This is a magnificent post. I totally disagree about the illegality of certain drugs. If something impairs cognition, then it absolutely must be illegal. Already, stupid people are in the majority. Cognitive impairment with drugs would exacerbate that problem. Rights cannot exist unless there is a ubiquitous acceptance in the populace which mandates the need for vigilant cognition.in general oppose drugs being illegal as , as far as I am concerned their illegality usually causes more problems than the drugs themselves.
I think it is partly as having a serious lifelong problem with weight , and I see these drugs as lifesaving treatments, it does seem just a bit too easy to take some reta to get body fat from 16% to 12%, when I have never been that thin ever. So maybe it is just jealosy .
And I do genuinely think that often those with very minor weight issues or body builders may not have thought through the risk to benefit equations of taking GLP's long term, especially as the long term risks in those populations have never really been studied , so are effectively unknown. And presumably rare and unlikely but severe risks like pancreatitis or NAION are just as likely in those people , but not counterbalanced by dramatic reductions in weight and other health consequences of obesity fixed by GLP's. A slightly thinner bodybuilder who suddenly loses vision in an eye is in some ways a worse outcome than someone with severe obesity who lost 30% of their weight and their diabetes was reversed, and did not have a heart attack, who loses an eye. At least their diabetes was fixed and they missed out on the heart attack, as some sort of compensation.
And for sure, many people do use stuff without having assessed the risk-to-benefit of that compound. I have no problem with that. It's their body, their choice. As long as another life is not being harmed, I have no issues. Stupid people are allowed to exist, so stupidity will exist too.
But my biggest disagreement there is the reliance inherent in the "risks haven't been studied" verbiage. Most people use scientific studies as "arguments from authority". While Ethos claims are utilized everywhere, it doesn't change the fact that they are logical fallacies. 99% of the scientific community once considered "continental drift" hypothesis as hogwash. Worse, for our own obesity topic- Ancel Keys and the 7 countries Study is one of the most heinous scams perpetrated on humanity. Published in 1979, followed by the US dietary recommendation charts based on it. Since the 1980's, there has been this fad for low-fat, zero-fat products in the mainstream with an impetus on it being necessary for good health. Yet, the obesity pandemic started in 1980's as well. And for some reason, the low-fat craze has been accompanied by a worsening of obesity in society. I have heard about how some cereal food manufacturers funded some of the people in the countries study and they also try to suppress or discredit the Israeli paradox and French paradox.
They also malign red meat, saturated fat, and promote plant/vegan/vegetarian diets. And I look at the 4 places in the Blue Zone. Okinawa, Ikaria, Sardinia, Costa Rica. Guess how many of those 4 places' traditional cuisines avoid red meat, sat fat, and are vegan? Zero!
Ergo, argument from authority is a fallacy while empirical evidence is not.
That said, it obviously is risky for bodybuilders to use GLp's to cut weight, but then, Stanozolol and other AAS's are risky too.