Dvergar wrote:
AIDS has been a 'thing' for a very long time, it just didn't affect Americans until the 80s (and there were infections before the 80s, the fact that people don't die from AIDS but from opportunistic infections means there was no single cause of death to point to one underlying disease). It's explosion had to do with proper social climate. Look at cholera, before everyone started cramming into overcrowded cities with horrible sanitation it wasn't as much of a worry. It wasn't just suddenly created in the 1800s, it was just the proper social conditions to allow for the bacteria to rapidly spread.
This is a poor analogy. Lots of people living in close proximity won't cause outbreaks of HIV as with diseases like cholera, TB, typhus, leprosy or plague.
Jubbergun wrote:
AIDS Patient: Hi, I have this terminal disease that's probably going to kill me in six years. Could I please have that drug will cure me?
FDA: No. We have to test for ten years to make sure it doesn't kill you or give you the shits.
AIDS Patient: I'm going to die in six, and I'll take the diarrhea over not breathing.
FDA: Fuck off, we have to follow regulations/procedures.
There aren't a lot of side effects that are worse than taking a dirt nap, and even with modern treatments, which I understand are amazing, time is a factor. I'm not saying we should just go "here's a pill," pop it on the market and take no precautions, but the FDA process isn't just excruciatingly long, it's also extremely expensive, which drives up the costs of medications.
Do you have an actual example of this happening - of people dying to diseases that are treatable because of the FDA?
What you don't grasp is that those regulations are there because experience proved them necessary.
Before we had the FDA, there was nothing to prevent the sale of snake-oil treatments or unsafe medications.
Latrile.
Antimony.
Thalidomide.

That is why we have the FDA.