Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Privacy slowly dissolves

This evening I went to buy some generic Sudafed (pseudoephedrine) for the first time in a while. I already knew that they now stock it in the pharmacy, and I thought that was to keep people from stealing them easily to use in their methamphetamine labs.

While that's the motivation for the policy, the new policy is dramatically more sinister than that (which isn't particularly sinister; I don't have a problem with stores keeping high-shoplift items under tighter control.)

No. What do you need to do now to purchase pseudoephedrine?

  • Provide a picture ID. Your name and address are recorded.
  • Sign an electronic form.
  • You are limited to 3.6 g/day and 9 g/month. Presumably this is enforced by the above items.
It's breathtaking what people are willing to give up in the name of "fighting" terrorism, crime, whatever. Individual, personal records kept. I suppose that this is one of the things that the pro-gun fanatics lose their heads about, but it's an awful lot harder to do harm to somebody with some decongestant pills than with a gun.

We sit by as we are increasingly monitored and controlled.

And I can't excuse myself either: I didn't complain.

4 Comments:

At 11:03 PM, Blogger R J Keefe said...

I saw the placard announcing this development at Duane Reade this afternoon (the "drugstore" we New Yorkers all hate — but at least its ours, unlike CVS).

How to complain — that's the sticky wicket. Consumers need a union.

 
At 6:56 AM, Blogger John said...

Max: Have you ever used a credit card? I have heard that your purchase data is recorded in a "computer" "database." I am not really sure about this, but that's the rumor. Then there are people who will sell your information. It seems far-fetched, but people will do anything for a buck. - John N.

 
At 10:53 AM, Blogger cryptozoologist said...

i _hate_ having to defend these kind of policies, but methamphetamine is not pot, it is dangerous and it destroys lives. meth labs turn any building into a superfund cleanup site (only a slight exageration) usually a rented location, and there are other alternatives to sudafed that do not carry the same odious privacy concerns.

what is truly astounding is what the establishment will do to protect the folks making money selling pseudoephedrine (sp?) instead of simply banning the stuff.

 
At 2:36 AM, Blogger Unknown said...

Here in New Zealand it is much the same, photo id with purchase of pseudoephredine products. Some pharmacists take it on themselves to proffer long and boring advice. The face of evil I reckon. The funniest thing is that these products are all heavily advertised and really individual pharmacists can do little about stopping meth manufacture. Tons of illegal psuedoephedrine are shipped out of China and stopped at ports in Australia and New Zealand annually. Much more must get in.Like the man said, if you can't buy something you can sure as hell sell it.

 

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