Howell
Storage? I am Storage!
Handruin and dd said:Yup, sounds about right to me too.
Do you two consider yourselves to be in the 90% or in the 10%?
Handruin and dd said:Yup, sounds about right to me too.
If you count the legal drugs, yes. And many legal drugs have long-term side-effects as bad or worse than illegal ones. Lipitor was responsible in large part for my father's death. IMO it's the legal drug problem we should go after first. I see far too many people stoned or otherwise out of it these days. It can't be that they're all hooked on pot or meth or crack. Medicine long ago stopped stressing lifestyle changes in favor of drugs to treat common ailments. Easier for the doctor, easier for the patient, but of course the downside is potential addiction plus both short and long term side effects.
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But as I said in my response to LM, I really think decreasing legal drug use should take precedence. Basically we need to end prescription drugs for any condition which is amenable to treatment with lifestyle changes only. And we need to stop inventing "imaginary" illnesses like "social anxiety disorder" just so we can sell a magic pill.
I'm obviously not an expert in those areas but I've done lots of research on the subject before reaching my conclusions. I've also seen the side effects of medication on my parents. My father never questioned what the doctors told him to take. I really wish he would have. He might well be alive today if he did. My mom does question everything, has me research the side effects, and then makes informed decisions. So far the only medications the doctors have recommended for her was one for blood pressure and another for very mild osteoporosis. The blood pressure medication caused enough problems that she doesn't take it regularly, and it doesn't seem to make much difference in her BP when she does. She has yet to find something for osteoporosis where the benefits outweigh the problems. She tried Fosamax briefly with horrible side effects. Recently her doctor prescribed Evista instead. After reading the side effects on that, she said forget it. IMO weight bearing exercise would help as much as pills, and would have other benefits. Besides that, it's not like her bones are so brittle that a fall would cause problems. It's a very mild case of osteoporosis, something which may well not be anything to be concerned with.I know you know your stuff when it comes to all things electrical, lighting, biking, meters, taxis, transit systems, etc... but without further explanation to expand on what I've read from your above posts, I'm not sure said expertise extends to pharmacology and medicine.
Do you two consider yourselves to be in the 90% or in the 10%?
Try reading this thread stoned - it's a hoot!
AP – In this May 22, 2003 file photo at left, Texas Ranges Alex Rodriguez rounds the bases after hitting a …
NEW YORK – Alex Rodriguez admitted Monday that he used performance-enhancing drugs from 2001-03, saying he did so because of the pressures of being baseball's highest-paid player.
"When I arrived in Texas in 2001, I felt an enormous amount of pressure. I felt like I had all the weight of the world on top of me and I needed to perform, and perform at a high level every day," the New York Yankees star said in an interview with ESPN that was broadcast Monday shortly after it was recorded.
Rodriguez, who for years has denied using steroids, was given a $252 million, 10-year contract by the Texas Rangers in December 2000.
His admission came two days after Sports Illustrated reported he tested positive for steroids in 2003, one of 104 players who tested positive during baseball's survey testing, which wasn't subject to discipline and was supposed to remain anonymous.
"Back then it was a different culture. It was very loose. I was young. I was stupid," he said. "I was naive, and I wanted to prove to everyone that, you know, I was worth, you know — and being one of the greatest players of all time."
Rodriguez hit 52, 57 and 47 homers in his three seasons with the Rangers, winning the first of three AL MVP awards during his final season with Texas. Because the Rangers were uncompetitive, he pushed for a trade to the Yankees in February 2004. Although he's won two more MVP awards in pinstripes, he's been a postseason failure and has never been to the World Series.
"It was such a loosey-goosey era. I'm guilty for a lot of things. I'm guilty for being negligent, naive, not asking all the right questions," Rodriguez said. "And to be quite honest, I don't know exactly what substance I was guilty of using."
SI.com reported he tested positive for Primobolan and testosterone.
"And I did take a banned substance and, you know, for that I'm very sorry and deeply regretful. And although it was the culture back then and Major League Baseball overall was very — I just feel that — You know, I'm just sorry. I'm sorry for that time. I'm sorry to fans. I'm sorry for my fans in Texas. It wasn't until then that I ever thought about substance of any kind, and since then I've proved to myself and to everyone that I don't need any of that."
Rodriguez directly contradicted a December 2007 interview with CBS's "60 Minutes," when he said, "No" when asked whether he's ever used steroids, human growth hormone or any other performance-enhancing substance.
"I've never felt overmatched on the baseball field," he said then. "I felt that if I did my, my work as I've done since I was, you know, a rookie back in Seattle, I didn't have a problem competing at any level."
That interview came after he opted out of his $252 million contract and agreed to a $275 million, 10-year contract with the Yankees.
Facts are steroids have been legal for a real long time, and, now, they change their minds... It's been industry standard for a LONG time, football in the 70-80's in particular. I'm getting to be a bit of a libertarian on all this stuff.
Marijuana legal? Should be, as should pretty much everything else. Checks and balance are it's going to REALLY cut into the gangs income, a major problem in our country.
Obama has admitted to using cocaine, so legalize that.
Everybody should watch Carlos Mencia for awhile, get a grip on the power of true freedom, and, how all these laws making stuff illegal impacts our freedoms in other areas...
The problem with my father was eating both the wrong foods, and more importantly eating too much food (he was close to 300 pounds in the end). There is no familial hyperlipidemia. He was fat, plain and simple. In fact, from what I've read most of the cases of high cholesterol are from being overweight, a condition which is better corrected by diet and exercise than drugs. Why the doctors didn't try this course first is beyond me. I'm not debating that drugs are effective and even necessary in certain cases, and it's great they exist for that. What I'm annoyed about is prescribing drugs before trying other methods. Drugs should be a treatment of last resort, when all else fails.I don't know the specifics of your father's case, but in reality, in many cases, what you eat matters relatively little to your serum cholesterol level. If your father had familial hyperlipidemia, statins and fibrates are the only options. Sorry, but whether you want to believe it or not, eating healthier does nothing in this case.
