There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

en.wikipedia.org

Cosmonaut_Collin , to youshouldknow in YSK that chiropractors are not medical doctors and "Systematic reviews... have found no evidence that chiropractic manipulation is effective"
@Cosmonaut_Collin@lemmy.world avatar

I think this depends on the kind of chiropractic work. If they are just there to pop bubbles for that crack, then nothing is happening. I got into a car accident and my insurance sent me to a chiropractor that never cracked my back. Instead he gave me physical therapy, got me MRI images to check for an cracks on my spine or hernias in my discs, and gave me some equipment to help relax my back muscles and provide support to my bacl. I feel like this kind of work actually does provide benefit. I don’t go anymore since all of that stuff is cleared up now, but I would trust that guy with my back again if I needed it.

executivechimp ,
@executivechimp@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Yeah, If the chiropractor doesn’t use chiropractic methods, it’s definitely preferable.

Arelin ,

A good chiropractor is one that doesn’t use chiropractic “treatment”

RedAggroBest ,

Honestly the best you can get is good deep tissue, which is why many chiros employ a massage therapist.

denhafiz_ ,

That’s just a physiologist right?

EatYouWell ,

Yup

TheDoctorDonna ,

Did you maybe go to a physiotherapist? That doesn’t sound at all like a chiropractor, especially the MRI and actual treatment part.

sulgoth ,

I’ve seen a couple ‘chiropractors’ that are just giving good physio work and advice but taking chiro insurance money. Scammy maybe, but if they’ll put me back together I’ll take it.

sukhmel ,

If anything, I’d color that a “good” flavour of scam 😅

ManOMorphos ,

Some chiropracters are more or less “bootleg” physical therapists that use the same treatment. Of course, there is no guarantee that a given chiropractor will use effective and proven treatments like a licensed PT practitioner.

Asifall ,

How does a chiropractor prescribe an MRI? Seems like that shouldn’t be possible 🤔

DoomBot5 ,

The same way any degreed doctor would.

EatYouWell ,

I mean, all they’re really doing is rubber stamping a form so insurance will pay. You can go to your hospital and give them cash to have an MRI done without a doctor being involved.

Asifall ,

I’m not sure you could go to most hospitals and get an MRI just because. Diagnostic tests still carry risks, especially MRIs given how strong the magnetic field is and that you can’t easily turn them off.

gmtom , to til in TIL Alice Walton (Walmart heir) killed a pedestrian in a driving accident and was never charged. She has also been arrested for DUI twice but never charged.

Not to be an Internet edgelord, but if some billionaire killed one of my family and got away with it, I would make it my life’s mission to hunt them down and make sure they get some kind of justice.

10DollarBanana ,
@10DollarBanana@lemmy.world avatar

I would devot my life to ruin them.

giacomo ,
@giacomo@lemmy.world avatar

I’d watch that movie

gamer , (edited )

This reminds me of that movie “Assault on Wall Street” where basically some dude goes on a killing spree and starts murdering a bunch of wall street people. Except, the guy is framed as a hero, which I assume is because it came out not too long after the 2008 financial crisis (~2013). I watched that movie in like 2017, and it felt antisocial and lunatic-ey.

I wonder if we’re at a point right now where a similar movie about going on a killing spree against billionaires would do well?

Leviathan ,

I feel like we’re at a point right now that if someone actually started popping off billionaires a significant portion of the population would cheer.

PrincessZelda ,

It might lift my spirits a little each morning

spasm01 ,

certainly seemed like everyone appreciated titanic taking a few more fat cats recently

Rolive , (edited )

A

ChickenLadyLovesLife ,

You would have a great deal of difficulty just getting near them. Billionaires don’t hang out at Walmart - ironically enough in this case.

soulifix ,

Neither does it’s CEO. They only care about shareholder meetings.

Madison420 ,

Driving themselves sorta negates the idea of private security, they’re not mutually exclusive but it would be very weird.

