Secure Da Bag
Veteran
You're Indian. You've repeatedly spoken on Indian superiority ... .
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The fukk are you talking about. I'm Caribbean. FOH wit that dumbshyt.

U.S. Pushing To End Cheap Drugs For Poorest Nations
“We are disappointed that the U.S. Trade Representative’s office has chosen to deny a request by the world’s poorest countries that is fair, sensible and takes into account the multiple challenges these countries face, including a heavy burden of infectious diseases such as HIV and AIDS and [tuberculosis],” said Rohit Malpani, director of policy and analysis at Doctors Without Borders’s Access Campaign. Doctors Without Borders is a humanitarian organization that won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1999. “Unsurprisingly, the approach adopted by the U.S. Trade Representative is not too different from the approach preferred by the multinational pharmaceutical industry.”
The Obama administration has spent over a year pressuring the Indian government to abandon its policy of providing a less expensive generic version of a new cancer drug. India, which features a per capita income of about $1,400 a year, is not considered a least developed country, but rather a “lower-middle-income country” and, as such, is required to comply with WTO treaties.
Although TRIPS requires countries to issue pharmaceutical patents and implement a host of other standards that give drugmakers greater pricing power, the treaty explicitly protects countries’ rights to produce generic versions of medications under a variety of circumstances.
In India, Bayer was charging $5,000 a month for its cancer drug — a price so high that only 2 percent of Indian patients who needed it could afford it. When the government licensed a generic producer to provide the medicine for $157 a month, the Obama administration declared in a congressional hearing that the move was an “egregious” TRIPS violation.
I understand protecting American interests but trying to bankrupt a country just so it can treat a serious virus/disease is beyond the pale.
How Rachel Maddow Helped Force Bill Clinton's Support For Mandela's AIDS Plan
After Mandela became president of South Africa in 1994, then-President Clinton pressured the nation to adopt trade policies that benefitted U.S. corporations while restricting South African access to drugs treating HIV and AIDS. In the mid-1990s, pharmaceutical companies were charging roughly $12,000 a year for lifesaving AIDS drugs in Mandela’s country. For a nation with an average income of $2,600 a year, where roughly one-fifth of the population was HIV-positive, the drug prices were untenable.
Mandela signed a law in 1997 authorizing his administration to shop the globe for cheaper drugs. If the same medication was available at a lower price in another country, Mandela’s government would simply buy the drug abroad and import it. In the years since, some U.S. states — including Kansas under former Gov. Kathleen Sebelius — have experimented with similar policies to obtain prescription drugs from Canada in order to lower prescription drug prices for American seniors.
But American pharmaceutical companies were livid. The Clinton administration insisted the South African law violated World Trade Organization treaties — an interpretation later discredited. Clinton’s team pressured Mandela in trade talks to drop the new law, and began punishing South Africa by rescinding U.S. trade benefits for goods produced in the country.
Two Democrat Presidents pushing the same foreign policy of profit over lives.
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