Anyone who works in business long enough realizes that the administrative bureaucracy everywhere is way too bloated right now and it's full of incompetent people. The average consumer maybe understand it a little when they apply for a mortgage loan or has issues with their cell phone plan but most people really have no clue. Not everyone has Presidents in their back pocket either.
The government needs to start reducing regulations in every industry that were implemented for security/safety reason by increasing oversight. Businesses should be allowed to run lean with higher risks of mistakes. Not every business should be regulated to death in an attempt to ensure there's no risk. This oversight takes up significant resources and time, leading to increased employment of incompetent people and longer wait times to get anything done.
Agree, but it's not that simple. You'd need to wave a magic wand and give congress the testicles to tell industry "no" when they come begging for special immunity from their mistakes.
Not even just regulation, just sheer time wasting to get you to give up and leave them alone.
I think almost all of us have called a business to get a problem sorted, only to spend hours trying to wrangle an automated robot voice to eventually give up and connect us to a live person who fixes the problem in 2 minutes. Unless the robot lady connected us to the wrong department and now its double the hold time. Or an Indian with an accent so thick you cannot understand a single word.
I think this shows that even without regulation, they would still obfuscate everything in a similar manner just to avoid taking any responsibility or having to hire extra help. The regulations might have started the issue, but most of them are pretty comfy using them as cover for their own incompetence a lot of the time.
Yes, I've noticed that as well. In my line of work, I actually think some of the added bureaucracy was just added to ensure that anyone who gets through it truly actually should be someone who gets through it (a filtration mechanism) BUT the reason my company does this is because the government regulations that have been implemented don't allow our company to help people unless they truly need it. Were the government to relax regulations, we wouldn't need so many bureaucratic layers designed to weed people out.
Companies I've worked for in the past have had no such regulations, they simply wanted to filter out as many customers as possible. Ironically, the ones that got through were usually the most angry, or became such because of the process, meaning they couldn't be helped in any satisfying way anyway.
It was entirely so the people in charge of answering the customers could also wear multiple other hats and cut the amount of employees down to "if one person calls out the whole operation falls apart" levels.
Like always, the government and the corporate are competing to see who can fuck each other into letting them be on top, and at the end of the day the person who actually needs something is left in the middle holding whatever is left.
Not to mention it's always the biggest and most entrenched players in any industry that favor suffocating regulations. It protects them from competition from better run upstarts because they have the resources to pay people to navigate the regulations and they have the pull to get their shady practices exempt from oversight, defeating the purpose of regulations to begin with.
Yes, that might mean more people die from trucking accident but then that'll get people more upset at Indians and maybe people will start demanding deportations.
Maybe the maker is being overly cautious with their warnings, but it sounds like this stuff does not fuck around.
To minimize radiation exposure to others following administration of PLUVICTO, limit close contact (less than 3 feet) with household contacts for 2 days or with children and pregnant women for 7 days. Refrain from sexual activity for 7 days, and sleep in a separate bedroom from household contacts for 3 days, from children for 7 days, or from pregnant women for 15 days.
If you can't get within 3' of a child for 7 days after it's administered, I'm going to bet it's stored and controlled very specifically.
Its some new drug that just got released. I dont think its over the counter and I’m unsure how easy it is to get it by just scheduling appointments yourself
Anyone who works in business long enough realizes that the administrative bureaucracy everywhere is way too bloated right now and it's full of incompetent people. The average consumer maybe understand it a little when they apply for a mortgage loan or has issues with their cell phone plan but most people really have no clue. Not everyone has Presidents in their back pocket either.
The government needs to start reducing regulations in every industry that were implemented for security/safety reason by increasing oversight. Businesses should be allowed to run lean with higher risks of mistakes. Not every business should be regulated to death in an attempt to ensure there's no risk. This oversight takes up significant resources and time, leading to increased employment of incompetent people and longer wait times to get anything done.
Agree, but it's not that simple. You'd need to wave a magic wand and give congress the testicles to tell industry "no" when they come begging for special immunity from their mistakes.
Not even just regulation, just sheer time wasting to get you to give up and leave them alone.
I think almost all of us have called a business to get a problem sorted, only to spend hours trying to wrangle an automated robot voice to eventually give up and connect us to a live person who fixes the problem in 2 minutes. Unless the robot lady connected us to the wrong department and now its double the hold time. Or an Indian with an accent so thick you cannot understand a single word.
I think this shows that even without regulation, they would still obfuscate everything in a similar manner just to avoid taking any responsibility or having to hire extra help. The regulations might have started the issue, but most of them are pretty comfy using them as cover for their own incompetence a lot of the time.
Yes, I've noticed that as well. In my line of work, I actually think some of the added bureaucracy was just added to ensure that anyone who gets through it truly actually should be someone who gets through it (a filtration mechanism) BUT the reason my company does this is because the government regulations that have been implemented don't allow our company to help people unless they truly need it. Were the government to relax regulations, we wouldn't need so many bureaucratic layers designed to weed people out.
Companies I've worked for in the past have had no such regulations, they simply wanted to filter out as many customers as possible. Ironically, the ones that got through were usually the most angry, or became such because of the process, meaning they couldn't be helped in any satisfying way anyway.
It was entirely so the people in charge of answering the customers could also wear multiple other hats and cut the amount of employees down to "if one person calls out the whole operation falls apart" levels.
Like always, the government and the corporate are competing to see who can fuck each other into letting them be on top, and at the end of the day the person who actually needs something is left in the middle holding whatever is left.
Not to mention it's always the biggest and most entrenched players in any industry that favor suffocating regulations. It protects them from competition from better run upstarts because they have the resources to pay people to navigate the regulations and they have the pull to get their shady practices exempt from oversight, defeating the purpose of regulations to begin with.
Too many indians to really deregulate things now i think.
Yes, that might mean more people die from trucking accident but then that'll get people more upset at Indians and maybe people will start demanding deportations.
Normally wouldn't approve of these personal favors, but guarantee some leftists in Kaiser purposely lost Scott Adams' paperwork so it balances out.
Can he not just buy the drug himself?
He’s worth 9figures
That specific drug:
Maybe the maker is being overly cautious with their warnings, but it sounds like this stuff does not fuck around.
If you can't get within 3' of a child for 7 days after it's administered, I'm going to bet it's stored and controlled very specifically.
Its some new drug that just got released. I dont think its over the counter and I’m unsure how easy it is to get it by just scheduling appointments yourself
Yeah. I don’t really understand how these new drugs are gated/controlled