Pubdate: Sat, 06 May 2006
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2006 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: John Tierney
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Rush+Limbaugh
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Richard+Paey
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone)

A TASTE OF HIS OWN MEDICINE

Now that Rush Limbaugh has managed to keep himself out of prison, the 
punishment he once advocated for drug abusers, let me suggest a new 
cause for him: speaking out for people who can handle their OxyContin.

Like Limbaugh, Richard Paey suffers from back pain, which in his case 
is so severe that he's confined to a wheelchair. Also like Limbaugh, 
he was accused of illegally obtaining large quantities of 
painkillers. Although there was no evidence that either man sold 
drugs illegally, the authorities in Florida zealously pursued each of 
them for years.

Unlike Limbaugh, Paey went to prison. Now 47 years old, he's serving 
the third year of a 25-year term. His wife told me that when he heard 
how Limbaugh settled his case last week -- by agreeing to pay $30,000 
and submit to drug tests -- Paey offered a simple explanation: "The 
wealthy and influential go to rehab, while the poor and powerless go 
to prison."

He has a point, although I don't think that's the crucial distinction 
between the cases. Paey stood up for his belief that patients in pain 
should be able to get the medicine they need. Limbaugh so far hasn't 
stood up for any consistent principle except his right to stay out of jail.

He has portrayed himself as the victim of a politically opportunistic 
prosecutor determined to bag a high-profile trophy, which is probably 
true. But that's standard operating procedure in the drug war 
supported by Limbaugh and his fellow conservatives.

Drug agents and prosecutors are desperate for headlines because they 
have so little else to show for their work. The drug war costs $35 
billion per year and has yet to demonstrate any clear long-term 
benefits -- precisely the kind of government boondoggle that 
conservatives like Limbaugh ought to view skeptically.

Yet conservatives go on giving more money and more power to the drug 
cops. When critics complained about threats to civil liberties in the 
Patriot Act, President Bush defended it by noting that the government 
was already using some of these powers against drug dealers. Why 
worry about snooping on foreign terrorists when we've already been 
doing it to Americans?

Limbaugh objected when prosecutors, unable to come up with enough 
evidence against him, demanded to be allowed to go through his 
medical records in the hope of finding something.

He managed to stop them in court, but other defendants can't afford 
long legal battles to protect their privacy.

Drug agents and prosecutors go on fishing expeditions to seize 
doctors' records and force pharmacists to divulge what they're 
selling to whom. With the help of new federal funds, states are 
compiling databases of the prescriptions being filled at pharmacies. 
Once their trolling finds something they deem suspicious, the 
authorities can threaten doctors, pharmacists and patients with 
financially crippling investigations and long jail sentences unless 
they cooperate by testifying against others or copping a plea.

Paey was the rare patient who refused to turn on his doctor or plead 
guilty to a problem he didn't have. He insisted that he'd been taking 
large quantities of painkillers because he needed them. He wanted to 
protect his own right to keep taking them, and others' rights as well.

"They say I was stubborn," he told me last year. "I consider it a 
matter of principle."

Limbaugh got off partly because he could afford the legal bills 
(which he says ran into millions of dollars) and partly because he 
cooperated with prosecutors. He confessed to being an addict, went 
into rehab and swore to remain clean.

Perhaps he really was one of the small minority of pain patients who 
hurt themselves by compulsively using drugs like OxyContin for 
emotional, not physical, relief. But most pain patients can become 
physically dependent on large doses of opioids without being what 
doctors consider an addict. They take the drugs not to escape 
reality, but to function normally.

Even if Limbaugh believes that drugs like OxyContin are a menace to 
himself, he ought to recognize that most patients are in Richard 
Paey's category. Their problem isn't abusing painkillers, but finding 
doctors to prescribe enough of them. And that gets harder every year 
because of the drug war promoted by conservatives like Limbaugh.

It has been said that a liberal is a conservative who's been 
arrested. I wouldn't wish such a conversion on Limbaugh. But a 
two-year investigation by drug prosecutors should be enough to turn a 
conservative into a libertarian. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake