 Originally Posted by Noldor
...So how can we be sure that everybody can lucid dream?
Well, we can't be sure.
LD'ing, being an activity that runs counter to your brain and body's natural order (aka, being awake while you are asleep), is something that a few people might not be able to learn. In order to LD consistently, you must effectively do some serious rewiring of physical sleep and consciousness routines that have been firmly established in your brain since birth; this rewiring is difficult most of the time, and occasionally might just be impossible.
So I would agree that, if you have been diligently and sincerely working to have a LD for four years now, there is an excellent chance that the ability may be out of reach for you. By "diligently and sincerely," I mean that, in addition to trying techniques, you have worked regularly and with sincere focus on developing all the fundamentals (self-awareness, memory, expectation/intention), you have learned and practiced MILD for at least six months, you have kept a dream journal, you made a sincere attempt to LD at least once a week for the full four years, and LD'ing was forefront in your thoughts for at least some part of each of your waking days.
I don't know what you've tried to date, but if it included the things I listed above, four years is a very long time to be attempting unsuccessfully to LD; it could be time to move on to something else. However, if your practice has been sporadic or unfocused, or if you didn't spend enough time on a single valid technique (like MILD), or perhaps -- and I wouldn't blame you for this -- you approach your LD attempts with a negative or disheartened attitude, there may be a chance that, should you start all over again, you might just find your way to lucidity... but if you should decide to start over, I would give it several months, rather than several years.
Oh, and for what its worth, I too get a little annoyed when people (including myself, I'll admit) toss out general advice like "Take a break!" " You are doing to much" " You are not doing enough," etc, without really looking into what it is that you're missing in your practice. If you can't LD after all that time, there is probably something specific you are missing, and, say, taking a break does nothing to lead you to that something. So who knows? Maybe your four years of failure is based less on your natural ability than it is on a consistent string of poor advice! 
tl;dr: We cannot be sure that everyone can LD; there may be some people whose brains simply will not allow the necessary rewiring to accommodate being awake while asleep. But to be sure you are in that small minority of people naturally unable to LD, look back at your years of attempts, and be sure you have pushed all the buttons required to truly confirm that your brain is not interested in being adjusted. If you've included the fundamentals in your practice, and have done your techniques and daywork with sincerity and consistence, then, after four years, it may be time to leave LD'ing behind.
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