If you live long enough your heart will quit.  If your heart stays healthy long 
enough, you're eventually going to get cancer.  And yeah, we're better at 
identifying specific cause of death than we used to be.

If someone in 1960 keeled over and had no bullet holes in him, then what cause 
of death was recorded?  I can't begin to guess the answer to that, but I'll bet 
the coroner in 1960 had a hard time guessing too.


________________________________
From: AF <[email protected]> on behalf of Ken Hohhof <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2025 1:19 PM
To: 'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group' <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Scott Adams -Dilbert


My personal belief is that most men over 50 have prostrate cancer, what matters 
is how aggressive it is.  For awhile the medical profession went crazy with PSA 
tests.  Based solely on a blood test, they would offer you the choice of 
surgery or radiation.



Bill is exactly correct.  If you are diagnosed with non aggressive prostrate 
cancer at age 75, something else is likely to kill you first.  Let’s face it, 
we’re all going to die of SOMETHING.  Or maybe they just say “natural causes”.  
Go back far enough and they just didn’t talk about cancer, it was taboo, so 
someone died but it wasn’t cancer because they wouldn’t say the word.



It’s like the supposed “epidemic” of autism.  More like better and earlier 
diagnosis.



From: AF <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Bill Prince
Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2025 11:36 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Scott Adams -Dilbert



Certain cancer rates for younger folks are up (e.g. colon cancer). That one's a 
mystery.

However, longer life expectancy increases the odds of cancer later in life too.

There is also better screening, so that is an unknown in terms of what the 
actual "rate" is.

We had a friend who was diagnosed with prostate cancer when he was around 75. 
Doc told us, the prostate cancer was not going to kill him. Sure enough, he 
died almost 20 years later at the ripe old age of 94, and no, the prostate 
cancer is not what got him in the end.



bp

<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>

On 5/22/2025 8:56 AM, Dev wrote:

Is it just me or does it seem like cancer rates are rising? You’d think with 
enough smart people in enough rooms, we’d have solved this by now.



On May 22, 2025, at 6:24 AM, Cameron Crum 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> wrote:



I know I'm not the only Dilbert fan in the group, but this is kind of sad.



Scott Adams, the creator of the "Dilbert" comic strip, announced on May 19, 
2025, that he has metastatic prostate cancer that has spread to his bones. He 
stated that he expects to live only "months" and "sometime this summer," and 
that he is in constant, "intolerable" pain, requiring a walker to move around.
Adams revealed his diagnosis on his YouTube show, "Real Coffee With Scott 
Adams," after former President Joe Biden's office announced that Biden also had 
prostate cancer. Adams said he decided to share his own health news to "slide 
under" Biden's announcement and deflect some of the public attention. He also 
mentioned that he had been keeping his diagnosis private to avoid becoming 
"just the dying cancer guy."
He stated that he has had time to process the diagnosis, get his affairs in 
order, and say his goodbyes. As a California resident, he also referred to the 
state's End of Life Option Act as "an option."

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