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Here you go, courtesy of Jacob Sullum writing for the libertarian Reason Magazine. Amusingly, the one wrongdoing he accuses Purdue Pharma of committing was reformulating the drug to make it harder to abuse, which was correlated with an increase in overdose deaths.
This is close, thanks. He's just missing the real important step. He's mostly focused on showing that perhaps they didn't actually get enough pills into the market to really have been much of a major driver in the increase in usage. What he's lacking is the, "...and it would absolutely be an affirmative good if they had churned out billions more pills and pumped them into the market via even more doctors looking the other way and correspondingly more straw patients." There's gotta be someone out there endorsing this as a project for good, rather than simply saying that they didn't actually manage to sell enough pills to make a difference. There's gotta be someone finishing that sentence at least with, "...they didn't actually manage to sell enough pills to make the clearly and obviously positive difference that they would have made had they sold more pills."
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