Vindicarre wrote:
Nope, people who are willing to put things into their body without taking any measure to verify that it is safe are choosing to close their eyes and trust that the Gov't is doing it for them. No one is forcing people to ingest any certain product, they are choosing to do so, all while relying on the Gov't to protect them, that's the Gov't protecting them from themselves. These same people have no idea what the FDA regulates, how often places are inspected, nor do they have any idea of what the inspection consists.
This is silly, You just got done saying you'd like to see independent experts do this; how is that any less "relying on someone to protect them from themselves?"
I'll give you a hint: it's not, because they aren't asking the government to protect them from themselves in the first place. They
should not have to take any measure to verify that food or perscription drugs are safe. They should be safe, and if there's any uestion as to whether they implicitly can be trusted (and there is) then' it's the proper role of government to protect them from the unscrupulous. People do have a choice what foods to eat, but they do not have a choice as to whether to eat, so presenting it merely as a matter of personal choice is as tortured as this "protecting you from yourself" nonsense.
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Having one example of twenty years of failure is just that: twenty years of failure.
One example does not demonstrate twenty years of failure.
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In this case it is an indication of a systemic failure due to non-existent regulation. Other examples of haphazard inspection are evidenced by the fact that the highest level of violation the FDA can assign to a facility is an official action indicated (OAI) classification, which warrants agency action to ensure the violation is fixed. The FDA took no regulatory action against 25 percent of facilities it assigned an OAI classification in fiscal 2007. Further, 36 percent of facilities with an OAI classification did not receive any follow up from FDA to ensure the violations that earned them an OAI were corrected. Other examples fall easily to anyone who looks.
Non-existent regulation? Easily ficed: create some regulation. This is not an argument to abolish the FDA; it's an argument, at best, that it needs greater powers or greater resources. Again, this is an
enormous country with an
enormous agricultural base.
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Only 1.3% of imported fish, vegetables, fruit and other foods were inspected in 2006, that's less than the 1.8 from 2003. I would call that as close to non-existent as one could get. As for irregular, fifty-six percent of the food facilities subject to FDA inspection were never inspected over a five-year period studied by federal auditors.
Again, size and volume. You're doing a great job of pointing out a lack of resources.
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Of the facilities the FDA classified as high risk, they only inspected 63% in 2008. As I said, haphazard, irregular or non-existent. Every year US citizens buy their tickets to the security theater, and they get more show than substance.
63% is not hapahazrd or nonexistant. At best, irregular. As for "security theater", repeating the mantra over and over does not make it suddenly make sense; you just got done saying it's 63% then turn around and say "more show than substance"? By those numbers its more substance than show, and as for show, there is none. When was the last time there was any sort of publicity-drawing action by the FDA to compare with what goes on in airports? You're doing a great job of establishing the FDA is understaffed, and/or underfunded however. Perhaps we could redirect some of the DOE funds there.
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The idea that "Big Ag" would be able to influence the inspection process if it were done by anyone but Big Gov't is laughable because it carries the connotation that "Big Ag" lobbying doesn't permeate everything about the current system. One wouldn't have to worry about any kind of "big agricultural lobby" if the inspections were made by independent who would go out of business if their inspections fell to the level of the Federal Government's food regulators. Obviously the issue is too big for the Gov't to wrap its hands around. The scale of the private sector, would allow inspections and certifications to be accomplished much more readily out of the Government's hands.
This is nonsense. First of all, the argument is not that "Big Ag" would not be able to influence the Federal government; it's that it can influence certain state governments a lot more than it can the Federal government because it competes against a far smaller number of interests at that level. Agriculture obviously should have some influence, just like any other major economic activity should ahve its interests represented, but it should not be in a position to dominate the body that should be overseeing it. It can do that at the State level in many states; it cannot do that with the Federal government because it must compete against far too many other lobbies.
As for this fantasy of "independents that would go out of business", what happens when they do that and go out of business? Now no one's inspecting anything. Yet people still have to eat. In the meantime we've gotten rid of government inspection for no better reason than the fantasies of people who want to eliminate government involvement for no better reason than ideology.
Tell me, where exactly is the capital and expertise going to come from for these "independent" inspectors in sufficient volume to improve on the FDA record, for agriculture or anything else. Oh that's right, from the businesses they inspect! Yes, that will work out great! Remember, if the government does it , it must be corrupt and inefficient just because it's government, but that would never become a problem in the private sector because the almighty force of consumer anger will prevent it... yeah, right.
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Some may wish that our Gov't protect them from all the unscrupulous people of the world, but that's not what our Gov't is intended to do, nor is it something it should be attempting.
That's exactly what the government is intended to do and should be doing. Obviously perfection in that goal is unattainable, but that's what we have one for.
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The tens of thousands of pages of regulations issued last year weren't able to do it last year, nor did it work the year before, ad infinitum, and it won't next year, or the next.
The fact that it cannot be done perfectly, and that considerable room for improvement exists in no way establishes that the government shouldn't be doing it. This is something it explicitly should be doing, and we should be demanding better performance, not simply tossing the idea out because "Gummint is bad, mmmkay?"
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As much as people would rather put their heads under the blankets and hope for the protections of Gov't in all things, it ain't gonna happen, and will only lead to even more dependence.
We aren't talking about all things, we're talking about food and drugs. Expecting the government to protect you from people who would sell you harmful food or drugs under the guise of healthful ones is not putting your head under the blanket, nor has it the first thing to do with "dependence". This is exactly what government should be doing - doubly so with things that come from foreign sources.
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The mere fact that people are unable to fathom someone besides the Gov't doing things is symptomatic of a Gov't that is expected to be all things to all people. This way of thinking is endemic in our society. That is not a good thing.
This is nonsense. We are talking about one specific issue: safe food and drugs. Expecting the government to regualte those things in no way generalizes to "being all things to all people".