Just to say my own hormones caused me a lot of problems! I have had a partial hysterectomy, I have used a very low dose 25 estrodiol patch.
When I was 56 I chose stop stop the patch for a few years, I took a two year college Diploma course, lost weight felt wonderful and was told so many times that I looked nowhere near my age and what was my secret and still am asked this.
I went back on my patch and to be honest it was because of MM, causing me to put it on and take it off in accordance of what I read, I have finally settled on half a patch of a 25 patch which I sometimes forget to put on or it falls off ( I have used dab estrogel sometimes, which I had for about ten years

occasionally. At the moment I am not using either of them and I assure you I have not fallen apart, my skin is very good, my teeth are solid in my mouth and I have never suffered from VA.
I do as my mum did and have reaped the benefits.
You talk of the older generation who are still alive and do not have quality of life. These women lived through the wars years and before, they did not have the benefit of the NHS, free vitamins, cod liver oil etc. and free milk at school. The baby boomers who came afterwards have had the advantages and will have a healthier old age, I am not sure about some of the young of today though.
We can also get back to the boring subject of genes and the tendencies we inherit.
HRT is a life choice but to condemn women who choose not to take it, and Doctors who do show concern when prescribing it to
some women to whom it maybe contradictive, to me is wrong.
I did say I would not ague the point, but I do find some of your statements so outrageous

we also have not touched on women who cannot use estrogen, because of breast cancer or other deseases or problems that preclude it.