Real cases of ADD are indeed a different biochemistry. The problem here is doctors have gotten so used to treating symptoms rather than causes that they never thought to check what these kids were eating. It turns out most cases of ADD are misdiagnosed. They are corrected by avoided diets laden with sugar. The few that don't respond to this treatment might need drugs. As for SAD, that's usually corrected with light therapy which makes the body manufacture the missing chemicals.As for SAD and ADD, these are real psychiatric conditions, diagnosed according to well-defined criteria in the DSM-IV. There is much clinical research available to support the existence of said diseases. Countless fMRI and PET scans and characterization of monoaminergic receptors and release/reuptake systems show that people with SAD and ADD have functionally different biochemistry.
In theory you're correct. In practice it doesn't work that way. From what I've seen with my parents, doctors are so overloaded with patients they just don't have the time to get to know them. End result is they "treat" them the quickest way, which is usually by writing prescriptions. Note the use of parentheses around the word "treat". In some cases the drug is indeed the best or only real option, but more often than not other treatment options aren't even explored. To give you a good example, suppose your car started leaking oil and gave you a low oil warning. How would you treat it? Would you try to find the source of the leak and fix it (i.e. fix the root cause of the problem)? Or would you just keep periodically adding enough oil to make the warning light go out (fix the symptom but not the root cause)? You might be forced to do the latter if you were in a hurry, or maybe lacked the funds to fix things properly. But of course the best course of action is the former. Well, today's hurried doctors tend more often to just try to cure the symptoms without getting at the root cause.As LM said before, every drug has side effects. It's the way the body works. There is no such thing as a magic bullet that magically targets the problem without inducing other effects in the body. If you know human physiology, you would understand why this is the case. The patient-doctor team must evaluate the treatment options available and determine what side effects they are willing to live with in exchange for the treatment benefits they receive.
Well, maybe the state of medicine is better in Canada than in the US. I don't know. I don't live there. At least Canada doesn't allow direct to patient drug advertising like we do in the US. That's a good thing. Here in the US we've mostly ended up treating symptoms rather than root causes. And that's if medicine is accessible to you at all (it isn't for me personally). If you can't afford insurance or can't pay out of pocket and make too much to qualify for Medicaid it isn't. IMHO, medicine won't improve here until we get rid of the influence of big pharma, and also start training doctors to treat causes rather than symptoms. To quote from one of the links I gave earlier: "Eastern medicine on the other hand deals primarily with disease prevention. In historic China a doctor was considered incompetent if one of his patients fell ill. We as Americans need to begin to take a more active prevention stance when it comes to our health."But then again, maybe you've never come across any of this stuff before in your research, because it isn't freely available on the internet via a Google search. This is the kind of stuff you need over a decade to learn in school. If you know the science first, you will be able to make an informed decision. But until then, it's a lot of opinion and conjecture based on biased "research" on the internet.
If you could keep the use restricted to private spaces I would in general agree that 'recreational' drugs should be legal. However, we all know that just doesn't happen. People show up to work while still under the influence. They drive vehicles while under the influence. They make life altering decisions while under the influence.Why do I think drugs in general should be legal? I believe that the harm done to liberty and freedom, in the name of 'protecting' us from such evils outweighs the damage done by the drugs. In other words, if all drugs were legal, you would undermine and destroy most of the gangs we are now plagued with. Also, you would force Columbia, etc, to take their evil powder and sell it some place they could make a lot of money doing, other then here.
I couldn't agree more. Also, to add to what Fushigi said, I agree that illegal drugs present a huge problem if they're made legal and people drive or operate machinery under their influence. However, we already have this problem with legal prescription drugs, many of which similarly impair judgement. To me it's always seemed a little hypocritical to harp on a problem which affects perhaps 1% of the population (i.e. illegal substances like marijuana, cocaine, heroine, opium, etc.) while ignoring the double digit numbers who are similarly incapacitated on legal drugs. It's a double standard if you ask me. Yet we do nothing about it due to the lobbying of big pharma. Illegal drugs kill perhaps 10,000 to 20,000 annually while legal drugs kill 10 times that amount. And these statistics don't include motor vehicle deaths caused by people under the influence of legal drugs. Which is the bigger problem?A nice way to discourage it is if caught with illegal drugs in your system, you're no longer eligible for any type of health care...ever.
Actually, what I want is for people to make sensible decisions about their health & safety and the health & safety of those around them. For them to take responsibility for their lives & actions and to not try and run away or take the easy way out. Yeah, I know, good luck on that. But that is what I would like to see. Drug and alcohol abuse are just symptoms of the larger issues of ditching responsibility and not accepting (and/or working to change) one's status in society.Want to stop drunk drivers?
Good point. We really need to be honest with children. Don't disguise the reality of drugs. Or sex, the tooth fairy, or Santa Claus FTM. An open and honest discussion will show the adult to be a trustworthy person. If you have a trusting relationship, the chances of an anti-drug (or anti-teen pregnancy etc.) message sticking is far greater. The trust relationship needs to start early and be consistent in it's honesty.DrunkenBastard said:The problem that I see is this: ..
Want to stop drunk drivers? We could put a breathalyzer on all cars, forcing you to blow into it everytime you start your car. They already have that in Kali for people on probation, etc.
Rather than severely inconvenience those who are responsible with a ridiculous breathalyzer in all cars (which also adds costs to those who don't drink and are responsible), why don't we make the law such if you're caught DUI/DWI you are no longer allowed to operate a motor vehicle ever again?