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1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
1714d
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1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
1714d
Thakur listened intently. Kumar had not even gotten to the really bad news. On the plane back to India, his traveling companion, another Ranbaxy executive, confided that the problem was not limited to Vimta or to those ARV drugs.

“What do you mean?” asked Thakur, barely able to grasp what Kumar was saying.

The problem, said Kumar, went deeper. He directed Thakur to put aside his other responsibilities and go through the company’s portfolio — ultimately, every drug, every market, every production line — and uncover the truth about Ranbaxy’s testing practices and where the company’s liabilities lay.

MORE: Maker of generic Lipitor pleads guilty to selling ‘adulterated drugs’

Thakur left Kumar’s office stunned. He returned home that evening to find his 3-year-old son playing on the front lawn. The previous year in India, the boy had developed a serious ear infection. A pediatrician prescribed Ranbaxy’s version of amoxiclav, a powerful antibiotic. For three scary days, his son’s 102°...
Read more...
set name to 1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE 1714d
1M1Vjj1HHh6vjtdC
saved 1714d
Don't take breaks from distractions. Instead take breaks from focus.
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
1714d
Happiness: 3
Energy: 2
Hunger: 4
Thirst: 2
Nausea: 1
Bathroom: 1

Pain: 2
Discomfort: 2
Bleeding: 0

Drugs/Supplements:
1000mg/d Magnesium citrate by Solgar on Amazon.com
Smoking weed
1F7jM3P4uRG3xBtk
saved 1714d
The health insurance system in the US has made care unaffordable for many people. It's no longer insurance, but an elaborate redistribution system.
muted
16MWdWtXFt5zoXMM
1714d
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
1715d
Happiness: 0-8/10
Energy: 0-4/10
Hunger: 0/10
Thirst: 0/10
Nausea: 1/10
Bathroom: a 2-4/10 that never goes away

Pain: 1-4/10
Discomfort: a 4/10 that never goes away
Bleeding: 0-6 drops everyday

Oral Drugs/Supplements:
1000mg/d Magnesium citrate by Solgar on Amazon.com
1717d · memo
Memo now supports tipping posts with tokens!
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
saved 1715d
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
1715d
they take English words, and labels, apply them to groups of people, then attack the label, causing the people who read their words to have their perspective changed
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
1715d
why are so many grocery store workers so nausea inducing?
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
1715d
it makes me want to puke when Indians blindside me from behind just to smirk at me when I try to checkout at the grocery store, as they talk about me behind my back and gangstalk me
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
saved 1716d
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
saved 1716d
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
saved 1716d
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
saved 1716d
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
1716d
I remember in Diablo 2, I saw a naked sorceress in the corner of town, shaking uncontrollably as another person seemed to show her off, after she was hacked and her items stolen by a program, and probably blackmailed for it for life. It made me feel very startled by it, as she looked like she had tardive dyskinesia, and makes my stomach hurt just thinking about the real world implications
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
saved 1716d
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saved 1716d
The current state of society will be seen in the future as "The Misinformation Age"

BitCoin will fix that...
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
1716d
i think feelings matter more than text or paper
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
1716d
Dirty medicine
By Katherine Eban
May 15, 2013

1. The assignment

FORTUNE — On the morning of Aug. 18, 2004, Dinesh Thakur hurried to a hastily arranged meeting with his boss at the gleaming offices of Ranbaxy Laboratories in Gurgaon, India, 20 miles south of New Delhi. It was so early that he passed gardeners watering impeccable shrubs and cleaners still polishing the lobby’s tile floors. As always, Thakur was punctual and organized. He had a round face and low-key demeanor, with deep-set eyes that gave him a doleful appearance.

His boss, Dr. Rajinder Kumar, Ranbaxy’s head of research and development, had joined the generic-drug company just two months earlier from GlaxoSmithKline, where he had served as global head of psychiatry for clinical research and development. Tall and handsome with elegant manners, Kumar, known as Raj, had a reputation for integrity. Thakur liked and respected him.

Like Kumar, Thakur had left a brand-name pharmaceutical company for Ranbaxy. Thakur, then ...
Read more...
1JHaEMi2KnsEymQw4XTcpkLWmAurYs98gE
1716d
Thakur listened intently. Kumar had not even gotten to the really bad news. On the plane back to India, his traveling companion, another Ranbaxy executive, confided that the problem was not limited to Vimta or to those ARV drugs.

“What do you mean?” asked Thakur, barely able to grasp what Kumar was saying.

The problem, said Kumar, went deeper. He directed Thakur to put aside his other responsibilities and go through the company’s portfolio — ultimately, every drug, every market, every production line — and uncover the truth about Ranbaxy’s testing practices and where the company’s liabilities lay.

MORE: Maker of generic Lipitor pleads guilty to selling ‘adulterated drugs’

Thakur left Kumar’s office stunned. He returned home that evening to find his 3-year-old son playing on the front lawn. The previous year in India, the boy had developed a serious ear infection. A pediatrician prescribed Ranbaxy’s version of amoxiclav, a powerful antibiotic. For three scary days, his son’s 102...
Read more...