The corruption I saw while working at Thermo Fisher in Greenville, NC; it was horrific and dangerous. I was a line worker, manufacturing sterile medicine for injection. I can tell you broken glass was often left in the manafucting line, and often entered the “clean” vials and then into people blood streams. The Japanese are a good source of proof. You can read online about them finding all sorts of dangerous contaminants within allegedly clean US vial batches. Coming from a background in US Army explosive ordnance disposal, I have a strong idea of producre and regulation. I can tell you that perhaps the average McDonald's follows their protocols more closely than Building 16 at Thermo Fisher. It was like the wild west. Simply, the only mission was to keep the machines running and produce the medicine. Coworkers that I knew for months continued to display a total lack of regard for regulations or safety procedures, despite the fact that I addressed the issue with supervisors. In fact, eventually, I was thrown under the bus for speaking out. And, of course, the federal government (OSHA, FDA) didn't care a single bit. They totally know that they are totally complaining about corruption. And then there is the media, once again, no one cared, no one thought anything I had to say was worth noting. But a part of me feels like it's my duty to share the information I know. My advice is that I'd double-check, triple-check, and quadruple-check your information and sources before you make a decision that puts any amount of trust in the pharmaceutical industry.