Wikileaks on Big Pharma
Posted: December 21, 2010 Filed under: Big Pharma, Wikileaks | Tags: Big PHarma deals death, BOA, Nigeria, PFizer, Wikileaks 53 Comments
Wikileaks has been the source of a lot of important whistle blower information which is why there seems to be a crusade against the organization’s most visible representative, Julian Assange. Wikileaks was founded in 2006 as a place where–among others–Chinese dissidents would be allowed to get important information to the public. Wikileaks’ stated purpose is to give assistance to all peoples that seek to “reveal unethical behaviour in their governments and corporations”.
Its first released documents dealt with government plots to assassinate people. It also has exposed bizarre documents from the Church of Scientology. During the financial crisis, Wikileaks released a report about a serious nuclear accident in Iran, problems at banks like the Kaupthing Bank of Iceland and Barclay’s, and a toxic dumping incident in the Ivory Coast. They have dumped data on corrupt governments and corrupt corporations so there is absolutely no shock that the powers that be all over the world are trying anything they can to discredit Wikileaks and every one associated with it. Wikileaks is bigger than one man and his foibles.
I’ve been finding more and more horrible things about Big Pharma and their experimentation on poor and helpless people in developing nations. This cover up trail–as with some others associated with horrible drug testing practices–leads to Wikileaks. Wikileaks has acted as our pharma watch dogs and released documents that provide more information on an ongoing story that exposed fatal drug tests on Nigerian children. Here is a summary of the situation from Democracy Now. You can watch Amy Goodman’s story in video at the same link. WAPO actually did a lot of the original investigative journalism back at the time this came to light in the late 1990s.
Diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks show the pharmaceutical giant Pfizer hired investigators to find evidence of corruption against the Nigerian attorney general to pressure him to drop a $6 billion lawsuit over fraudulent drug tests on Nigerian children. Researchers did not obtain signed consent forms, and medical personnel said Pfizer did not tell parents their children were getting the experimental drug. Eleven children died, and others suffered disabling injuries including deafness, muteness, paralysis, brain damage, loss of sight, slurred speech. We speak to Washington Post reporter Joe Stephens, who helped break the story in 2000, and Musikilu Mojeed, a Nigerian journalist who has worked on this story for the NEXT newspaper in Lagos.
The story is 14 years old, but the Wikileaks information is new. In 1995, Pfzier was trying to get a new antibiotic–Trovan— to market. You may know this drug as Zithromax. It was supposed to be a big drug breakthrough and they wanted to test the drug on children. This is a complex and difficult undertaking in the US so they headed to Nigeria for their Clinical Trials. This is Amy Goodman’s explanation from a transcript of the show.
AMY GOODMAN: In 1996, Pfizer’s researchers selected 200 children at an epidemic hospital in Nigeria for an experimental drug trial. About a hundred of the kids were given an untested oral version of the antibiotic Trovan. Researchers did not obtain signed consent forms, and medical personnel said Pfizer did not tell their parents their children were getting the experimental drug. Eleven children died. Others suffered disabling injuries including deafness, muteness, paralysis, brain damage, loss of sight, slurred speech.
The details of the case were first exposed in 2000 in an investigative series in the Washington Post. In 2007, Nigerian officials brought criminal and civil charges against Pfizer in a multi-billion-dollar lawsuit.
Wikileaks has exposed an important link between Pfizer and the Nigerian law suit.
JUAN GONZALEZ: A State Department cable from 2009 details a meeting between Pfizer’s country manager, Enrico Liggeri, and U.S. officials in Abuja. The cable reads, “According to Liggeri, Pfizer had hired investigators to uncover corruption links to Federal Attorney General Michael Aondoakaa to expose him and put pressure on him to drop the federal cases.” A few months later, Nigeria settled with Pfizer for just $75 million.
Nigerian journalists consider Assange and Wikileaks to be heroes for exposing this connection. Here’s something just written by PMNews Nigeria outlining the importance of this information. You see an article there written by a Nigerian lawyer that explains the importance of the Wikileaks. The author has disabled the option to quote his work so I’ll respect this and just give you the link.
Additional information on Pfizer has come to light through the documents released by WikiLeaks. A lot of this information is being reported by Democracy Now–an advertising free media outlet–that has followed this story extensively. Pfizer extensively lobbied against a New Zealand Free trade agreement because New Zealand has drug buying rules similar to Canada. Big Pharma just hates it when countries negotiate prices.
In other WikiLeaks news, newly released cables have shed more light on the pharmaceutical giant Pfizer. Last week on Democracy Now! we reported how Pfizer hired investigators to find evidence of corruption against the Nigerian attorney general to pressure him to drop legal action over fatal drug tests on Nigerian children. Now Pfizer’s actions in New Zealand have been exposed by WikiLeaks. Newly released cables show the pharmaceutical company lobbied against New Zealand getting a free trade agreement with the United States because it objected to New Zealand’s restrictive drug buying rules. In addition, cables show drug companies tried to get rid of New Zealand’s former health minister.
