4.4 • 921 Ratings
🗓️ 7 July 2020
⏱️ 97 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Pharmaceutical breakthroughs such as antibiotics and vaccines rank among some of the greatest advancements in human history. Yet exorbitant prices for life-saving drugs, safety recalls affecting tens of millions of Americans, and soaring rates of addiction and overdose on prescription opioids have caused many to lose faith in drug companies. Now, Americans are demanding a national reckoning with a monolithic industry. Pharma introduces brilliant scientists, incorruptible government regulators, and brave whistleblowers facing off against company executives often blinded by greed. A business that profits from treating ills can create far deadlier problems than it cures. Addictive products are part of the industry’s DNA, from the days when corner drugstores sold morphine, heroin, and cocaine, to the past two decades of dangerously overprescribed opioids. Pharma also uncovers the real story of the Sacklers, the family that became one of America’s wealthiest from the success of OxyContin, their blockbuster narcotic painkiller at the center of the opioid crisis. Pharma reveals how and why American drug companies have put earnings ahead of patients. Shermer and Posner also discuss:
Gerald Posner is an award-winning journalist who has written twelve books, including the Pulitzer Prize finalist Case Closed: Lee Harvey Oswald and the Assassination of JFK and multiple national bestsellers. His 2015 book, God’s Bankers, a two-hundred-year history of the finances of the Vatican, was an acclaimed New York Timesbestseller. Posner has written for many national magazines and papers, including The New York Times, The New Yorker, Newsweek, and Time, and he has been a regular contributor to NBC, the History Channel, CNN, CBS, MSNBC, and FOX News. He lives in Miami Beach with his wife, author Trisha Posner.
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0:00.0 | Before I introduce today's guest, I wanted to tell you about our sponsor, which is The Great Courses Plus. |
0:06.4 | This is what it looks like. It's an app on your phone right there. And this is the teaching company, |
0:12.1 | the great courses that I've been a fan of and consumer of for many years. |
0:18.0 | And before you had to go online and purchase a course and take the entire course and that's all you got. |
0:25.5 | Now with the Great Courses Plus program they have a subscription program. |
0:30.4 | So if you subscribe then you have access to hundreds of course, thousands of courses and therefore tens of thousands of lectures. |
0:38.0 | If you get tired of a course, just switch to another course. I do it all the time. I'll hit two or three or half a dozen lectures in a |
0:43.7 | particular subject. I get bored or I just just want to try something different and |
0:47.9 | I'll switch to a new one. So let's just see what pops up here because they also are |
0:52.0 | pretty current so I hit that and we get America's |
0:55.1 | long struggle against slavery okay it's pretty obvious why that's why that's |
1:01.2 | popped up now is I'm recording this in the middle of the riots and looting |
1:06.4 | and all that over the death of George Floyd and so I touch on that and then you |
1:11.7 | get a list of the lectures to choose from |
1:14.7 | understanding the fight against slavery, the origins of slavery in the British Empire, |
1:18.4 | the African slave trade and so on and so forth all the way down, Slavery in the war for independence. |
1:24.3 | The Haitian Revolution, it looks like there is 30 lectures |
1:28.8 | ending in slavery by another name, probably slave labor, and fighting modern slavery. So I'm going to listen to a few of those. |
1:37.1 | The deal is if you go to their site, the Great Courses Plus. site the great courses great courses plus |
1:44.8 | dot com slash salon you get a free trial and as a listener of my podcast so I |
1:50.9 | recommend it I consume their lectures all the time along with |
1:54.0 | audio books so I recommend that you do that perfect time and this era of |
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