tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post5949931892763901675..comments2024-03-27T14:50:47.345-04:00Comments on <center>Sandwalk</center>: About half of all cancers are just bad luck. It's not your fault. Larry Moranhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05756598746605455848noreply@blogger.comBlogger17125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-9717835587762806332015-01-26T17:20:18.687-05:002015-01-26T17:20:18.687-05:00Where do I find the actual course? All I can get ...Where do I find the actual course? All I can get is this silly video.Rosie Redfieldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06807912674127645263noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-19173034726242627372015-01-25T23:36:26.006-05:002015-01-25T23:36:26.006-05:00I was a light smoker for a mere 8 years. Quitting ...I was a light smoker for a mere 8 years. Quitting was by far the hardest thing I ever did. I craved a cigarette every waking minute of every day for a year and a half.Petrushkahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02343702725399620404noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-56321433716578111632015-01-24T15:56:11.932-05:002015-01-24T15:56:11.932-05:00In any case, there seems to be a tendency to say t...In any case, there seems to be a tendency to say that people who get cancer because they had an unhealthy addiction such as smoking "deserve" to have cancer. I've always found this to be an ugly way of thinking. Nicotine is extremely addictive. Some people are able to kick it, some aren't. People who have managed to kick heroin have said that nicotine is harder to quit. Nobody deserves to suffer and die from cancer. Wanda Psychohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09398274683194725769noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-53404248889397863082015-01-24T15:54:17.357-05:002015-01-24T15:54:17.357-05:00Wow! This is interesting
How come the immune sys...Wow! This is interesting <br /><br />How come the immune system fails then? I recall reading that there are "10 layers of protection" that cells have to overcome before becoming cancerous. Is that true?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-23266125777828380942015-01-24T15:46:44.200-05:002015-01-24T15:46:44.200-05:00@Diogenes I know you meant well with your sarcasti...@Diogenes I know you meant well with your sarcastic comment "Our immune system normally would protect us against tumors, that's totally how it works. The immune system normally identifies neoplastic tissue and destroys it with white blood cells." but this turns out to be pretty close to the mark. Do a quick search on "immunoediting" and also look at drugs targeting the PD1/PDL1 axis.whimplehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15979048635836472956noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-87221773816999369512015-01-24T14:19:36.572-05:002015-01-24T14:19:36.572-05:00P.S. Next time a girl scout rings my doorbell, I&#...P.S. Next time a girl scout rings my doorbell, I'm getting out the baseball bat!Diogeneshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15551943619872944637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-7363945488079633942015-01-24T14:16:44.367-05:002015-01-24T14:16:44.367-05:00Byers says: "I think cigarettes are as harmle...Byers says: <i>"I think cigarettes are as harmless as chocolate chip cookies."</i><br /><br />Yeah, but do the progressive radicals who run the guvmint make the Keebler elves put warning labels on their cookies? Oh nooo. The liberals rail against discrimination, meanwhile they discriminate themselves against human-Americans in favor of elves. Why? Just because they live in a tree like a bunch of damn Injuns! Or communists!<br /><br /><i>Our immune system etc simply gets worse and cancer breaks in.</i><br /><br />Yup. There you go. Our immune system normally would protect us against tumors, that's totally how it works. The immune system normally identifies neoplastic tissue and destroys it with white blood cells. But eat too many cookies and they destroy your immune system like that AIDS that God gave to the sodomites. Eat too many cookies and bang, you've got a prostate the size of a supermarket pomelo. <br /><br />That's totally scientific. It's so scientific I could die from an overdose of all the totally real science. I could have a heart attack from all that science. I could get a tumor from consuming too much of Byers' science.Diogeneshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15551943619872944637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-85402496022445922922015-01-24T10:57:05.536-05:002015-01-24T10:57:05.536-05:00There's a lot more to prevent cancer that you ...There's a lot more to prevent cancer that you can do other than "don't smoke, don't work in a coal mine". Even assuming that the results from the study are correct and 50% of cancers are not linked to behavior, this implies that 50% are. Diet and exercise aren't panaceas, but there's pretty solid data showing both diet and obesity are linked to cancers (not to mention heart disease, the other major cause of death in the developed world).<br />Jonathan Badgerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04921990886076027719noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-11986293303451786232015-01-24T05:46:01.801-05:002015-01-24T05:46:01.801-05:00Up until now I was giving you the benefit of the d...Up until now I was giving you the benefit of the doubt but now I realize that you are a kook. You don't have anything to contribute to these discussions. Larry Moranhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05756598746605455848noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-6332042212188792352015-01-24T04:23:15.048-05:002015-01-24T04:23:15.048-05:00I only know about this from common observation.