Democracy NOW also reports that the Big Pharma has become the biggest defrauder of the Federal Government. They are bigger than even the military industrial complex with its giants like GE.
A new study by the watchdog group Public Citizen has found that the pharmaceutical drug industry has become the biggest defrauder of the federal government, surpassing the defense industry. Public Citizen found that the drug industry paid out nearly $20 billion in penalties over the past two decades for violations of the False Claim Act. More than half of the industry’s fines were paid by just four companies: GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Eli Lilly and Schering-Plough.
If you read the show’s transcript, you’ll see further evidence and concerns about clinical trials happening on poor people in poor countries. The person I will quote is guest “Dr. Sidney Wolfe, the Director of Public Citizen’s Health Research Group and co-author of the new report, Rapidly Increasing Criminal and Civil Monetary Penalties Against the Pharmaceutical Industry: 1991 to 2010.”
I’d just like to add something to what James Steele said, which is, we call this industry the human experimentation corporations. The biggest human experimentation corporation is right here in the United States. It’s called Quintiles. They do experiments for drug companies as quickly as they possibly can all over the world. We found an ad from Quintiles that sells to the drug industry: “We help you recruit drug-naive subjects in many developing countries.” So this industry, in terms of exporting human experiments—and it really is a business—in terms of criminal violations—off-label marketing, illegal—in terms of False Claims Act, is really at the forefront. They parade themselves—and they do some good things; they do develop some good drugs. Is it really necessary for them to engage in criminal behavior, in civil violations and in very unethical human experimentations around the world? We think the answer is no.
A top lawyer at the FDA has recently said, “The only way we’re going to stop this industry from violating these laws, endangering people, is to start putting people in jail.” No one has ever gone to jail from one of these drug companies for these criminal violations. The size of the penalties is miniscule compared with the profits. Two companies, as mentioned—Glaxo and Pfizer alone—have paid $7 billion or $8 billion in the last 20 years. In one year, those two companies make about $15 billion or $16 billion in profits. So, until they are adequately assessed penalties that compare with the amount of money they’ve made off of these various drugs, until people are put in jail, if appropriate, this industry is going to keep running away.
And one other thing that was alluded to by James Steele is, this industry directly finances the FDA through cash payments. This year, between $700 million and $800 million in cash goes directly from the drug industry to the FDA. It pays for about two-thirds of all the review of drugs. So, in addition to the lobbying, the $200 million that James Steele talked about, there are direct cash payments, under a 1992 law that the Congress unwisely passed. So we have lots of problems with this industry. It does a lot of good things, but it is increasingly a menace in this country and abroad. As part of globalization, we’ve globalized human experimentation, and it’s a pretty nasty business.
There are several things that are becoming abundantly clear to me as I continue my search for Big Pharma’s role in the deathes of many people–babies and children included–through reckless experimentation and profit-seeking. The first is the importance of Wikileaks and the realization that the sideshow going on right now over Assange’s behavior in Sweden detracts from the essential role that Wikleaks plays in releasing important information. The second is how the majority of real data that I find comes from either sources not aligned with advertising interests or over seas media.
Democracy NOW and public interest groups like WikiLeaks rely on small donations and are not held hostage by government bullies and corporate revenues. Without media and free press outlets like Wikileaks and Democracy NOW and these investigative reports done by Public Interest Groups, we would NEVER get this information. We should be actively funding their ventures and supporting their right to expose the corruption and immoral behaviors of all governments and huge corporations.
The rich and powerful are banding together to prevent this information from coming to the surface. JUST a few minutes ago, this came to my attention: Apple Explains Why They Banned The Wikileaks App. MasterCard, Bank of America, and Pay Pal have moved to stop the flow of money to Wikileaks. BOA is said to be one of the next data drops from Wikileaks so I hardly find that move surprising. As corporate and western European/American government interests move to strangle this outlet of free speech, we’re beginning to see more people–people with questionable intellect and morals–distracted by the Assange Rape Accusation Side Show. Isn’t a little bit odd that all this is taking place in light of more and more whistle blowing documents showing up in places where there is only accountability to free speech and not to the profit motive and geopolitical power?
Against this backdrop, Julian Assange, the 39-year-old globetrotting Australian who is the driving force behind WikiLeaks, is battling extradition from England to Sweden for questioning about rape allegations. He was released on bail in London on Thursday.
Speaking Saturday outside a supporter’s mansion in eastern England, Assange called the case in Sweden a “travesty.” He also claimed he and others working for WikiLeaks face significant risks.
“There is a threat to my life. There is a threat to my staff. There are significant risks facing us,” he said, without offering details of the purported threats.
In an interview with CNBC on Friday, Assange said his organization plans to soon release information about banks, and he told Forbes magazine last month that the data would show “unethical practices.”
Assange told Computerworld magazine in 2009 that his organization had a trove of files on Bank of America. “At the moment, for example, we are sitting on 5GB from Bank of America, one of the executive’s hard drives. Now how do we present that? It’s a difficult problem,” he was quoted as telling the magazine.
