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Originally posted by Cowgirlstraitup7
To the people that complain that smokers at their place of employment get more smoke breaks and work less, I highly suggest that you take this up with your management team, as it would seem that they are condoning that behavior. You have a management problem, not a smoker problem. In my state people working eight to ten hours per day are aloud two ten minute breaks and one thirty minute lunch. That's it, so what you choose to do with that time is your business. Some smoke, some read a book, some choose to stay at their desk and make like they are working so they look good to the powers that be in their office.
Originally posted by sparda4355
reply to post by darcon
Are you joking, no seriously, are you @#$%ing kidding me?
You honestly believe they should just play mom and dad and tell us that because they don't think it is good for us... we can't do it anymore?
Where do you draw the line? Should we make drinking illegal? How about buttered popcorn? Fastfood? Let's just all get in a line, bend over, grab our toes and beg them to shove sharp pointy objects up our rear ends!
Why even vote anymore? We can't handle the awesome power it holds, lets just them pick our leaders, our judges, and our politicians... Just give up completely cause we don't like smelling smoke when we eat dinner!
Originally posted by sparda4355
I personally think the way they are treating smokers in several areas, is simply unconstitutional! Smokers are not a protected class, but in today’s society, we should be!
[edit on 4-3-2008 by sparda4355]
Originally posted by Toy_soldier
Smokers DO have rights, but they do not have the right to take away my right to fresh air. You can keep your toxic cancer causing smoke to yourself.
Originally posted by mandrake
Smoking causes diseases. It is the undeniable FACT that has been proven time and again by an innumerable amount of medical research.
Originally posted by JPhish
yeah but fat people don't hurt other people.
Originally posted by Toy_soldier
Smokers DO have rights, but they do not have the right to take away my right to fresh air. You can keep your toxic cancer causing smoke to yourself.
Originally posted by Cythraul
In all seriousness, despite the fact that I personally don't drink, I would defend people's right to alcohol because:
a) Used responsibly, it isn't a dangerous addiction.
b) This is the most important point - drinking doesn't directly affect those around you who choose not to drink.
Originally posted by OSSkyWatcher
simple as, i don't need all the crap you want to put into your lungs and bloodstream into mine
People might not like smoke. They might find it unpleasant. But it's a huge jump to say it's actually harming their bodies, as though they were coal miners, soon to be diagnosed with Black Lung Disease. In fact, we have two studies that measured Environmental Tobacco Smoke--the scientific name for it--and came to the conclusion that, first of all, the smoke inhaled from the air is chemically and physically different from the smoke inhaled from the end of the cigarette, and, secondly, people who work eight hours a day in heavy-smoking environments had the following CE's (Cigarette Equivalents):
Sydney: 0.2
Prague: 1.4
Barcelona: 4.3
That's cigarettes per year. The worst case they could find had the bartender adding to his cancer risk at the rate of 4.3 cigarettes per year, which is, of course, like saying somebody who eats six Lifesavers is a candidate for heart disease.
Even more to the point, scientists computed what would happen if a 20-by-20-foot room with a nine-foot ceiling were filled with smoke, and then compared that exposure to the EPA's lowest published "danger" doses. Here are the results:
For the lowest level of danger for benzopyrene, you would need to have 222,000 cigarettes burning in the room.
For the lowest level of acetone, you would need to burn 118,000 cigarettes.
For the lowest level of hydrazine, you would need 14,000 cigarettes.
And for toluene, you would need a cool million smokes, all burning at the same time.
Unless, of course, you opened the door or window--then you would need more.
When the tobacco executives testified to Congress that they did not believe that smoking caused cancer, their answers were probably truthful and I agree with that statement. Now, if they were asked if smoking increases the risk of getting lung cancer, then their answer based upon current evidence should have be "yes." But even so, the risk of a smoker getting lung cancer is much less than anyone would suspect. Based upon what the media and anti-tobacco organizations say, one would think that if you smoke, you get lung cancer (a 100% correlation) or at least expect a 50+% occurrence before someone uses the word "cause."
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Would you believe that the real number is < 10% (see Appendix A)? Yes, a US white male (USWM) cigarette smoker has an 8% lifetime chance of dying from lung cancer but the USWM nonsmoker also has a 1% chance of dying from lung cancer...
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You don't see this type of information being reported, and we hear things like, "if you smoke you will die", but when we actually look at the data, lung cancer accounts for only 2% of the annual deaths worldwide and only 3% in the US.**
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When we look at the data over a longer period, such as 50 years as we did here, the lifetime relative risk is only 8 (see Appendix A). That means that even using the biased data that is out there, a USWM smoker has only an 8x more risk of dying from lung cancer than a nonsmoker. It surprised me too because I had always heard numbers like 20-40 times more risk. Statistics that are understandable and make sense to the general public, what a concept!
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6. Certain types of pollution are more dangerous than second hand smoke.3
7. Second hand smoke has never been shown to be a causative factor in lung cancer.
8. A WHO study did not show that passive (second hand) smoke statistically increased the risk of getting lung cancer.
9. No study has shown that second hand smoke exposure during childhood increases their risk of getting lung cancer.
10. In one study they couldn't even cause lung cancer in mice after exposing them to cigarette smoke for a long time.23