Th4tGuyII , to til in TIL about de la Chapelle syndrome where people with XX chromosomes are born with traditionally masculine organs & presentation. Usually those with the trait are unaware they have XX chromosomes at all
@Th4tGuyII@fedia.io avatar

As interesting as La Chapelle syndrome is, it kind of sucks that most people find out they have this syndrome due to the fact it causes infertility.

zeroday ,

I found out because I was doing genetic work to test for Ehlers Danlos and I’d gotten my entire genome sequenced, so I figured I’d look for other stuff as well. I’ve suspected for a few years now that I’ve got some sort of intersex condition for a while because of very low testosterone and a weirdly fast transition, but finally got the confirmation earlier this week and wow my genetics are kinda a mess. Tbh I’m amazed that my code actually compiled XD

twistedtxb , to technology in A generational gap on Wikipedia - 91% of WP admins started editing before 2010
@twistedtxb@lemmy.ca avatar

Many people pointed this out in the link but yeah, it’s much harder to make edits / entries in wikipedia nowadays.

The rules are more strict and you have to respect an increasing number of rules, etc.

I remember when Wikipedia started to get some steam, it was basically a text editor with very basic hyperlink-style formatting.

Minor changes / typos are still easy to do, but frankly I wouldn’t know how to start anymore if I wanted to create a new entry.

HidingCat ,

Yea, I'm happy to make minor edits and do reverts on vandalism, but starting something? Man, I have no idea what the best practices are.

lud , (edited )

In general you can just do it. As long as it’s not malicious it’s probably fine.

One of their rules/motos is “be bold”

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Be_bold

Creating new articles seems hard though

Silverseren ,

I always work on new articles in my userspace before putting it out into the main article area. Since you're much more likely to run into conflict if you're putting out an article with a couple of sentences and one source, even if you're planning on expanding it, than if you move a more fully formed article into the mainspace all at once.

Aatube ,
@Aatube@kbin.social avatar
KevonLooney ,

I’ve corrected a typo before and had it reversed by a bot. Why the fuck would I help them again?

Aatube ,
@Aatube@kbin.social avatar

What was the typo correction? Are you sure the article wasn’t e.g. written in British English while you use American English?

KevonLooney ,

Yes, I’m sure. I don’t remember because I left and never gave it a second thought.

GnuLinuxDude ,
@GnuLinuxDude@lemmy.ml avatar

Unfortunately as more and more people got online it became more and more ripe for abuse. I can’t imagine Wikipedia not getting horrible defaced if its editorial standards were still in 2006. Old Wikipedia had some weird shit. Not every mid-level WW2 Nazi commander needed a page of thinly-veiled apologia, and thankfully many of those excesses are already dealt with. Also, the articles in general are of a higher quality than they used to be.

I hope they can work out a solution that allows trusted junior editors to become admins more easily.

Silverseren ,

It is funny looking back to the earliest articles and how little rules and regulations there were for making them. Including just how loose the reliable source rules were, since there was little oversight on using, say, someone's blog as a source of information.

Maven ,
@Maven@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Back in the early days, I noticed my town had a wikipedia entry, but no demonym (word for people who live there; e.g. New Yorker, San Franciscan). I thought of a slightly rude word whose first half happened to be my town’s name (think if, say, Parisians were called “Parisites”), and added it as the demonym, totally unsourced, as a joke to show my buddy. It stayed. For a few years it stayed, never questioned. Then, the new Mayor used it in a speech; presumably, she’d looked it up on wikipedia. That speech was published in the local paper. The local paper was added to the page as a source, and not by me. A high-school gag between friends was now a sourced and cited fact.

Mannivu ,

So basically this XKCD comics happened in real life xkcd.com/978/

JackbyDev ,

You really make me wanna go hunt it down.

Car ,

I’ve tried editing a few articles years ago, only to have everything undone hours later with no explanation why and nothing in the way of constructive criticism for whatever invisible criteria the power users were looking for. I don’t even bother anymore and avoid using the entire site if I can find what I need elsewhere.

Push away eager contributors and you’re stuck with the old guard before you realize it.

ultranaut ,

That was my experience trying to clean up some obvious typos. I’ve never bothered trying to contribute again.

SocialMediaRefugee ,

I fix dead links too. References to news websites are the worst.

Aatube ,
@Aatube@kbin.social avatar

What was the edit about? There’s a rule to never revert others with the default summary

Car ,

Ah this was like 10 years ago when I was in undergrad. Possibly something video game or chemistry related.

antonim OP ,

frankly I wouldn’t know how to start anymore if I wanted to create a new entry

Read about it in advance (from decent sources, as much as possible), find a few similar articles to see how they’re usually formatted, map out how you want your article to look (while generally respecting the format of the other articles), and do it. The formatting is a bit trickier in the raw editor, but I think the visual editor is the default now. They also have help articles of all sorts, and a message board for new users looking for help.

