dcentity2000
<font color=red>Simba Cub<br><font color=green>Is
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2003
- Messages
- 10,057
Yes.
It'll happen, just not for quite a while.
Smoking boils down to paying to poison yourself (harming those who love you by this merit alone), make you look a bit mank (yellow teeth and tongue, anyone?), smell awful, very possibly form an addiction, be antisocial ("I gotta go have a smoke...") and harm others, even if you try reeeeaaall hard not to.
Remember, second hand smoke is recognised to be a serious threat.
Taken from the US National Library of Med:
Estimated annual deaths from passive smoking: 35,000 from Ischemic Heart Disease; 3,000 from Lung Cancers; 1,900 from Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.
Estimated annual casualties from passive smoking: 9,700 suffer Low Birthweight Births; 400,000 suffer Asthma Exacerbation in Children; 150,000 suffer Acute Lower Respiratory Illness (Children < 18 mo.); 700,000 suffer Otitis Media in Children.
So why the HELL should my brothers and I have to suffer because of your drug addiction?
Just so you can feel a little more relaxed compared to what that stuff does to you when you don't breathe it? Just because you prefer to smoke? You would do this knowing that you could be harming others and yourself just because of a preference which you can overcome?
As the NHS says: Put it out. Right out.
There are already bans being instated accross parts of the UK which have been very successful. There are murmurs of possible lawsuits for battery or technical assault based on passive smoking. According to a November 2001 report issued by the National Cancer Institute, there are 69 known or probable carcinogens in cigarette smoke. According to the IARC, involuntary smoking (exposure to secondhand or 'environmental' tobacco smoke) is carcinogenic to humans. In its groundbreaking report, the EPA concluded that, for adults, ETS [environmental tobacco smoke] is a human lung carcinogen, responsible for approximately 3,000 lung cancer deaths annually in U.S. nonsmokers. A 1997 British Medical Journal meta-analysis of 19 published studies found that "Breathing other people's smoke is an important and avoidable cause of ischaemic heart disease, increasing a person's risk by a quarter." The list is endless.
My Grandmother died a few years back from cancer due to smoking. My little brother developed asthma from passive smoking due to the friends he used to keep. My parents were once addicted and my father still has to fight it, day in, day out.
And all this, just because of that little stick that you put in your mouth?
This is one narcotic drug that is going to die.
Rich::
It'll happen, just not for quite a while.
Smoking boils down to paying to poison yourself (harming those who love you by this merit alone), make you look a bit mank (yellow teeth and tongue, anyone?), smell awful, very possibly form an addiction, be antisocial ("I gotta go have a smoke...") and harm others, even if you try reeeeaaall hard not to.
Remember, second hand smoke is recognised to be a serious threat.
Taken from the US National Library of Med:
Estimated annual deaths from passive smoking: 35,000 from Ischemic Heart Disease; 3,000 from Lung Cancers; 1,900 from Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.
Estimated annual casualties from passive smoking: 9,700 suffer Low Birthweight Births; 400,000 suffer Asthma Exacerbation in Children; 150,000 suffer Acute Lower Respiratory Illness (Children < 18 mo.); 700,000 suffer Otitis Media in Children.
So why the HELL should my brothers and I have to suffer because of your drug addiction?
Just so you can feel a little more relaxed compared to what that stuff does to you when you don't breathe it? Just because you prefer to smoke? You would do this knowing that you could be harming others and yourself just because of a preference which you can overcome?
As the NHS says: Put it out. Right out.
There are already bans being instated accross parts of the UK which have been very successful. There are murmurs of possible lawsuits for battery or technical assault based on passive smoking. According to a November 2001 report issued by the National Cancer Institute, there are 69 known or probable carcinogens in cigarette smoke. According to the IARC, involuntary smoking (exposure to secondhand or 'environmental' tobacco smoke) is carcinogenic to humans. In its groundbreaking report, the EPA concluded that, for adults, ETS [environmental tobacco smoke] is a human lung carcinogen, responsible for approximately 3,000 lung cancer deaths annually in U.S. nonsmokers. A 1997 British Medical Journal meta-analysis of 19 published studies found that "Breathing other people's smoke is an important and avoidable cause of ischaemic heart disease, increasing a person's risk by a quarter." The list is endless.
My Grandmother died a few years back from cancer due to smoking. My little brother developed asthma from passive smoking due to the friends he used to keep. My parents were once addicted and my father still has to fight it, day in, day out.
And all this, just because of that little stick that you put in your mouth?
This is one narcotic drug that is going to die.
Rich::

) I'm allergic to cigarette smoke and have never even tried it, but it doesn't bother me as long as they smoke in the great outdoors.
