Bullets by prescription?

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a former UNC professor of pharmacy law, said he thinks the best way to reduce the number of gun-related crimes is to regulate access to ammunition in the same way doctors regulate drugs - by having physicians prescribe bullets.


And, the best way to reduce the number of pedophiles that solicit children on the internet is to have doctors prescribe internet uses.

We can also cut down the numbers of written death threats and cases of libel by having doctors prescribe pens, pencils, paper, and other forms of communication.

Oh, and lets not forget those poor children that get started down that road to crime by playing violent video games, listening to explicit cds and watching violent movies. Perhaps we can have doctors can start prescribing these various forms of entertainment. Come on... its for the children.
 
"Dr, this ammo you prescribed is just not cutting it! I think I need something stronger".

"Wow, you went through all that ammo I prescribed last week already"?

"I think it is becoming habit forming for you son"!

"But, here is some sample packs of Winchester White Box to tide you over for a bit. Try shooting some snap caps and dry firing to help with your withdrawals after that"...

After that try an ice bath for the muscle cramps!
 
Hmmmm

I seem to remember a post of mine from a while back where I point out that "mental health" could be used to abridge the Second Amendment without having to pass a bunch of new laws.

In that discussion, it was pointed out that this was a silly idea.

My response was that, as silly as it might be, that didn't mean someone wouldn't try it.

And here we are.

Q.E.D.
 
Shoe on wrong foot

I believe we need to amend the BATFE to the BATFEP Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, Explosives and Pharmaceuticals. Only BATFEP approved medicines with a valid sporting use could be prescribed by doctors!:neener:
 
So what happens if you get an overdose of bullets? Can you overdose only with bullets that start with a "4"? What if you took 16 9mm's instead of 7 .45's? I guess would depend on if you took it topically or orally or as a suppository...?

Is it true that 9mm is a gateway caliber to other, heavier and more serious centerfires?

:neener:
 
Great. I'll be having people showing up at my ER at 3am first day of deer rifle season saying they need a refill on their hunting caliber. "Sorry doc, I used up my last ammo sighting in the gun and forgot to save some for the hunt. By the way, where is the closest 24hour drive thru ammo store?"
 
Lemme see...

Are there generic substitutes?
What's the copay for brand name cartridges like Federal?
Do they do 90 day supplies by mail order?
How much ammo constitutes a 90 day supply?
What about FDA approval?
Will they start selling ammo at Walgreen's?

Will you be able to buy it from Canadian companies?
If you load your own, would you have an "Ammo Lab?"
If they raid your Ammo Lab, will they cart your children off to Social Services?
 
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But, under the BATFEP, would those pain killers that are strong enough to actually work be classified as "assault meds" and thus banned in most states?

Also, what about waiting periods? I can see many injuries either heeling on their own or becoming infected and worse before the waiting period to get medication is up.
 
Since retiring from leading the N.C. Board of Pharmacy, David Work is promoting a new role for medical prescriptions: gun control.

He is a piece of ....Work. Thinking outside of the box is a great understatement.
 
I'm ALL for this. Great idea.

Why? It'll take care of the ammo expense issue! I already know plenty of doctors who can write prescriptions if I need it.... and I have health-insurance..... HELLO?!

(ok.... in all seriousness.... it's dumb.... for the same reason that I don't go to a gun range for a prostate exam)
 
Hi, I'm David Work from the N.C. Board of Pharmacy, and I'm either a complete idiot! or just an average liberal who wants to abuse government power to un-enpower the serfs.
 
Ambulatory Pediatric Association
American Academy of Pediatrics
American Academy of Ambulatory Care Nursing
American Medical Women`s Association
American Medical Student Association
American Medical Association
American Association for the Surgery of Trauma
American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
American Association for World Health
American Nurses Association
American Association of Neurological Surgeons
American Public American Health Association
Association of American Medical Colleges
Black Mental Health Alliance
Congress of Neurological Surgeons
National Black Nurses` Association
National Association of Chain Drug Stores
National Association of Pediatric Nurse Associates & Practitioners
National Association of Public Hospitals
National Association of Children`s Hospitals and Related Institutions
National Association of Community Health Centers
National Spinal Cord Injury Association
Physicians for Social Responsibility
Society of Critical Care Medicine

Guess what they have in common, according to the NRA
 
...And then we can have FDA approval for new calibers

Why There's No Cure for the Common Cold

I shovel telomeres for a living. My friends in the computer industry are always asking me: “Why can’t you biotech guys cure cancer? Or aging? Or the common cold? What do you do with all those billions of government research dollars?”

