• @thawed_caveman
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    345 months ago

    The life expectancy of 75 is an average (of the US population i assume), billionaires are likely to live longer

    • @[email protected]
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      215 months ago

      75 years of nation-wide life expectancy is also likely to include early deaths due to accidents, cancer and such. People who die of “old age” typically do later than 75.

      • @[email protected]
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        145 months ago

        When people talks about life expectancy 99.99% of the time they mean life expectancy at birth, at every year the life expectancy change. Using this life table someone with 61 years, have a life expectancy of 19.7 years, that means he’s expected to live until he’s 80.

      • @grue
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        5 months ago

        Yep, and that was true even going all the way back through history. People weren’t routinely dying in their 30s or whatever before modern medicine; it’s just that a lot more of them were dying in infancy/early childhood and that brought down the average. (That’s the situation anti-vaxxers are trying to go back to, BTW.)

      • @[email protected]
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        15 months ago

        I would say it’s appropriate to loop cancer deaths into the “old age” bucket – DNA getting old and making mistakes replicating seems relevant.

    • @[email protected]
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      65 months ago

      Plus Gaben has been doing some serious work on his health recently so the fat part no longer applies.

    • @474D
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      65 months ago

      Gaben is not exactly an inspiring portrait of health…

    • @xantoxis
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      55 months ago

      Fit billionaires do. What happens to gaben’s heart and arteries are anyone’s guess. He is getting healthier but you can’t undo damage completely.