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I think the new generation of weight-loss drugs are going to be a revolution because they give you power over bad habits, wholesale.

ICYMI: https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2023/05/ozempic-a...

Anecdotally, they really work. It’s not just your food cravings that are mostly stopped in their tracks. But in some miraculous fashion it seems all your “bad” cravings are squashed, while your good ones (side projects, chores, work) stay intact. The only good one I can see slightly down is sex, but as well with that it does also feel like you have a lot more control in that area.

I think we’ll eventually see them as first line prescriptions for all types of addicts. It’s part of the reason I sort of want to throw some money into their stock, but then again it’s hard to know how that all turns out as multiple manufacturers have these drugs and there are many more analogues in the pipelines.

But I find it so interesting, as it really upsets my notion of morality. Yes, resisting your temptations without drugs seems like the obvious better world. But our modern world is simply overflowing with temptation. Fast food, advertisements, sugar in everything, caffeine in everything, drugs everywhere. It was far easier to be ascetic when there just wasn’t that much around. But suddenly on one of these drugs you feel… powerful, in a way. Like you’ve gained a superpower. It’s a really weird experience, and I don’t hate it.




This is fascinating. Do you know if these anti-addiction effects have only been studied with the weight-loss drugs? I'm too skinny (133 lbs) to take them, but am interested in the rest of it.


I think at the lowest dose you could still maintain weight while getting the effects.


unpaywalled link: https://archive.is/7mxOi




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