Rouser2 said:
>>5. "Prevent" cancer? Pray enlighten us. The AMA and the American Cancer Society would like to talk to you when you're done here.<<
No, over the years, they've pretty much turned a deaf ear to that kind of "an ounce of prevention...." talk.
So, you're not going to tell us how, in your opinion, cancer may be prevented? I hope I may be forgiven if I go ahead and assume that, given the overall tone and content of your posts, the reason you aren't going to tell us is simply because you don't have any idea yourself, that you were just shootin' from the hip in order to serve your "drugs are bad" agenda, and your "FDA and the medical establishment" conspiracy theory, and that you were just blowin' smoke without any idea what you were talking about.
>> I would also like to know how my grandma, who never smoked a day in her life, and who died of quick-moving lung cancer at age 91, was supposed to have prevented her cancer.<<
Why, she prevented contracting cancer for nearly 91 years. Eventually, everybody's got to die of something.
Nope, not good enough. You beg the question.
Your statement was that the cure for cancer was "an ounce of prevention", and now I'm asking you to back it up. What specific "ounce of prevention" do you have in mind in order to prevent cancer? Or do you once again have no idea what you're talking about, it's all just bull off the top of your head?
>>Ditto Raedean from church, who is a nice Church Lady, doesn't smoke, drink, or take drugs, who has lung cancer. Ditto both Ruth and Irvin, nice non-smoking, non-drinking church people, who also have cancer. Ditto Debbie, who had uterine cancer, and who is now cancer-free, due to drugs, after the requisite five years.
Being "cancer - free" in the medical jargon, does not mean you are free of cancer. And many of the so-called 5-year survivals never had cancer in the first place, but rather a pseudo-disease.
Nope, once again you beg the question.
Again, your statement was that cancer can be prevented, and I am asking you to clarify your statement by telling us
how cancer can be prevented.
Do not bring in side issues about the semantics of the phrase "cancer-free". Tell us how to prevent cancer.
That is the statement that I am calling you on.
As to your other remarks, suffice to say the proposition as stated is that most drugs don't "cure" anything, but only mask symptoms.
What
you are claiming here is that most drugs don't cure anything but only mask symptoms, and that overall, drugs are a Bad Thing.
What
we are claiming here is that
some drugs cure
some things, like middle ear infections and cancer, and that other drugs "alleviate" other things--like gout. And that overall, drugs are a Good Thing.
Indocin is not prescribed as a "cure" for gout--it's a
pain reliever, an NSAID, like ibuprofen (Advil, which Number 6 mentioned). And yes, taking painkillers during a gout attack
can "mask symptoms", but...what happened in this thread was,
you came rushing in here with your massive anti-drug and anti-medical establishment agenda, lecturing Number Six on how you think he was a fool to expect Indocin to "cure" his gout.
But if you had been paying attention, and not been so anxious to weigh in with your agenda, you would have
noticed that
he wasn't expecting the Indocin to cure his gout.
He was just asking for information on
where he could get some more of those nifty painkillers--and on gout in general.
Now, you could have simply told him,
along with the rest of us (I count five people ahead of you, including me, who had already posted advice about "diet"), that NSAIDs were only a palliative, and that he needed to make some lifestyle changes in order to get rid of the gout permanently, and left it at that--but you chose to drag in this whole anti-drug/anti-medical establishment agenda.
Drugs are dangerous. And they don't "cure" anything.
< snip >
That "cure" is just about as fast as those dangerous drugs doctors are only too happy to dispense but much longer lasting. Just as in most maladies, the drug cure can be worse than the disease.
< snip >
There are people who are regular gout customers for their foot doctors and their magic pain killing potions. I am not one of them.
< snip >
>>Do you realize that in your first sentence you essentially that every drug that exists is by definition harmful?<<
Yes.
>> To be honest it's hard for me to take anything you say seriously after that.<<
Oh, but that's pretty much the line that any FDA official will give you.
< snip >
>>Just out of curiousity, why do you say that drugs by definition are harmful? <<
Because if they didn't do any harm, they wouldn't be called drugs.
< snip >
It is the very ambiguity of such words that keep the drugs a-flowing.
< snip >
Drugs seldom "cure" anything. What they mainly do is get rid of or hide symptoms.
< snip >
<< what's your stance on alcohol?
What about caffeine--coffee, tea, Pepsi?
Tobacco? Nicotine? >>
All drugs. And they all kill
< snip >
The fact that the FDA is a government agency, exempt from the rigors of scrutiny that the market place would place on a private agency makes its judgements all the more dubious.
< snip >
I stand by the general proposition that few drugs "cure" anything but only mask symptoms and very often the drug "cure" is worse than the disease.
Your mistake in this thread is in taking your success with your self-help treatment for your own gout, and in extrapolating it to
all illnesses. "Well," you say to yourself, "I didn't need drugs to deal with my gout, so therefore nobody should ever need drugs to deal with their own illnesses." And then you add to that the "Medical establishment conspiracy theory", and the self-congratulatory "I'm onto them, they won't catch
me taking their mysterious potions", and you wind up making sweeping generalizations condemning all drugs as bad.
Now,
you are the one who brought this all up.
So, put up or shut up.
1. If "drugs" are bad, as you so loudly proclaim, being according to you worse than useless in that they "mask symptoms" instead of "curing" anything, then why do some "drugs" get a free pass from you, and others don't? Why do the epileptics get Dilantin and the kid with the broken arm can have Tylenol, but the kid with a middle ear infection can't have any Tylenol or antibiotics--and I can't have Pepsi with caffeine in it? Where are you drawing the line? Seems to me that when it comes to "masking symptoms", Dilantin does
precisely that--it prevents the seizures that are the symptoms of the condition known as epilepsy. And painkillers for the broken arm mask the
symptom of "pain" that indicates a broken bone.
2. How exactly does one "prevent" cancer and diabetes (which I can't help noticing you didn't address at all, as I believe I "gotcha" dead to rights on the subject of Juvenile Onset Diabetes)?
3. Where do you stand on the CF baby? Drugs, and a live baby, or no drugs, and a dead baby?
in most cases, most afflictions will be better in the morning no matter what you do.
Really? "Most" afflictions? Please be so kind as to take a few moments and go through the
Medline Encyclopedia and tell us which of the 4,000 afflictions listed therein will be "better in the morning".
In order to qualify for the adjective "most", I think it's fair to ask you to come up with 51% of those, or about 2,000 afflictions, that will be "better in the morning" no matter what you do.