Townhall
God
Bless You, Sen. Feinstein
by Debra J. Saunders
Feb 17, 2013
Sen.
Dianne Feinstein began her war
on allergy and cold sufferers in 2005. In an effort to prevent
small-time
dealers from buying allergy and cold drugs and cooking them into
methamphetamine, she pushed through legislation requiring consumers to
show
identification before purchasing products with pseudoephedrine --
otherwise
known as the good allergy drugs, known only to those who know enough to
ask for
them.
Now
Feinstein wants to make you get
a prescription from a doctor before you buy these drugs.
In
2005, I thought Feinstein's
Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act wrongly punished law-abiding
citizens by
limiting their access to over-the-counter medications. A spokesman for
Di-Fi
told me the legislation would prompt the pharmaceutical industry to
find
"alternatives to pseudoephedrine."
The
industry found those
alternatives. They just don't work so well as the old stuff.
Nonetheless,
Feinstein, a committed drug warrior, thought the downside for allergy
and cold
sufferers was worth the trade-off.
Now
she's at it again. The
Government Accountability Office reported a decrease in meth lab
incidents in
Oregon and Mississippi after those states passed laws requiring
purchasers to
present a doctor's prescription.
Feinstein
crowed, "It's time
to redouble our efforts to prevent these products from falling into the
wrong
hands by expanding these common-sense laws to all 50 states."
That's
right. You have to contact a
doctor because Feinstein thinks her 2005 law didn't do enough.
The
drug trade has shown itself to
be crafty in maneuvering around drug laws. The 2005 law required a
buyer to
show a driver's license. Would-be manufacturers started "smurfing" --
sending recruits to multiple retailers to buy pills. Users started
using the
"shake and bake" method to produce small batches of meth in 2-liter
plastic jugs.
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