theory never seem to advocate either of these things, which any
respect for consistency demands, but only use it as a tool to bash
libertarians over the head with their own respect for private
property and voluntary association.
The libertarian in me thinks that hospitals should be able
to run themselves by Christian Scientist standards, by praying
instead of treating people.
There already are such places. They're called Christian Science
sanitoriums. Are you suggesting they ought to be shut down by law?
They're pretty clearly denying a lot of what even Mr. Sullum would
admit constitutes "basic health care."
To reiterate, to limit some folks freedom (pharmacists) creates
vastly more freedom for many others (the many customers in the
area). It's a question of deontology vs. consequentialism in the
area of liberty.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deontological_ethics
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consequentialism
"Ken | June 2, 2007, 8:44pm | #
To reiterate, to limit some folks freedom (pharmacists) creates
vastly more freedom for many others (the many customers in the
area). It's a question of deontology vs. consequentialism in the
area of liberty.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deontological_ethics
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consequentialism"
Ken, maybe you didn't see this:
"thoreau June 1, 2007, 4:19pm
Mapquest shows 8 pharmacies in Great Falls and the Anderson Family
Pharmacy looks to be off the main drag."
In other words, there's plenty of competition-his refusal to sell
does not limit anyone's "freedom". Moreover, having state power
over private business limits people's freedom far more than the
ability to make a pharmarcist out in the middle of Bumf**k, Nowhere
sell birth control pills makes up for.
And then there's your definition of freedom--the implication of
your statement is that the freedom to coerce is the libertarian
kind of freedom. But libertarian freedom is not freedom TO, but
freedom FROM. By definition, the government's interference in this
area limits freedom.
Also, consistency on consequentialist grounds dictates that it
would be perfectly alright if the government kept a certain small
amount of the female population as sex slaves for the "freedom" of
the percentage of the male population that can't get a date to have
sex.
Are you comfortable with that?
Actually, de stijl posted that comment, not me.
But I concur with the point being made: The regulation in question
(pharmaceutical licensing) has not led to a lack of consumer choice
for the town under discussion. And, as others have said, you can
get contraception online.
So if this case does not involve a meaningful harm against
consumers as a result of regulation, it's hard for me to see how
there's a problem in need of solution.
(Which is not to say that I'm cool with state licensing of
pharmacists, but rather that the actions of Stuart Anderson hardly
constitute a problem in need of solution, be the solution coercive
or otherwise.)
Thoreau, like you I think that I too, fail to see a problem here in need of solution. Do you suppose they might let us bury the poor horse now? ;-)
SSob:
Since we are no longer allowed to butcher the horse and export the
steaks to France, I guess we'll have to bury it.
Is it still legal to make the hide into baseball covers, or the
bones into glue?
Kevin
Is it still legal to make the hide into baseball covers, or
the bones into glue?
I think so, as long you do it offshore. Otherwise you'd probably
run afoul of the EPA - especially with the hide and hooves
processing. By the way, it is the hides and the hooves that are
typically made into glue more so than the bones. Bouillon from
boiling them can be turned into glue, but you wouldn't get
much.
Since we are no longer allowed to butcher the horse and
export the steaks to France, I guess we'll have to bury
it.
If the French aren't allowed to buy our horse meat, isn't that a
harm of regulation? Shouldn't we be forced to sell them our horse
meat?
:)
I'd always thought most horsemeat was used to make dog food. I guess the French would be harmed by not being able to obtain food for their dogs. Oh wait, what dogs? They probably ate them - you know how the French are. ;-)
"But libertarian freedom is not freedom TO, but freedom FROM.
"
For many, yes this is the view, but the exact point I am making is:
should it be? If the government, by limiting a handful of folks
freedom could create more choices, more meaningful exercises of
their liberty, should it? For example, I'm all for the government
stepping in and limiting the ability of employers to restrict
employee freedoms (such as firing someone because they were
arrested for an off-grounds drug charge, or because they are gay,
etc). There are a lot more employees than employers and the total
liberty enhanced is worth the total liberty lost. Ditto my example
of the FDA and EPA (I can exercise my liberty much more knowing
that the food I am browsing at the supermarket or the drugs at the
pharmacists are made relatively safe, though it provides
restrictions on my ability to shop at quacks or the liberty of
quacks to peddle their wares.)
