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Originally posted by NavyDoc
Originally posted by rickymouse
reply to post by troubleshooter
I have to agree with you, and I have researched the statistics, or actually lack of statistics that are pertinent quite a bit. Cancer rates are way up. Deaths from cancer remain about the same. Trouble is that death after getting cancer is not technically from the cancer itself anymore so the cause of death is something else that is damaged by the treatment for the cancer. It could be listed as heart failure, or possibly liver failure. The treatment is extremely invasive to the organs and tissue of the body. This artificially keeps the death rate statistics down. Someone who died six months after the cancer is removed is not technically dying of cancer. There is no cancer left in the body.
The hospitals do not like to keep patients in the hospital long after any surgery. They kick you out a lot of times even if you are not doing good. This keeps the death rate of the hospital down and artificially makes the hospital look like it has a better success rate. Make the figures look good, that is the name of the game. Nothing about honesty in this, it works hand and hand with reducing costs for the insurance companies. If you stayed a few more days sometimes it would increase your chances of never coming back. The problem now is that exposure to MRSA is a real problem. I see no solution to this problem.
Conversely, one reason why cancer rates are up is because people are living longer. The longer you live, the more chance you will get cancer. Life is a dangerous proposition.
Originally posted by davjan4
What's the big deal? I guess because it's hard to imagine mutilating a healthy body. And because she was manipluated by her father.
Recall "your going to die JUST. LIKE. YOUR. MOTHER. DID."
No pressure.
Originally posted by Druscilla
Originally posted by davjan4
What's the big deal? I guess because it's hard to imagine mutilating a healthy body. And because she was manipluated by her father.
Recall "your going to die JUST. LIKE. YOUR. MOTHER. DID."
No pressure.
You see it as mutilation.
How do you feel about your appendix, tonsils, wisdom teeth?
Many people choose to have these removed before complications ever occur.
I'm fond of taking extended wilderness treks solo anywhere from 50-100+ miles away from the nearest human structure. I also go sailing, sometimes on extended trips. I had my appendix taken out long ago before I ever had problems with it to avoid the chance of ever getting stuck hundreds of miles away from any help in a bad situation with failing health.
Have I mutilated myself by getting my appendix removed when I didn't have a problem with it to begin with?
I had all my wisdom teeth removed at the first sign of trouble, and my tonsils were out as a child.
Am I mutilated? Only the one wisdom tooth was causing trouble at the time, but, what's to say the rest wouldn't raise arms in rebellion? Having none of that, I had them out.
Or, do you just have some over emotional attachment to someone else's boobies that you've never met and feel the need to enforce your own sense of reasoning and aesthetic on other people regarding what they can and can't do with their own bodies as a matter of progressive foresight in health awareness against their will?
Are people that get Tattoos mutilating themselves? Piercings? What about breast implants by themselves? Breast reduction too for those that have problems with over-endowment?
Little Christina Ricci blossomed into distracting over-endowment and for the sake of her career as an actress as well as her quality of life, opted to have a reduction.
At what point does the definition of "mutilation" start and stop?
At what point is it fine and okay for someone else to tell you, and even enforce their own ideals on what you can and can't do with your own body, especially as it applies to your own very personal health concerns?
Historical records have indicated that castrated men live longer, healthier, more active and productive lives. If you're in favor of telling other people what they can and can't do with their bodies, certainly wouldn't be against any law or condition of health insurance coverage that says all men need be castrated after some arbitrary age, for their own good you know?
edit on 1-12-2012 by Druscilla because: (no reason given)
Sure it's mutilation. Self mutilation at that. What a tragic decision to have to make. Beats an early death any day, though.
Originally posted by davjan4
Yeah. Take out or amputate something that works and is not diseased? Wrap it in any justification you want short of neccesary for life and I call that mutilation.
Originally posted by marg6043
reply to post by NavyDoc
I agree, sometimes, it is genetics but the genetic link until one or two generations ago was actually rare, now is for some reason and epidemic what cancer is becoming and just like childhood diabetes that also was rare a generation or two ago now is blame on genetics and obesity, but mostly is about the environment and what our bodies are exposed everyday from all sources and specially the child in uterus, that is creating the modern version of cancer problems that now are becoming genetically linked because after two generations a link can be made as now cancer can be found in families as generations become more sucestible to the disease.
When my doctor could not pin poing why I have naturally high blood pressure as I am a fit person he try to linked to genetics, because I told him that my mother had high blood pressure also and has developed hart disease, but he failed to undestand that it was factors into my mothers health that I don't have, but that is how now the medical comunity wants to link what it can not be explained.
Is a shame because it is true cases in which diseases are actually genetically linked regardless.
Originally posted by newsoul
reply to post by Seektruthalways1
Sometimes peoples ignorance is astounding. I hate to be that blunt, but you leave me no choice.
Are you insinuating that people actually cause themselves to have cancer by thinking about it? I can assure you that I did not sit around thinking about my breasts, or fearing the day that I might get breast cancer. Believe it or not some people actually have a life and other things to concentrate on.
I have a friend who had both of her breasts removed at the age of 27. She did not have breast cancer. Her grandmother died at the age of 50 from breast cancer and her mother died at the age of 39 from breast cancer. How can you blame someone for trying to be proactive and take care of things before it is too late?
Do you look both ways before you cross the street? Do you wear a seat belt? I am assuming that you do these things because they can save your life. You shouldn't be so critical of someone else who is trying to save their own life.
Originally posted by Seektruthalways1
You haven't fixed nothing by removing your breasts. Cancer starts in women first there because that's a focal point of where it grows.