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It’s not a conspiracy of any kind!

June 26, 2013 by Michael Boyle

My friend Peter Wheeland is right on target here: Moving Day is not an anti-anglo conspiracy. We need more voices like his and fewer cranks and paranoiacs in the discussion in Quebec these days.

Incidentally, I’m not moving on Moving Day and haven’t moved on that day in years.

Tags: Montreal, Politics, Quebec

Today was by-election day

September 17, 2007 by Michael Boyle

Today was by-election day

in three Quebec ridings, and it has proven to be as exciting as politics in Quebec have tended to be in recent years. It’s hard to see what has been happening both federally and provincially as nothing less than a sea-change, not a temporary post-scandal correction as many (including myself) feared it might have been.

The results are interesting. In my new riding, Outremont, the winner was Thomas Mulcair of the NDP (and the former provincial environment minister for the Quebec Liberal Party). In Roberval-Lac-Saint-Jean, the winner was Denis Lebel, a Conservative (and sitting Mayor). In Sainte-Hyacinthe, the winner was Ève-Mary Thai Thi Lac for the Bloc Quebecois. Most striking is that none of the Liberal candidates were successful, even now that the scandals are behind them and despite (well, maybe) having a new leader.

Some bullet-point reactions:

  • The NDP have to be careful how they interpret their victory in Outremont. If they have any illusions that this is a vote of confidence in the party as a whole or in Jack Layton, I think they’re sorely mistaken. On the positive side of things, Mulcair, and Mulcair alone, is the reason for their victory. If anything he has such personal popularity and universal respect that he won in spite of how the NDP is viewed in Quebec.
  • It is pretty shocking to “traditional” interpretations of Quebec voting tendencies that neither of the MPs in the Saguenay region are sitting for the Bloc Quebecois.
  • Stéphane Dion must be – should be – pretty scared. For the party with the second most seats in Parliament to not win any of three by-elections? Not a comfortable spot for the leader. When he was selected as leader of the Liberal Party, I was cautiously optimistic that he could do a decent job – certainly better than Ignatieff – but so far, it has been nothing but setback after setback. He’ll probably stick it out until the next General Election, but it looks like he’s already finished.
  • Back to the NDP, after years and years of living in Montreal but never having any hope of my candidate winning, I’m kind of amazed that someone has done it. Again, though, if the NDP over-estimate the significance of this victory they’re going to be in trouble. I’ve almost only ever voted NDP, but party had pretty much lost me as a supporter over the past two or three years. The NDP’s foreign policy is nothing more than naive and pandering, and the fact that they have done nothing to truly address their chronic problems in Quebec is more than frustrating – at this point it smacks of a mix of disrespect and fear. I hope they can get over it – and the first step would be a radical re-thinking of their traditional (and idiotic) strong-centralist federalism. It does them no good and a lot of harm.

Tags: Canada, Canadian Politics, Liberal, NDP, Politics, Quebec

I’ve been reading the Guardian

June 16, 2006 by Michael Boyle

I’ve been reading the Guardian

more often than usual due to their excellent World Cup coverage, but I have also been reading other articles and tonight I came across an interesting article that demonstrates that even fine media sources have real difficulty with medical/pharmaceutical stories. They quite simply get them wrong, and I am convinced they do so because it strokes their readers positively to do so by making out pharma to be the big bad wolves of the medical scene.

The article is entitled, Drugs firm blocks cheap blindness cure, a shock title which is only true in an extremely limited sense. Anyhow the piece goes on to note that a particular product used to treat colon cancer, Avastin, can also be used in very low doses to treat a relatively common yet debilitating condition that tends to strike the elderly. Then the article notes that the company (Genentech) is seeking regulatory approval for a specifically engineered version, which would cost a great deal more than the original drug, and so is “blocking” the use of the the cheaper alternative.

The trouble is that according to the article itself, that is not what’s happening at all. What has happened is that Genentech noted the benefits of the product in this totally unrelated disease site and has been studying how to address this with a product for ten years. In other words, they’ve spent at least a million dollars a year for a decade to try and get this to the point that it might be approvable by regulatory agencies.

There is no option for a pharma company in a situation like this. They are compelled to do the research before seeking approval of a product. And no amount of anecdotal evidence will ever be considered adequate by any regulatory agency – can you imagine? “Oh, we think this might do something, this one doc in Montreal seems to think it’s OK, will you allow us to market this product?” Of course no one would ever accept such standards from our public health and regulatory agencies.

What the article leaves out is that the real issue is a political issue – and the very fact that this is a problem indicates that the politicians – in this case in the UK, but it happens all the time in Canada and particularly the US – have already failed. There are two solutions to this issue. The first one would be to pro-rate or fold in the cost of all of the research into this off-label usage of Avastin into the marketed price of the drug for everyone, no matter whether they’re colon cancer patients or wet macular degeneration patients. Of course if the company were to do that, they would probably not succeed since most countries strictly control pharma pricing (usually using reference pricing, BTW, which means that this would have to be attempted in a dozen countries simultaneously).

The other option is very simple: the government could fund and organize a double-blind study of the non-specialized product itself. And, if the government had drawn up laws in a truly independent fashion, it wouldn’t fall ONLY to the company to submit a product for regulatory approval, and there would at least be an alternative path that could be used in exceptional situations such as this one. If we want sane regulations of things like pharma products, then governments simply have to set rules that privilege health, not simply commerce. Pharma companies generally – especially outside the US – play within a very strict rule set and are only too happy to comply if the rules are clearly communicated and fairly enforced. If our politicians don’t set those rules, then it is they who are at fault for such ridiculous situations.

Tags: Guardian, Journalism, Pharma, Politics

Something I’ve been formulating:

September 27, 2001 by Michael Boyle

The greatest patriot is the one who thoughtfully questions and critiques her/his state, and its government. Careful critique isn’t disloyalty, it’s the greatest gift of an engaged citizen.

Tags: Politics

Poking around at

March 14, 2001 by Michael Boyle

the O’Reilly Network and associated sites this morning. Bopping around from politics to introductions to things I’m starting to play with and stuff. So far, I’ve come across the following interesting new (and no so new) stuff: The CSS Anarchist Strikes Again!; Is Open Source Un-American?; a bunch of OnLamp PHP articles; and Code + Law: An Interview with Lawrence Lessig.

Tags: CSS, Lawrence Lessig, O'Reilly, Politics, Strike

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