JB
Honorary Moderator Emeritus
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2001
- Messages
- 45,907
I've been watching commercials for chemicals to cure/prevent anything known to man and clips in news shows warning about the dangers of all of the same stuff.
Now I wonder how anyone in my generation and our parents generation ever made it past 40.
Sixty years ago. . .
* Paint had lead in it. If it was paint there was lead in it.
* Ninety percent of adults and most alolescents smoked non-filter cigarettes, about a pack a day average. My grandpa smoked about 10 Cuban cigars a day and lived to 88. My Dad smoked a pack of Philip Morris a day to the day he died at 84. Neither had cancer or heart trouble.
* We ate all the sugar we wanted and put salt on everything. Morbid obesity was pretty rare.
* One of my favorite playthings was a small bottle of mercury, which I handled regularly.
* DDT was the only known sure cure for any kind of bug that you were at war with.
* Diabetes was fairly rare and type 2 diabetes was very rare.
* Only professional athletes "worked out". Nobody went to a gym that wasn't at the YMCA or YWCA, and we went to play volleyball or swim.
There is more, of course, but those are what occur to me now.
Are we being sold a bill of goods or at least gross exaggeration by the drug companies and the AMA? How in the world did any of us make it to 70, 80 or even the big one?
Now I wonder how anyone in my generation and our parents generation ever made it past 40.
Sixty years ago. . .
* Paint had lead in it. If it was paint there was lead in it.
* Ninety percent of adults and most alolescents smoked non-filter cigarettes, about a pack a day average. My grandpa smoked about 10 Cuban cigars a day and lived to 88. My Dad smoked a pack of Philip Morris a day to the day he died at 84. Neither had cancer or heart trouble.
* We ate all the sugar we wanted and put salt on everything. Morbid obesity was pretty rare.
* One of my favorite playthings was a small bottle of mercury, which I handled regularly.
* DDT was the only known sure cure for any kind of bug that you were at war with.
* Diabetes was fairly rare and type 2 diabetes was very rare.
* Only professional athletes "worked out". Nobody went to a gym that wasn't at the YMCA or YWCA, and we went to play volleyball or swim.
There is more, of course, but those are what occur to me now.
Are we being sold a bill of goods or at least gross exaggeration by the drug companies and the AMA? How in the world did any of us make it to 70, 80 or even the big one?