Ah, the weekend turmeric marker of the thread is here again.
First of all you started quoted RUCAM all over only when this study pointed it out. Second the paper called out studies using case selection from Livertox as the basis. Half of the links you quoted were based on Livertox case selections and not RUCAM. Finally it concluded that the RUCAM based cases were too few to even to warrant any judgement.
Probability and likelihood tells us they are not sure. It may or may not cause it. More specifically, if there is an adverse event, the definitive cause is yet unclear.
It is clear that you have a personal vendetta in all of this. You choose to believe what you want to believe and ignore everything else. You have a problem with understanding statistical analysis and probability but I sense that it is more about that you cannot accept what they are saying and that they are inconclusive.
This is the warning they issued -
In case of liver, biliary or calculosis abnormalities in the biliary tract, the use of the product is not recommended. Do not use during pregnancy and lactation. Do not use for prolonged periods without consulting your doctor. If you are taking medications, it is it is advisable to hear the opinion of the doctor.
The fact that you need to repeatedly compare turmeric to alcohol tells me how desperate you are. One does not even need common sense to know that each individual is unique and the same genetic predisposition cannot be applied to everyone. With the kind of logic you have been spewing all over, you should stop eating and drinking altogether. Almost everything you consume has one or the other study telling it's bad in one or more scenarios. Even water is known to cause problems in specific cases.
That is for the physician to decide, not you nor me. They are in the position to understand studies and trials and patient needs better than you.
The fact that a physician is not a pseudoscience apologist does not make them good just because you say so. A good physician is one who makes sense out of all the BS and game of smokes and mirrors being played. A good physician interprets studies and trials for what they are and prescribes the best possible course of action for the patient. A good physician doesn't really need to be on Twitter.