Well, it’s time to confess: Biologists bought three stuffed mice and two petri dishes in 1974. These are recycled in staged publicity photos in such high-profile popular glossies as Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Cell, and Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol. Our much-hyped “gene sequencing,” “chromosome imaging,” etc. are all done on Photoshop by companies in Taipei . All the rest of the money goes to yachts, scuba equipment, and private islands in Fiji for all postdocs and research associates. That’s why medical researchers always look so tanned and vigorous.
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OK, seriously: If the computer industry were running under the same conditions as biotech, this is how it would work:

There would be a Federal Data Administration (FDA). Every processor, peripheral, program, printer, and power cord made in or imported into the USA would have to obtain FDA approval. This would require an average of 19 years of safety testing on lab rats and clinical trials for effectiveness on nerd volunteers with informed consent, before prescription for general human use is allowed. Any change of any kind to any chip, ergonomic keyboard, or line of code would require re-approval of the entire system and any hardware or software that could in principle be connected to it via Internet, intranet, or hand-carried disk.

In the medical system, this sort of approval can be done for only a bit over $802 million per drug or medical device (Tufts study, 2001). So it might cost only a few times more when applied to a global industry producing next-generation silicon chips. Anyway, how can anyone put a price tag on safety? Think of the children!

Today even someone who dropped out of college could legally own a large software company. To remedy this unconscionable state of affairs, state licensing boards would be created to require American Mainframe Association (AMA) membership for all computer professionals. This would ensure that all programmers go to college and postgraduate school for at least eight years, and then serve multi-year nerdships and residencies before being allowed to practice independently. Thus programmers would be fully prepared to start writing BASIC programs by age 28-30, and attain full professional status by their 40s.

These AMA professionals would prescribe for consumers the “right” hardware and software (within the prescribing and cost limits of the appropriate HMO, see below). To guard against improper (“recreational”) use of computers, all information products would now require a prescription from a professional.

A Data Enforcement Agency (DEA) would be empowered under the asset forfeiture laws to confiscate the property of smugglers and users of illegal data processing paraphernalia, such as that used in so-called “video games” or “palm pilots.” The DEA would also have the responsibility of ensuring that no unapproved data flows in or out of our borders.

Then the IRS would make buying computers for the home use of employees a deductible expense for employers (but not for employees), as is true of health insurance today. Companies would be forced to buy computers for their employees through Hardware Maintenance Organizations (HMOs), instead of allowing the employees to buy them directly.

Finally, the Federal government would hire hundreds of thousands of programmers and chip designers to work in government-run “computer research,” controlled by NIH, the various armed services, and other fountains of innovation. Private “cybertech” companies could have whoever was left over . . . if they could figure out how to con investors into funding companies which were rarely allowed to sell their products.
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If we had really let government run the computer industry this way, there would be no Intel, IBM or Apple. There would be no chip industry. There would be no Internet. The NIH would be funding hundreds of labs to develop better vacuum tubes.

Now, all you programmers who are snickering at the poor dumb biologists: let me point out something. You, personally, aren’t made of doped silicon. You are made of DNA and some other junk banging around inside lipid bilayers. If you want to improve your life in any meaningful way, you need to be able to buy stuff to upgrade your DNA system.

Some organisms, like Bowhead whales, already manage to make DNA systems work for over 200 years. That means their cancer control is 1,000 times as good as ours (twice the lifespan times 500 times the cell number), and their aging control is at least twice as good. A real free-market biotech industry could pirate these already-existing DNA programs and sell them to you cheap (whales don’t get royalties, and DNA replicates as easily as chips do).

So, since you computer guys have all the money, it would behoove you to use a little of it to get rid of the FDA and all the rest of the medieval guild nonsense that encrusts the biotech industry. Then you would finally see some progress against cancer and aging.

Oh, the common cold? We could wipe out the existing varieties, but RNA and DNA hackers will always resequence new types. Viruses will always be with us; you just have to continuously update your immune system’s definitions.
 
Re mpmarty's "BATFEP"

BATFEPSBNMATVSATOHNTYMOYNNWLYPWWYWKBYMGAHWBBDPQTQB


"Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, Explosives, Pharmaceuticals, Scissors, Brickbats, Noisy Motorcycles, All Terrain Vehicles, Slingshots, and All The Other Hairy Nasty Things Your Mommy or Your Na-Na Wouldn't Let You Play With When You Were a Kid Because You Might Get All Hurted With a Boo-Boo or Disturb the Peace and Quiet of Their Quilting Bees."

Now we're getting somewhat closer to Utopian Ideals.

Be a good little boy, now.
 
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