"Also, consistency on consequentialist grounds dictates that it
would be perfectly alright if the government kept a certain small
amount of the female population as sex slaves for the "freedom" of
the percentage of the male population that can't get a date to have
sex.
Are you comfortable with that?"
I don't know, how hot would my sex slave be (I'm married, but why
limit this program to the dateless?)? Just kidding. Yes, consistent
consequentialism has problems (remember the old example from into
philosophy where the healthy patient goes in for the check up and
they decide to take his organs to save five sick folks). But so
does consistent deontology (not being able to lie to a killer
looking for your mom when he asks where she is). In fact, it seems
much more wierd to be across the board against decisions which
would create more meaningful liberty across the board just because
they involve an initial restriction on liberty up front.
As to the other pharmacies in the area: that does not fix our
thought experiment. In really rural areas you'd be out of luck. And
many average folks would either not know of ordering rx online (I
have a PhD and I just found that out during this thread) and many
others may not have access to or savvy with the internet that would
make that much of an option.
kevrob,
Since we are no longer allowed to butcher the horse and export
the steaks to France...
I guess you are talking about this
issue?
Note this language in the article:
At issue was an agreement the company had made with USDA to
pay for inspection at the plant after Congress eliminated funding
for inspection in domestic horse-slaughtering operations. Without
inspection, the plant was precluded from
operating.
For anyone too lazy to type it in themselves, he's a link to a
'google map' of the pharmacies in great falls.
http://maps.google.com/maps?near=Great+Falls,+MT&q=pharmacy
In response to the argument "But if pharmacists aren't licensed
drugs won't be safe."
Okay, pharmacists will try to make the most money, right? Know
what's bad for business? Killing off customers. For one, it's hard
to have repeat customers when they are dead. Secondly, its not good
advertising.
Also, there CAN be voluntary regulation. It's not stupid to think
so. Given the choice between two pharmacies, one that is licensed
by a national (non-govermental) organization and one that isn't,
who would customers more often go to?
I am too disinterested to read all the posts. What is the
conclusion here, is it OK run all the fetus killers out of the
store, or does the guy have to sell the pill?
Oh, by the way, we are now headed north of 200 posts.
F. LeMur: "The only evidence for that is the word of a
feminist activist, which is no evidence of all."
I guess you could make any argument if you assume the facts are
different from those stated in the article. Hell, I have yet to get
a woman pregnant, so I think that "pregnancy" is just a feminist
plot. Everybody knows that storks bring babies, not fat-bellied
feminist chicks. The left wing media has been pushing its
extremist, non-stork based theory of babies since the dawn of
printed rags. Damn feminists.
Hmmm, any RX can be bad for you if you have an overabundance of them and/or allergies. Someone close to me had to be on the pill in order to reduce a growth in her fallopian tubes. Religion? Well not too much into their beliefs if they will be selling the pills until they're all out. Money, Money, Money. Perhaps the owners need to take in all of the children in Great Falls and around the world and become foster parents/adopt. Don't forget the children in the 3rd world countries who are starving to death or dying of AIDS. But then again, it's a free country. I don't believe in abortion because IT IS LEGALIZED MURDER! Not allowing birth control actually says that you agree with abortion in it's own way. Maybe they should continue selling and the DONATE the money to causes that support mothers of unplanned pregnancies, etc. This in return will hopefully prevent mothers from entering the front doors of Planned Parenthood.
Dea- you are contradicting yourself by saying anyone who denies BC agrees with abortion yet implying Planned Parenthood is pro-abortion. PP is the largest provider of reproductive health care in the nation (as in #1 ub preventing unwanted pregnanices). The Planned Parenthood in GF doesn't even provide abortion services and they have yet to deny a woman their birth control.
I am very sad that there are this many posters that think it is
ok to force a businessman to sell something he doesn't want to
sell.
That reminds me of the "it is ok to force people to wear seatbelts
and helmets because I am forced to pay for insurance"
Or "it is ok to violate immigrants rights because I am force to pay
for their social services"
It is clearly fascism. Clearly the opposite of
libertarianism.
But people advocate it because it conforms to their beliefs. This
on a libertarian forum?
Is there really any hope for freedom?
Kwais: Forgive me if I don't have any sympathy for the businessman who knowingly involves himself in one of the most heavily regulated industries in existence, then whines when he can't go outside the purview of those regulations.
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Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245