N101CS wrote:
Quote:
I will say this though, although Im not arguing about the cure word anymore. The disease is a genetical disease of addiction. Propensity it not the same thing as genetical. Those words are being equated and they are not the same. Respectfully, you are confusing the terms. Addiction is a genetic disease.
dreadnought - Respectfully - I think you are making assertions that the science is still out on. I don't think anything other than loosely correlated genetic markers have been found with respect to alcoholism.
How would you explain the fact that the vast majority of people who try nicotine or crack cocaine more than a couple times become addicted? If almost everyone becomes addicted is it still a genetic disease? Or are a few people simply genetically immune?
I think alcoholism is initially caused by a non-genetic factor. Stress, break-up (in my case), whatever. After a period of time, a physical addiction set in. I think
anyone who drinks enough, often enough, will become physically addicted to it and become an alcoholic.
Fair enough, you make some good points. But the genetic markers associated with addiction are highly correlative and revolve around, so far, about 20 different markers. the AA allele(no pun intended) and GabaB are two, that in rat studies correlate highly with addictive behaviors. This is not in regards to TSM, but the general addiction industry that makes billions of dollars off of people actively suppress research into large scale clinical trials of studies that would lead to a cure. There is simpy too much money in it. Thats why we have little research in genetics or things like TSM, and much in the way of endless "treatment" and "12 step" stuff.
I would say the vast majority of people who try nicotine or crack have the genetic pre-disposition of the disease already. The majority of the human population might try a hard drug at one time or another in their life, but do not become addicted, because they dont have the disease. If it were true that the vast majority who tried drugs, and Im sure its true, became addicted, we would have a majority of the populations who were addicts of some sort. That isnt the case. Its odd, because we seem to be agreeing more than disagreeing. I think words and their meaning are sometimes confused.
You may be right, I may be right. If it is initially a non genetic factor, then that would lead credence that it the case was behavioral, or spiritual, or whatever. Remember without the physical 3.5 pound organ that is the human brain, there would be no behavioural or spiritual or whatever. All disease are physical/genetic in the most basic sense.
And I just read the last comment. If anyone who drinks enough long enough becomes addicted, they probably have the disease. Why would normal people who dont have the disease drink long enough and hard enough in the first place?