And if you make some technical mistake, some bot or no-lifer who edits 50 articles a day will smooth it all out anyway.

wahming ,

And if you don’t make a mistake, it’ll probably get fast tracked for deletion anyway

xuxebiko , to til in TIL Alice Walton (Walmart heir) killed a pedestrian in a driving accident and was never charged. She has also been arrested for DUI twice but never charged.

Read about Robert H. Richards IV, the Du pont eir whho raped his own children. Guess how much prison time he saw?

https://www.forbes.com/sites/denizcam/2019/06/14/how-a-du-pont-heir-avoided-jail-time-for-a-heinous-crime/?sh=2b94a2a029db

sanguinepar , to til in TIL Hunter S. Thomson got an early honorable discharge from the air force in part because, "Sometimes his rebel and superior attitude seems to rub off on other airmen staff members."
@sanguinepar@lemmy.world avatar

His books of letters from that time are well worth reading if you’re interested in that time in his life, very interesting.

mine OP ,
@mine@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I will have to find them, thanks.

fartsparkles ,

Please share where you found them, if you do.

grimsolem ,

annas-archive.org/search?index=&page=1&q=The+prou…

Use slow option #3 (the first 2 normally work but wait list is long atm)

sanguinepar ,
@sanguinepar@lemmy.world avatar

The book is called The Proud Highway: Saga of a Desperate Southern Gentleman, I should have mentioned that before!

And it’s followed by Fear and Loathing in America: The Brutal Odyssey of an Outlaw Journalist

carbonprop , to til in TIL about exploding head syndrome, which causes patients to hear a loud, frightening noise when falling asleep or waking up. Up to 10% of people may have it, but cases often go undiagnosed

Sometimes sound, sometimes an impact. Either way it’s pretty disruptive. I thought this was very common.

janNatan ,

Yes, I get the sound version but it’s more likely for me to just be walking in a dream, fall flat on my face, and wake up. But it’s more jarring than it should be.

Apparently it’s more common in people with sleep paralysis, which I have.

nilloc ,

The falling thing is a hypnic jerk. I get both too though the nose one tends to be rare and more often when I’m sick.

umbrella ,
@umbrella@lemmy.ml avatar

i just realized i have this. not sounds but “impacts”.

DannyBoy , to til in TIL Hunter S. Thomson got an early honorable discharge from the air force in part because, "Sometimes his rebel and superior attitude seems to rub off on other airmen staff members."

Looks a lot like someone else who got discharged from Army

https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/875ce060-b0dc-4a62-9034-e71555e02533.jpeg

macarthur_park ,

I’ve gotta hand it to you, that’s a good comparison

DannyBoy ,

I thought that’s who was in the picture before I read the caption.

Cadeillac ,
@Cadeillac@lemmy.world avatar

I’m rewatching this now. Still getting plenty of laughs out of me

Jakeroxs ,

There’s dozens of us! Dozens! (just started a series rewatch too lmao)

Deebster , to til in TIL: Gamergate's have interesting hierarchy and can replace the queen
@Deebster@programming.dev avatar

gamergate (/ˈɡæmərˌɡeɪt/ GAMM-ər-gayt)

Ah, so nothing to do with incels harassing women. Do incels have a queen?

delirious_owl ,
@delirious_owl@discuss.online avatar

Incels are queens.

(They’re dainty and worship themselves)

TheAnonymouseJoker , to linux in TIL that operating system Linux is an example of anarcho-communism
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

I made a commentary about it here lemmy.ml/post/511377 in the FLOSS vs Closed Source Philosophy section:

The soul and spirit of FLOSS is socialist/communist, in a similar way to piracy. The purpose of it is to serve the greater good. In comparison, the soul and spirit of closed source software, outside rare cases of benevolence, is highly corporate and fascistic, similar to a leech, which in many cases these days may suck money out of your wallets for subscriptions. It may also serve as a leech to suck your data for telemetry and spying purposes.

RagingNerdoholic , to technology in NTFS turns 30 years old today! I hear it's still in use by some crufty old legacy operating systems 😁

Unbelievably, Windows still has a ridiculously short filepath length limit.

sorenant ,

Are you writing parahraphs for folder/file names? That’s one “issue” I never had problem with.

Maybe enterprises need a solution for it but that’s a very different use case from most end users.

Improvements are always welcome but saying it’s “ridiculously short” makes the problem sound worse than it is.

