Posted on 11/22/2004 11:55:48 AM PST by Born Conservative
Get treated for depression one time in your life and possibly lose your gun rights! Don't let this happen.
"the bill would create a central database affecting tens of millions who are not even suspected of a crime"
Too many databases with too much information. This is not good.
Nope. The government has already made it plain that it will gleefully share (or sell) such information to private industry...like insurance companies. When insurance companies discover that you're taking stuff like high blood pressure medication, insulin, or have received chemotherapy, good luck ever getting a new policy. Some insurers will even rescind homeowner's policies and credit agencies will reduce your credit rating if they think your health has taken a turn for the terminal.
If the Republicans ever have a majority in Congress -- this kind of bill will never get out of committee.
This is not good IMHO.
Nope. The government has already made it plain that it will gleefully share (or sell) such information to private industry...like insurance companies.
You stole my words. Imagine your auto insurance company raising rates because of the prescription drugs you take. Would they ever tell you the reason why rates were raised or why you were denied coverage ? To even think something like this could be passed is scary.
Virginia already passed SB 425, creating a pilot program to track prescriptions for Oxycontin and other painkillers. This make Pharmacists defacto law enforcement agents. But no one would ever use this "confidential" information to say affect the outcome of alocal election. Or destroy a radio talk show host.
Here it is introduced by the House to the Senate:
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/D?c108:2:./temp/~c108SEroCo::
National All Schedules Prescription Electronic Reporting Act of 2004 (Received in Senate from House)
HR 3015 RDS
108th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. R. 3015
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
October 6, 2004
"If the Republicans ever have a majority in Congress -- this kind of bill will never get out of committee."
Sadly, I don't think the Republicans have the nads or will to stop it. Not without putting their feet to the fire.
and by this description, they could say any priscription fir the definition:
(2) The term `controlled substance' means a drug that is--
(A) included in schedule II, III, or IV of section 202(c) of the Controlled Substance Act; or
(B) identified by the State involved as a drug subject to the monitoring program of the State under this section.
Over here.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
The Congress finds as follows:
(7) A major portion of the use and misuse of schedule II, III, and IV controlled substances involves interstate and foreign commerce.
Ah, the hint of Constitutional flavoring to make blatantly unconstitutional legislation seem legal.
The two halves of the Redomopublicrat superparty are equally worthless at protecting our rights, I'm sorry to say.
In progress. Watch the Florida Supreme Court on this one.
It was introduced by a Republican from Kentucky, Ed Whitfield.
From his webpage:
The first Republican elected from Kentucky's First Congressional District since the Civil War, Whitfield is part of the new wave of citizen-legislators that has adopted historic changes...
Just throw in the word 'interstate'.
Michigan's and Texas' requirements don't justify it--that's just an observation.
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