SpunkySkunk347
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2006
- Messages
- 1,717
Doctors and psychiatrists that is.
Entirely incapable of problem solving, and only a rudimentary understanding of pharmacology.
Don't know whether or not to prescribe a patient benzos for panic attacks? Fools! Prescribe them 5 or 10 measily little pills a month strictly for halting panic attacks - so that way even if they do abuse them they're not going to get addicted.
Why does the medical industry insist on prescribing you a daily dose of medications like benzodiazepines?
And quit prescribing kids things like SSRIs and DA antagonists you twats!
The situation is rank with foul play to me.. get people addicted so they have to keep coming back and keep paying for more doctor visists and prescriptions. To think that there was actually a board meeting in some pharmaceutical company where people openly agreed "if patients ailments are alleviated, then they won't need us anymore.. we need to keep them sick" is disgusting and terrifying.
"The spiders are all in tune" now..
For any dilemma there are always many paths for us to take, some better than others, but the one that's beneficial to the big players is always what's chosen.. and then they try to convince us that it was the only path all along. Strictly economically speaking, when everyone tries to take a 'little extra', it adds up, and the result, collectively, is a society where every available path for an individual is nothing but a scam designed to keep them at the bottom.
The business world ought to view their customers as partners -- what's good for the customer is good for the business. This leads to a better quality of life for the individual. Honor and compassion are what truly motivates a person - not personal gain. Everything the business world has accomplished so far could have been done in 1/10th the time if people felt truly motivated like they were all in it together with each other, and this would lead to a better future for the entire human race.
It's ultimately a philosophical question, because where the future of our species ends up is in our own hands, but we better make every decision carefully and with posterity in mind.
If men of business are men of business at heart and can't be anything else, that's fine isn't it? There's nothing wrong with making money and being a little competitive out of sportsmanship, is there? Unless your business is directly harming other people. Are there people out there who just want to hurt people at heart? Archetypal vampires? I think there might be. But they're not truly evil at heart, but by circumstance, don't you think?
Entirely incapable of problem solving, and only a rudimentary understanding of pharmacology.
Don't know whether or not to prescribe a patient benzos for panic attacks? Fools! Prescribe them 5 or 10 measily little pills a month strictly for halting panic attacks - so that way even if they do abuse them they're not going to get addicted.
Why does the medical industry insist on prescribing you a daily dose of medications like benzodiazepines?
And quit prescribing kids things like SSRIs and DA antagonists you twats!
The situation is rank with foul play to me.. get people addicted so they have to keep coming back and keep paying for more doctor visists and prescriptions. To think that there was actually a board meeting in some pharmaceutical company where people openly agreed "if patients ailments are alleviated, then they won't need us anymore.. we need to keep them sick" is disgusting and terrifying.
"The spiders are all in tune" now..
For any dilemma there are always many paths for us to take, some better than others, but the one that's beneficial to the big players is always what's chosen.. and then they try to convince us that it was the only path all along. Strictly economically speaking, when everyone tries to take a 'little extra', it adds up, and the result, collectively, is a society where every available path for an individual is nothing but a scam designed to keep them at the bottom.
The business world ought to view their customers as partners -- what's good for the customer is good for the business. This leads to a better quality of life for the individual. Honor and compassion are what truly motivates a person - not personal gain. Everything the business world has accomplished so far could have been done in 1/10th the time if people felt truly motivated like they were all in it together with each other, and this would lead to a better future for the entire human race.
It's ultimately a philosophical question, because where the future of our species ends up is in our own hands, but we better make every decision carefully and with posterity in mind.
If men of business are men of business at heart and can't be anything else, that's fine isn't it? There's nothing wrong with making money and being a little competitive out of sportsmanship, is there? Unless your business is directly harming other people. Are there people out there who just want to hurt people at heart? Archetypal vampires? I think there might be. But they're not truly evil at heart, but by circumstance, don't you think?
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