Moderator: Flannel Jesus
His concerns match trends within medicine itself where they are questioning the overuse of various drugs including antiobiotics. Over the counter medications, even, are involved in a rather large number of deaths each year. Prescription drugs also. I don't think it is hurtful to raise the issues here in the way Abstract has.Xunzian wrote:Seems to me like you are fearmongering. You are promoting fear of a thing you don't really understand.
That is bad. You are engaging in an activity which is bad and hurtful.
Xunzian wrote:Seems to me like you are fearmongering. You are promoting fear of a thing you don't really understand.
That is bad. You are engaging in an activity which is bad and hurtful.
Xunzian wrote:Doctors aren't afraid of over prescribing antibioitics because they weaken the immune system. So, no, he isn't doing what doctors do. He is engaging in Jenny McCarthy level medical fearmongering.
Actually at least some doctors are:Xunzian wrote:Doctors aren't afraid of over prescribing antibioitics because they weaken the immune system. So, no, he isn't doing what doctors do. He is engaging in Jenny McCarthy level medical fearmongering.
Note they specifically mention immune suppression.
5. Immune Suppression. This may sound odd, as the purpose of antibiotics is presumably to help the immune response. However, evidence indicates that people treated with antibiotics have more repeat infections than those who are not treated. This is especially true of children whose ear infections are treated with antibiotics. Vitamin A and C and the use of simple herbs such as echinacea and astragalus, for example, are much safer and often equally effective.
In fact, antibiotics do not aid the immune system. They replace one of its functions. Antibiotics act by inhibiting certain enzymatic processes of bacteria, and by changing mineral balances. Normal cells, however, are also affected. This may be one reason why antibiotics weaken the immune response. Other toxic effects of antibiotics, such as the effect upon the normal bowel flora, may also be a cause.
AIDS research indicates that a risk factor for AIDS is an impaired immune response. This can be due to a history of repeated antibiotic use. Perhaps it is no accident the same group with the highest incidence of AIDS, male homosexuals as of 2009, is also a group that uses more antibiotics than other groups in America.
Xunzian wrote:Did Glen Beck murder and rape a girl in 1990?
Xunzian wrote:It is an old internet meme. Check it out.
Xunzian wrote:Right.
And it is possible that Glen Beck did rape and murder a girl in 1990. I'm not saying that Glen Beck did rape and murder a girl in 1990, I just want to start a discussion as to whether or not Glen Beck murdered and raped a girl in 1990. If Glen Beck didn't rape and murder a girl in 1990, then Glen Beck has nothing to worry about. The very fact that there is so little discussion about whether or not Glen Beck did, in fact, rape and murder a girl in 1990 says something, don't you agree? I'm just asking questions, you know?
Just to be clear i am not only discussing epigenetics as that applies to things that are not also of alterations to the DNA, i would think both occur in my examples as changes to the environment and body over time alter the DNA and thus thus later it is the DNA that informs the difference...Xunzian wrote:So . . .
I mean, I didn't think you were actually doing it. What with epigenetics, people are able to have all sorts of poorly considered opinions . . .
Xunzian wrote:But . . .Xunzian wrote:Are you seriously arguing LaMarckianism? Did you seriously just do that?
Xunzian wrote:So . . .
You are a LaMarckian. I believe we are done here.
Xunzian wrote:I'll give you a hint:
Your definition of genetics is wrong.
Xunzian wrote:"is the idea that an organism can pass on characteristics that it acquired during its lifetime to its offspring"
That was your definition.
But genotype doesn't change (significantly) within an organisms lifetime, more to the point, the genotype of an individual organism doesn't change in response to environmental pressures.
Xunzian wrote:Epigenetics is pretty new and so invoking it is pretty suspect in this case. I will agree that medicine is removing selective pressures, I talked about that earlier. But I'd argue that the removal of selective pressures is a good thing. Most people dying before they can reproduce represents a fantastic mechanism for selection, we could breed people with super immune systems if we did that. But I'll take a removal of selective pressures and longer life.
Look at glasses. Have glasses been a boon or a bane to humans? They removed selective pressures but in so doing allowed more people to live longer and live more fulfilling lives. I'll take that.
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