"GLP-1 drugs are going to be a more impactful technology than AI.
I think GLP-1s are dramatically under-hyped and AI is dramatically over-hyped."
Scott Galloway, investor and public intellectual
So far I am a happy customer of a GLP-1 drug, Zepbound. It immediately changed how I thought about food.
These drugs are being marketed on social media and TV about as casually as any over-the-counter drug. There are dozens of vendors. Answer a few screening questions at their website, get approved by their in-house licensed provider, enter your credit card number, and you begin getting the drug. A shopper can now get the drug in various doses for about $200/month, all things included.
The drug changes something that I had presumed was my essential nature and personality: my appetite for food. I had a big appetite which, on reflection, was never fully satiated. Within hours of taking my first dose I realized it was dinnertime and I didn't particularly care. I wasn't hungry. The drug changed how I thought and felt! And food didn't cross my mind as something particularly interesting or desirable. I liken it to the drug turning off an irritating itch. I feel relief.
The Wall Street Journal this week reported "More than 12% of Americans reported taking GLP-1 drugs for weight loss last fall, up from 6% in early 2024, polling firm Gallup found. Women and people ages 50 to 64 reported higher usage rates."
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| Wall Street Journal gifted article |
The drug isn't a diet drug, in my experience. It is an appetite drug. Weight loss takes care of itself. It is easy to cut back on food intake when you feel "full," even when you haven't eaten.
It prompts me to reflect on the chemical and hormonal nature of personality. I had considered myself mostly-rational. I had agency. There is an "I" inside my head that controlled my choices.A giant medical experiment is taking place in America. If there is a hidden health time bomb in the drug, it hasn't shown up yet. Maybe the time bomb is that the drug works so well it becomes a near-universal adjustment for people who need it, as eyeglasses are for people who need a different refraction. Then maybe Americans as a group end up living a few extra years and Social Security goes broke sooner than we had planned.
We Americans have gotten heavier over the past 50 years. Maybe this is an era-linked phenomenon, like iron lungs for polio or people living with big goiters in the Upper Midwest "goiter belt." Maybe 50 years from now children will ask their teachers why photographs of people in this 1970-to-2030 era showed so many people looking so big. Teachers will have to explain that it was the style back in the olden days before the invention of certain medicines..
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5 comments:
I have been taking GLP-1 for 3 weeks and really like it. I have lost 10 pounds while paying attention to eating vegetables and protein so I don’t damage my body as asked by anonymous. It’s much easier to eat in a healthy manner. I have not eaten a chip or any processed foods since starting on it. The shot in the pen is minuscule and shouldn’t be a deterrent to anyone. I predict widespread use in spite of some viewing it as some how cheating or as a mark of being weak.
The $200 per month sounds expensive, but how much of a savings in groceries and restaurants outweigh the cost of the drug, do you estimate? Looking at this on a macro-economic level, let’s assume that the level of use doubles again. What would the impact be on fast-food restaurant and franchisees and chains, wholesalers of groceries, agricultural producers, Betty Crocker and Sara Lee? A lot of economic interests could be disrupted, with a lot at stake, and a lot of money to spend in our politics. There’s a lot of money being made in the fattening of America. Those interests won’t give up easily.
I am still trying to do it the “old-fashioned way,“ with limited success. I lost almost 9 pounds and have now gained back about 4 of them.
But I am on enough drugs already, and will probably keep trying this way.
We are all riding around in brains that have been molded for millions of years by evolution. We have strong desires for things that evolution decided were good for getting our genes into the next generation.
Your comment about rational brain function (which we all THINK we have) reminded me of an exceptional book by Sam Kean entitled The Tale of the Dueling Neurosurgeons: The History of the Human Brain. Reading about brain pathology and neurobiological research that goes back to the 1500’s with King Charles V, I found myself wondering about the idea of cognitive moral culpability. For example, reading about autopsies of numerous serial killers showed they had the propensity to have thin and porous cerebral cortexes; and “super-agers” (those with exceptional mental faculties into their 80’s and beyond) had unusually thick ones makes you wonder.
So yes - having GLP chemically change your impulses seems like a positive. Of course reading today about Trump and his posse like RFK and Hegseth getting juiced with testosterone (TRT) may explain the “roid-rage” presidency.
Designer drugs for whatever you want to be!!
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