Ye...I only know about this from common observation.<br />Yet the point in all these things to me is how they imply cancer is a chance thing. When clearly it comes from old age or rather the decay of the body.<br />Our immune system etc simply gets worse and cancer breaks in.<br />Not a strange mutation out of thje blue but a predictable thing.<br />I see this weakness as the big point.<br />Then radiation, smoking, other things, can affect/create cancer because they weaken the defense.<br />I think cigarettes are as harmless as chocolate chip cookies.<br />Its more likely the minor irritation of tobacco , in old age and after long time impact, has beat down the resistance and so cancer comes. Yet smoking is actually harmless if one did it moderate and stopped at say 55 or something.<br /><br />anyways it seems they see cancer as like a germ in how they say it affects people<br />It seems clear its all about our resistance to it. Age and some heritability.<br />very little environmental origins at least before old age.<br />Unfortuately everone would get deadly cancer if we lived long enough. Say up to 150. . Robert Byershttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05631863870635096770noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-77978852410003985242015-01-23T17:40:24.695-05:002015-01-23T17:40:24.695-05:00This claim may very well be true but I have my do...This claim may very well be true but I have my doubt as to the degree of the influence of environmental factors in relation to cancer. This is totally not my area of expertise, so I'm going to relay on others, but I remember once going over some statistics related to prostate cancer rates in Asia and US. I don't remember the exact details but it must have been overwhelming since I remember some. Up until 1958 or so there were 18 cases of confirmed prostate cancer deaths in Japan in comparison to US of 14000 or 140.000. I'm sorry but all my notes are at the office and I'm at home now. My point is, how does this statistic fits into the picture of random mutations if by 1990 Japan almost reached the same level of prostate cancer deaths with US? I'm puzzled but many studies "suggest" that dietary changes influenced by the American life style and eating habits are the only reasonable answer to this dilemma. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-20446626390366534032015-01-23T15:20:06.205-05:002015-01-23T15:20:06.205-05:00Well smoking used to be a majority activity. I smo...Well smoking used to be a majority activity. I smoked for eight years. Just passed the 40th anniversary of quitting. My mother-in-law smoked and died of lung cancer.<br /><br />So there's not much and individual can do, but there are lots of things regulated or forbidden due to cancer risk. I'd like to see a scientific assessment of these regulations. I suspect that most are bogus. The added risk just doesn't justify being banned.Petrushkahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02343702725399620404noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-71013146616645890962015-01-23T15:06:06.243-05:002015-01-23T15:06:06.243-05:00Also, use sunscreen and get any radon gas out of y...Also, use sunscreen and get any radon gas out of your home. <br /><br />I've been teaching for years that most cancers are caused by bad luck (unpredictable and unavoidable mutations that happen to occur in genes that affect cell behaviour), so I too was really surprised by the resistance to this paper's conclusions.Rosie Redfieldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06807912674127645263noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-71764973836793744642015-01-23T14:27:54.021-05:002015-01-23T14:27:54.021-05:00If you don't smoke, don't work in a coal m...If you don't smoke, don't work in a coal mine, and have parents with good genes, there's not much else you can do. <br />Larry Moranhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05756598746605455848noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-79371430928399379282015-01-23T13:24:27.089-05:002015-01-23T13:24:27.089-05:00So you cannot eliminate the probability of getting...So you cannot eliminate the probability of getting cancer, but you can definitely increase the probability.<br /><br />Or put in a more positive light, you can eliminate things that could double your risk.<br /><br />My math illiteracy may be showing, but that's how I read it. Corrections welcomed.Petrushkahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02343702725399620404noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-91366191933149080202015-01-23T12:15:25.548-05:002015-01-23T12:15:25.548-05:00There's one thing that may change he result a ...There's one thing that may change he result a little. Behavior can have an effect on the rate of cell proliferation in some tissues and so influence cancer frequency without resort to mutagens.John Harshmanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06705501480675917237noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37148773.post-89186016554311482015-01-23T12:11:00.168-05:002015-01-23T12:11:00.168-05:00Hi Larry. Thanks for the link to another interesti...Hi Larry. Thanks for the link to another interesting discussion of this paper. Personally, I wasn't surprised by the overall finding and I hope it might help balance out the public perception that their cancer must be due to a "faulty" gene or environmental factor. Bad luck must be an accurate description for a great many cancers.<br /><br />All that said though, their methods are a little odd, especially when they try and split cancers into two groups. This leads them to state that the incidence of some cancers are poorly explained by the number of cell divisions when figure 1 shows that's clearly not the case. I've blogged about it at the address below if you or ypur readers are interested.<br /><br />https://cgatoxford.wordpress.com/2015/01/09/cancer-correlations-and-clustering/<br />TomSeanSmithhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09271133571965909376noreply@blogger.com