The Food and Drug Administration, once a bastion of bureaucratic predictability, has become the latest stage for executive drama, reflecting tensions that predate the republic.
Executive Edicts and the Erosion of Regulatory Autonomy: A Familiar Colonial Echo
The Food and Drug Administration, once a bastion of bureaucratic predictability, has become the latest stage for executive drama, reflecting tensions that predate the republic.
Why it matters: The ongoing disarray within the Food and Drug Administration, marked by abrupt shifts and executive unpredictability, is more than mere bureaucratic inefficiency. It offers a stark echo of the grievances that once spurred a nascent nation to revolution. Unchecked authority, as seen in historical transitions of power, fundamentally threatens stable governance: '_Sic transit Gloria Americana_,' a lament for a republic’s potential decline. When an executive so easily sows chaos within an essential regulatory body, disrupting the evaluation of critical treatments and public health, the underlying compact between the governed and government erodes. The founding call for predictable, accountable governance, central to the American experiment, is seemingly under renewed strain.
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