Television viewers are inundated with drug ads from Big Pharma. It's a flood.
Have you ever heard of these drugs? Otezla, Xeljanz, Namzaric, Keytruda,
Breo, Cosentyz? Not likely. If you have, do you know what conditions
they treat?
Highly unlikely. But there they are, splashed in
commercials.
Why? Who is going to remember to ask their doctor whether these and other obscure meds are right for them?
What's going on here?
The answer is: IT DOESN'T MATTER WHAT DRUGS ARE BEING ADVERTISED.
If Pharma can pay enough TOTAL money for ads, for ALL drugs, and
dominate the allotted TV time for commercials, it can control the
news---and that is exactly what it wants to do.
Pharmaceutical scandals are everywhere. Reporting on them, wall to
wall, isn't good for the drug business. However, as an industry ponying
up billions of dollars for TV ads, Pharma can limit exposure and
negative publicity. It can (and does) say to television
networks: If you give us a hard time on the news, we'll take our ad
money and go somewhere else. Boom. End of problem.
Face it, the billions of dollars Pharma is paying for TV ads are a drop
in the bucket, compared with its profits gained from selling the drugs.
The ads are a good investment. As a bribe.
Control the news.
There is another reason for the insane flood of TV drug ads:
By their sheer number, they convince viewers that medical drugs (no matter what they are) are absolutely necessary.
Hour by hour, viewers numbly watch drug commercial after commercial.
The overall message is: To keep illness from your door, to cure illness,
to alleviate illness, you must take these medicines. THIS IS LIFE IN
THE 21ST CENTURY. You're all sick, and you
need help, and this is the ONLY kind of help there is.
The drug companies could invent names of fake drugs that don't even
exist, advertise them in a cascade on television, with the same intent.
DRUGS ARE AS VITAL TO LIFE AS WATER OR AIR.
But what about all those dire warnings of side effects from the drugs?
By law, the companies must include them in their commercials. Well, the
companies have calculated that, on balance, the stark, front-line,
unending message of DRUGS, DRUGS, AND MORE DRUGS
will outweigh the warnings in viewers' minds.
If the television audience is nailed with the idea that they can't
escape; that their health always hangs in the balance; that dire
illnesses are always waiting in the shadows to strike; that the
slightest ache or pain could be a precursor to a crippling or
fatal disease; and drugs are the only solution and protection---they're
going to overlook the warnings about side effects.
ALL IN ALL, DRUG ADS ARE NEWS.
That's the approach. Pharma is blasting out 24/7 news asserting modern
medicine's central and commanding role in the life of every human.
It's a gigantic and stupendous piece of mind control, but when did that ever stop tyrants from inventing reality for the masses?
Implicit in "ask your doctor if drug X is right for you," is the
message: "go to your doctor." That's the key. If the ads can put a
viewer into the system, he will be diagnosed with something, and he'll
be given a drug for it.
So the drug ads are also promotions for doctors, who are the arbiters
and the decision makers. Some kind of medical need (drugs) always
exists---and the doctor will tell you what it is. And all patients
should OBEY. Even if, in the process, they go broke.
Take the case of Opdivo, a drug that treats squamous non-small cell lung
cancer. Cost? $12,500 a month. Patients on Medicare will pay $2500 a
month out of their own pockets. And the result?
Wall St, Journal: "In the clinical study on which the Opdivo ad bases
its claims, the drug extended median patient survival to 9.2 months from
the start of treatment..."
The cancer patient pays $22,500 for nine months of survival, during which the suffering continues, and then he dies.
The ad isn't mentioning THAT.
The ad relies on the doctor to convince the patient to go along with this lunatic program.
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