Tekchip ,
@Tekchip@kbin.social avatar

I think they mean the full path length. As in you can't nest folders too deep or the total path length hits a limit. Not individual folder name limits.

RagingNerdoholic ,

File paths. Not just the filename, the entire directory path, including the filename. It’s way too easy to run up against limit if you’re actually organized.

motorwerks ,

You like diving 12 folders deep to find the file you’re after? I feel like there’s better, more efficient ways to be organized using metadata, but maybe I’m wrong.

RagingNerdoholic ,

Metadata is slow, messy, and volatile. Also, shortcuts are a thing.

d3Xt3r ,

Not OP, but I occasionally come across this issue at work, where some user complains they they are unable to access a file/folder because of the limit. You often find this in medium-large organisations with many regions and divisions and departments etc. Usually they would create a shortcut to their team/project’s folder space so they don’t have to manually navigate to it each time. The folder structure might be quite nested, but it’s organized logically, it makes sense. Better than dumping millions of files into a single folder.

Anyways, this isn’t actually an NTFS limit, but a Windows API limit. There’s even a registry value[1] you can change to lift the limit, but the problem is that it can crash legacy programs or lead to unexpected behavior, so large organisations (like ours) shy away from the change.

  1. …microsoft.com/…/maximum-file-path-limitation?tab…
riskable OP ,
@riskable@programming.dev avatar

C:UsersaxexandriaanastasiachristiansonDownloadssome_git_reposrc…

You run into the file parth limit all the fucking time if you’re a developer at an organization that enforces fullname usernames.

lolcatnip ,

I think I’ve spotted the real problem.

bighi ,

People have been talking about the real problem from the beginning of the thread: small character limit on file paths.

lolcatnip , (edited )

I would be pissed if they made me use such a ridiculously long login name at work. Mine is twelve characters and that’s already a pain in the ass (but it’s a huge company and I have a really common name, so I guess all the shorter variations were already taken).

Edit: Also, I checked it’s really very simple to enable 32kb paths in recent versions of Windows.

orangeboats ,

If your name consists of non-ASCII characters, like Thai words or Arabic or Chinese, it’s pretty easy to rack up >15 bytes in your username alone.

Aux ,

The limit is 32,000 characters.

bighi ,

Only if you go into settings, disable the safety measures and change it. And some apps might break.

No, the default file path limit is 256 characters. And I don’t mean file name. Full file path.

Aux ,

No, you don’t need to change any settings, that’s the thing! Windows, unlike other OSes, has several APIs. Old apps (and dumb apps) are using old API and are limited to 260 characters. New apps are using new API and are limited by 32k characters. This “new API” is available since NT4, btw.

bighi ,

I remember I had to change a setting when using Windows. And it even showed me an “Are you sure?” dialog. It wasn’t that long ago. Is that not a thing anymore?

Aux ,

Once again, that only affects old or dumb apps. Any half decent app supports 32k paths since late 1990-s.

Serinus ,

It might be 255 characters for the entire path?

I’ve run into it at work where I don’t get to choose many elements. Thanks “My Name - OneDrive” and people who insist on embedding file information into filenames.

chinpokomon ,

The limit was 260. The OS and the filesystem support more. You have to enable a registry key and apps need to have a manifest which says they understand file paths longer than 260 characters. So while it hasn’t been a limitation for awhile, as long as apps were coded to support lesser path lengths it will continue to be a problem. There needs to be an conversion mechanism like Windows 95 had so that apps could continue to use short file names. Internally the app could use short path names while the rest of the OS was no longer held back.

Aux ,

32k Unicode characters. No, mate, it’s not easy to run up.

Exec ,
@Exec@pawb.social avatar

Nope, long paths are supported since 8.1 or 10 person bit you have to enable it yourself because very old apps can break

eco ,

Furthermore, apps using the unicode versions of functions (which all apps should be doing for a couple decades now) have 32kb maximum character length paths.

muddybulldog ,

That’s not an NTFS issue. That’s a Windows issue.

Aux ,

That’s not even a Windows issue, that’s an issue with specific Win32 API.

stanleytweedle , to til in TIL ~62% of the atoms in a human body are Hydrogen, and are as old as the universe.

I’ve always suspected most of life’s problems could be traced back to hydrogen.