Stay tuned. There will be more. The more you dig into stuff, the more twisted it gets. My guess is that Karl Rove is over on a mission there in Sweden to stop something that must either endanger Cheney, Bush, or himself. Why is Karl Rove helping to persecute Julian Assange? But, my friends, that is another story.
update: The BBC News has a Transcript of The Assange interview on its site.
What do Republicans have against the 9/11 responders?
Posted: December 21, 2010 Filed under: legislation, U.S. Politics | Tags: 9/11 responsders bill 9 CommentsThere’s going to be a lot of lumps of coals left in a few people’s stockings this christmas. It sure is a shame that the voters
can’t do more to idiots like Tom Coburn. He didn’t earn the nickname Dr. No for nothing!
New York Democrats hoping for quick action on a bill to give health care compensation to ground zero workers are about to run into Tom Coburn.
The Oklahoma Republican senator and physician — known in the Senate as “Dr. No” for his penchant for blocking bills — told POLITICO on Monday night that he wouldn’t allow the bill to move quickly, saying he has problems with parts of the bill and the process Democrats are employing.
Another Republican, Wyoming Sen. Mike Enzi, said he had concerns with the measure and that it should instead move through the committee process.
“I’m not trying to fight it; I’m trying to get it right,” Enzi said. “There are 30 things that ought to be changed real quick in committee but very difficult on the floor. To finish a bill at this point of time, we’re not going to be able to amend it.”
The bill — offered by New York Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand and Chuck Schumer — would give compensation to first responders who fell ill from the toxic dust from the collapse of the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001.
We just got through giving huge tax breaks to folks that don’t need it and some that have even stated they don’t want it and yet we can’t help any of our fellow citizen’s in need. I just don’t get it at all. You may recall that Minx has mentioned that Shep Smith has taken this on as a personal cause. The Business Insider is reporting that he’s naming every single Republican who refused to speak to him over this bill. He’s invited them to his show to explain why they’re not supporting the effort. Jon Stewart has personally made appeals for the bill on his show too. Stewart brought on first responders who were dying from their exposure to toxic materials doing their 9/11 duties. Smith just got Pataki and excuses instead of Republican Senators.
Instead he got former Gov. George Pataki, who offered a very brief, very faint concession that the GOP has raised ‘valid questions’ before agreeing that, yes, it should get passed. “This is the right thing to do.”
But that wasn’t enough for Shep who noted it that took Jon Stewart bringing on 9/11 First Responders, “people who are dying,’ to get this done. And then this:
“Thank God this didn’t happen down in a place like New Orleans where they don’t have a lot of media to run around and take up for themselves and where Sen. Gillibrand [his previous guest] and Gov. Pataki don’t have microphones in their backyard cause then it might have worked out differently.”
We’ll undoubtedly get problems showing up from the BP Oil spills down here. We’ll see if we can get similar attention when that happens. Meanwhile, why can’t we take care of these public servants? Because some one wants to hold a meeting and give a few speeches?
Interestingly enough, a committee hearing was held on the bill in June. Coburn sits on the committee so he should know about it. I will add that Former Arkansas Mayor Mike Huckabee and former NY Mayor Guiliani support the bill.
Last night on Fox’s Red Eye, former Republican Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee urged the Senate to pass the bill immediately, telling the moving story of a friend of his from Texas who volunteered to come to New York City after 9/11, spent a year working there, and is now dying from cancer he contracted while on the job. “There are people who need medical care right now, and frankly, the clock is running out on them. Their lives are fading away, even as we sit here talking about it,” Huckabee said.
Likewise, former Republican New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani urged Congress to pass the bill straight away, noting the heroism these first responders showed in days and weeks after 9/11.
Once Upon a Time: Christmas in Medieval England
Posted: December 21, 2010 Filed under: Festivities, just because 22 CommentsOne of the crazy things I do with my copious free time (haha) is Medieval/Renaissance re-enactment. I try to combine that with my love of research and recently wrote a small article for a very local newsletter (distribution about 30, I think :)). I hope you all will enjoy reading a bit about how Christmas was celebrated 500-1000 years ago.
In the old, pre-Gregorian, calendars the shortest night of the year, winter solstice, falls on 24th December (in modern, Gregorian, calendars it falls on the 21st or 22nd). Therefore the 25th was the day when the duration of the sun’s light began to grow. This event, and the midwinter season, was celebrated in every known pagan European religion. For example, the Romans had the day of Sol Invictus (25th December) and the weeks long festival of Saturnalia and the northern Germanic and Norse cultures celebrated Jultide or Yule and Midwinternacht.

Christian bishops living in the 350s chose the 25th of December as the day to celebrate Christ’s birth. The symbolisms of the lengthening daylight and forthcoming emergence of plants and animals in Spring were inescapable. It was also very convenient to graft the celebration of Christ’s birth onto the existing pagan holidays. This meant that the Christmas traditions celebrated in Medieval England, and many of those celebrated today, are an amalgam of pagan and Christian ritual and belief. Both the pagan and the Christian worlds centered around an agrarian lifestyle which is foreign to many of us today, and their rituals reflected this lifestyle.
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