Joe Queenan reviews Generation Rx: How Prescription Drugs Are Altering American Lives, Minds, and Bodies by Greg Critser.
“Generation Rx” contends that large drug companies have co-opted the federal government, seduced the medical establishment and mesmerized a temperamentally supine public into taking far more drugs than is strictly necessary, much less healthy. Worse, Americans have fallen victim to “polypharmacy”: using so many drugs for so many ailments that they have no idea how the various medications are interacting.
…Despite the book’s misleading title, the triumph of “big pharma” is yet another national tragedy, like Michael Flatley’s career, that can be laid directly at the feet of baby boomers. As Critser writes, “The generation of Americans who rebelliously experimented with drugs is now a generation upon whom drugs are experimented, with barely a squeak of protest.”
Actually, this argument is a bit hard to follow. Young baby boomers never protested against drugs, merely their price, quality, availability and the advisability of buying them from furtive men named Sweet Memphis or Chucky the Swede. So why on earth should they complain about drugs now? (For the answer to this question, go ask Alice. When she’s 10 feet tall.)
“For the answer to this question, go ask Alice. When she’s 10 feet tall.”
Haha hahahahahahahahahaha hahaha hahahaha hahahaha schnort.