NOT_RICK ,
@NOT_RICK@lemmy.world avatar

This is giving me Groundskeeper Willie complaining about the Scots vibes

motor_spirit ,

I want you both to help me with therapy… I just need to point fingers!

atomicorange ,

Damn hydrogen! It ruined the universe!

kinsnik ,

i think if you have problems with your weight, that is mostly an oxygen problem

corsicanguppy , to youshouldknow in YSK that chiropractors are not medical doctors and "Systematic reviews... have found no evidence that chiropractic manipulation is effective"

Quick reminder that Physios and Chiros outside America face different rules for accreditation, and may not warrant similar judgement.

Saltblue ,

Nope still bullshit here and not USA, you have problems with your bones and muscles? Go to a physiotherapist.

betterdeadthanreddit ,

Laws and accreditation don’t change how the human body works (and, importantly in the case of chiropractic performances, doesn’t work). No energy lines to unblock, your humors or bile aren’t unbalanced, a wheatstone bridge can’t detect alien ghosts and some distant planet’s apparent motion from the Earth’s perspective isn’t causing your misfortune. We’re just meat machines no matter which map lines you’re inside and a medical professional who can’t keep their mysticism and fantasy out of the workplace can not be trusted to maintain their patients’ physical or mental health.

JCreazy , to youshouldknow in YSK that chiropractors are not medical doctors and "Systematic reviews... have found no evidence that chiropractic manipulation is effective"

I know people that swear by it which I can kind of understand if you have pain and they “pop” something and you feel better. But is it really helping if you have to keep going back?

finestnothing ,

My wife went to a chiropractor weekly for the last few months of her pregnancy (the chiro office specialized in pregnancy chiropractic). It helped with managing some of the back pain she already had plus the new ones. The best way she described it was like a massage for your bones, feels good and alleviates pain in the short term but doesn’t fix anything long term

Dvixen ,
@Dvixen@lemmy.world avatar

I used to see a chiro, stopped while I was pregnant after he ‘treated’ PGP. (I’m hypermobile, and pregnancy made everything ready to dislocate.) Daily pain went from 5/6 (manageable, barely) to a 9 and severe mobility limitations.

I was slowly moving, but able to move before that appointment. Could barely walk, and climbing stairs was not happening for months after.

A physio realigned everything, and I walked out of the first appointment and could take stairs again. Ended up at a specialist dealing with the aftermath of that chiros treatment.

Physiotherapy is my first stop now, and I will never set foot in a chiropractor’s office ever again.

KrummsHairyBalls ,

I don’t believe in it, and I’ll never go, but my girlfriend does.

Yes, she has to keep going back, but when they “pop” the correct thing, she’s pain free for weeks. When she holds off going, she’s in pain and can’t sleep until she goes.

I personally don’t trust them, and it’s a lot of money for temporary relief, but I guess it kinda works? As long as you’re fine with the trade-off being fucking paralyzed when they crank your neck at the speed of sound.

Wogi ,

There are good chiropractors who are just trying to treat pain. 95% of them are woowoo worshipping morally bankrupt bastards. Even those guys can be helpful if what you’re looking for is short term care for an injury that’s in the process of healing.

They are not good for treating chronic pain. They may be able to help you manage your pain in the short term while you seek real treatment. But over time, your risk of injury from a chiropractor only goes up. You should limit your exposure to chiropractic ‘therapy’ to as few sessions as possible, and the second they suggest they can treat anything other than a temporary injury, find someone else. It won’t be hard they’re fucking everywhere.

ipkpjersi ,

Physiotherapy is generally recommended for acute (and I believe chronic) injuries by actual medical doctors, so you should generally go to that over chiros.

SoleInvictus ,
@SoleInvictus@lemmy.world avatar

Oh yeah. I have chronic pain, I’ll be doing physiotherapy until the day I die.

HelixDab2 ,

Honestly, your girlfriend would be far, far better off going to a competent physical therapist. It sounds like there’s a muscular weakness that’s allowing a joint to not stay in place.

In almost all cases, people will get better long-term results by doing physical therapy rather than going to a chiropractor.

DogMuffins ,

The thing is, this study is talking about “chiropractic manipulation” which is a very specific thing. (With that clicker thingy I think?) The thing is, chiropractors tend do do lots of different therapies, like stretching and massage. So you could go to a chiropractor who performs some kind of massage which is effective at temporary pain relief.

Rodeo ,

Sounds like the chiropractor has no reason to fix her for good. It’s for-profit healthcare, and she keeps coming back. If he fixes her properly he’s going to lose income.

Arfman ,

I wonder if it’s a placebo effect. Like I go for a back massage every month or so and feel good for a few weeks but I’m fully aware it’s just muscle pain relief and not some permanent fix.

elscallr ,
@elscallr@lemmy.world avatar

Muscle pain relief is pain relief. I don’t go to a chiropractor and I’m confident most of them are selling snake oil but I kinda view them as a next level masseuse.

If I were more comfortable with strangers touching me a massage might be nice. A chiropractor sounds like a next level up. I feel relief when I get a good back crack.

Rodeo ,

Massage therapy requires significantly more training than chiropractic does, at least in my area.

ADON15 ,

hey even if it is just the placebo if it still works and its not harmful who cares

ChronosWing ,

That’s the problem, chiropractors routinely injure and kill people.

ADON15 ,

I wasn’t mentioning chiropractors in specific, although I can see how it’d come across as such. I have no idea how safe or unsafe it is

ChronosWing ,

Then you should educate yourself and never visit one if you value your well being. It’s an incredibly unsafe practice. Ask any Orthopedic Surgeon how many near permanent injuries they’ve had to fix from a botched chiropractic adjustment.

afraid_of_zombies ,

They get paid a lot less per hour, have less support staff, and less equipment. Hence any given unit of time they spend with you costs less. Additionally you have more options of which to choose.

Been to a doc recently? Think of how fast they try to get you out of the room. Feels like you are begging them to please listen to you. Well a chiropractor can spend the time talking to a patient. Of course you feel better, someone heard you complain for over 30 seconds and really listened to you. And if you weren’t listened to you, you just go find another one.

piecat ,

Feeling listened to doesn’t mean the same thing as treatment.

DogMuffins ,

It doesn’t, but it might be perceived as treatment.

Suppose you ask your GP to make it rain because your garden is dry and they tell you to go away. Then you go to a chiropractor that talks to you about your garden and then performs a complex ritual that takes a half hour or so. 2 days later it rains.

SoleInvictus ,
@SoleInvictus@lemmy.world avatar

I think people are misunderstanding your comment.

I don’t think you’re suggesting this proverbial chiropractor made it rain, only that the patient felt listened to, which may make them initially view the treatment favorably. When their symptoms later get better, as they always would have, they attribute it to the chiropractic treatment, not just healing over time

afraid_of_zombies ,

Of course not but it makes you feel a bit better.

ChronosWing ,

Clearly you’ve never been to a physiotherapist. It’s usually always a 30-60min appointment and they spend the entire time with you, bonus is they are actually trying to fix your problem instead of just temporary pain relief so you keep coming back forever. Not to mentioned they are board certified and didn’t get their certificate from a cracker jack box.

afraid_of_zombies ,

I have not been to a chiropractor either. I am repeating what other people told me about them.

Snekeyes ,

I messed up my hip once… couldn’t get it right … super painful. Chiropractor did it up and was ok from then on. Who knows!

shalafi ,

Ex had an issue. 6 treatments and she was done for good, never went back. So yes, sometimes they know what they’re doing sometimes it works.

Painting the whole profession as witch doctors? Meh, they’re not touching my neck, but I’ll listen to what they say. Educated and licensed doctors and nurses can be total fruitcakes as well.

Zevlen ,

“fruitcakes” is a slur for homosexuals. . .

NOT_RICK ,
@NOT_RICK@lemmy.world avatar

First hit isn’t even free

Kase ,

I will add, as someone with a connective tissue disorder, that a quick “pop” can help a subluxated/dislocated joint, but that’s something that can and should be done by an actual physician. And if someone has joints that are especially unstable (for example, bc of a connective tissue disorder), subluxations/dislocations can happen pretty regularly.

This is NOT a defense of chiropractors. And chiropractors are even more dangerous for people like me because it’s easier for them to seriously damage our joints. Go to a PCP, a rheumatologist, a physical therapist, it doesn’t matter, just go to a real doctor.

stallmer , to youshouldknow in YSK that chiropractors are not medical doctors and "Systematic reviews... have found no evidence that chiropractic manipulation is effective"

One of my best friend’s fathers was an MD before retiring.

The cadaver he used in med school: broken neck during an “alignment” at a chiropractor’s office.

Anecdotal evidence for sure, but definitely a story that I think of whenever someone talks about going to a chiropractor.

victorz ,

One of my best friend’s fathers

How many fathers did they have?

stallmer ,

Touché. Ya got me!

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines