Safe Cigarettes? 844
CDPatten writes "The UK Times Online is reporting that we could see a 'safe cigarette' next
year. From the article: 'BRITISH American Tobacco
(BAT) is to launch a controversial 'safer cigarette' designed to cut the risk of
smoking-related diseases such as cancer and heart failure by up to 90%.'
I wonder if this will have any impact on the no smoking bans we have seen in recent years?"
Still Safe? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Still Safe? (Score:3, Insightful)
Hint: witches are imaginary or harmless. Smokers are real, their nuisance is lethal, and your troll is a failure.
Re:Still Safe? (Score:5, Insightful)
you're right - cars, trucks, and other hydrocarbon-fuel based engines and generators should be banned from public spaces.
Re:Still Safe? (Score:4, Interesting)
So your sarcastic comment is actually true. Which are all reasons why we've already decreased that pollution quite a bit - for our own good, despite our self-destructive desire to just burn away. But it's not enough - we're still burning too much, polluting ourselves too much. We need to cut down more. Especially as we're now approaching a forced quitting as the hydrocarbons run out. Thank you for seeing the light.
Re:Still Safe? (Score:5, Insightful)
it wasn't really sarcastic. it was highlighting the fact that the "smoking in public places" issue is just a red herring to distract people from the REAL health risk, carcinogens like benzene in petrol fumes, and (worst of all), diesel exhaust.
Re:Still Safe? (Score:3)
That is of course the fact that smokers stink.
Re:Still Safe? Never safe (Score:4, Insightful)
Consider this concept of personal freedom: If I'm having a party, I have every right to tell my guests that I don't want them to smoke on property. My guests who smoke may choose not to come to my party because I won't let them smoke. They may choose to stand on the sidewalk in front of my house and smoke. They may choose to not smoke while at my party. They have the freedom to decide.
If I'm having a party, I have every right to tell my guests to light up. My guests who do not smoke can choose not to come to my party if they don't wish to inhale smoke. They may choose to avoid smokers and end up hanging out someplace where there are no smokers, such as on the sidewalk in front of my house. They may choose to put up with the smoke. They have the freedom to decide.
To me, personal freedom is about the right to choose. I don't have to agree with their choices. I may wish they wouldn't choose these things. I may not want to be around them when they choose these things. But that doesn't mean that I have the right to not allow them to choose.
Last night, I went out to dinner with a friend of mine. We were at a nice restaurant enjoying a quiet meal and conversation. Unfortunately, about half-way through our meal, a group of people came in and ended up sitting at a table close to us. They'd probably been sitting at the bar for an hour or so, so they were already a little drunk and loud. They ordered a couple of bottles of wine and started getting a little loud. It certainly was annoying. Were infringing on my "personal freedom" to enjoy a quiet dinner? Had I gone to the restaurant and complained, would I be infringing on their "personal freedom" to have a good time?
You'd prefer not to be annoyed by cigarette smoke while enjoying a night out and I can't say that I blame you. But to equate your preferences with "personal freedom" is a bit much. To go back to your term, "right", you don't have the "right" to make everybody else do what you want.
Re:Still Safe? Never safe (Score:3, Interesting)
Judging by the context of this thread, it sounds as if you're oppos
Re:Still Safe? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Still Safe? (Score:5, Informative)
Smoking bans not only make public places healthier, they also demonstrate very simple ways in which the free market doesn't effectively model choice or social preferences. Especially when the markets are controlled by minorities with deeply vested practices, irrational needs and a budget to promote detrimental group behavior. For clues, note how expensive smoking is in product and healthcare, and how many people behave uneconomically within the algebra of junkie need.
Re:Still Safe? (Score:3, Interesting)
Ok, so I'm stimulating the economy. You've made my point very eloquently for me.
Smokers tend to die early into their retirement. They (those that die) don't draw from th
another threat from smoking (Score:5, Interesting)
Seth
Re:Still Safe? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Still Safe? (Score:3, Insightful)
Non smokers die every day.
Sorry.
tobacco still sucks (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:tobacco still sucks - canabis (Score:5, Interesting)
we'd like to see something nicotine free, but burn well. we're going to do canabis whether it's legal or not, as will other smokers smoke. I think this sort of thing is a good thing for most involved.
if they legalised pot, and made better ways of regulating the doses I'm sure we'd all be a lot happier!
Re:tobacco still sucks - canabis (Score:3, Informative)
here's some
http://www.honeyrose.com/ [honeyrose.com]
Personally, I just smoke a bong.
Re:tobacco still sucks - canabis (Score:4, Informative)
He said the difference was mainly due to nicotine in tobacco, whereas cannabis may inhibit cancer because of the presence of the chemical THC.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/4350642.stm [bbc.co.uk]
Presumably you can back up your own statement?
Re:tobacco still sucks - canabis (Score:3, Informative)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/684328.stm [bbc.co.uk]
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:tobacco still sucks (Score:5, Funny)
Re:tobacco still sucks (Score:5, Interesting)
Phillip Morris says... (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree (Score:2)
Philip Morris LIES (Score:5, Informative)
Internal memos from Philip Morris [tobaccodocuments.org] from April 1980 indicate that the tobacco companies have been fully aware of radioactivity in cigarettes for over two decades. They also knew of ways of eliminating the radioactivity, but wrote them off as a "valid but expensive point":
Furthermore, switching to indirect fire curing would eliminate virtually all of another carcinogen, nitrosamine, from cigarettes. Nitrosamine was previously found in BEER thanks to direct fire curing of barley. Switching to indirect fire curing of barley reduced nitrosamine in beer to indetectable levels. Yet Philip Morris makes Marlboros, cigarettes with more nitrosamine than any others in the world [smh.com.au].
Yes, believe what Philip Morris says, because if you realized there could be a safe cigarette, it would cost them a lot of money...
Here's two simple manufacturing changes they could make which would eliminate the two most potent carcinogens from cigarettes. But I guess it's just cheaper for Philip Morris to kill their customers.
Re:Philip Morris LIES (Score:3, Interesting)
What's the point of making something safer if the government tells you that you're not allowed to tell people you did it? Would cars have airbags if there was a restriction against telling pe
Awesome! (Score:2)
We need deadlier cigarettes (Score:5, Funny)
Yes! deadlier cigarettes! (Score:3, Funny)
Not only would it encourage people to quit, all those who were dumb enough to keep smoking would be dead quick enough not to become such a horrible drain on our medical system. Yes, I do know that cigarettes are taxed, blah blah blah.
Maybe we could comprise any make every 1000th cigarete cause instantenous death?
Re:Yes! deadlier cigarettes! (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, non of this changes the fact that it's a disgusting habit, imposed on others in the form of passive smoking, and leaves clothes and hair stinking, and any rooms/furnishings stinking forever after.
Personally I loath sm
Re:Yes! deadlier cigarettes! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:We need deadlier cigarettes (Score:3, Interesting)
- Make cars more unsafe so people die when they crash? That way we will have fewer crashes
- Make materials more flameable? That way a fire will ensure everyone gets killed. THAT will teach people to be more carefule with matches and lighters.
- Make cellphones give you an electroshock when you say something ungodly? Then everyone will be religious and believe in the same crap.
Yes, by golly! I think you are on to something... Why not just use all the nuclear weapons
Re:We need deadlier cigarettes (Score:5, Insightful)
Of the four comparisons you made here three were invalid and the fourth actually proved his point
- Make cars more unsafe so people die when they crash? That way we will have fewer crashes
- Make materials more flameable? That way a fire will ensure everyone gets killed. THAT will teach people to be more carefule with matches and lighters.
- Make cellphones give you an electroshock when you say something ungodly? Then everyone will be religious and believe in the same crap.
Cars, matches and lighters, and cellphones are all very useful items that in some cases have innately dangerous qualities, people should exert caution with them but we lose a lot of benefit if people stop using them entirely. Cigarrettes on the other hand have no real benefits thus nothing is lost if people stop using them.
Yes, by golly! I think you are on to something... Why not just use all the nuclear weapons we have? Then we will not be having this discussion in the future!
We haven't used a nuclear weapon in a war since WWII, in fact because nuclear weapons are so insanely deadly there hasn't been a full out war between major powers since WWII, we simply made war so deadly with nukes that people stopped having them because is was MAD... Hey, isn't that exactly the point the grandparent was trying to make with about using extra deadly cigarettes?
Re:We need deadlier cigarettes (Score:4, Insightful)
[...] we simply made war so deadly with nukes that people stopped having them because is was MAD...
Excuse me, stopped having wars?
Seriously though, I'm a smoker and I absolutely love smoking. I can spend 10 minutes doing abosolutely nothing but enjoying a cigarette. Don't ask me why, because I don't know. I can find plenty of worse ways to go [darwinawards.com]. Smoking really works for me and I don't mind trading off a few years of my life for it.
I understand and respect how and why non-smokers can be annoyed by smoke, that's fine and understandable, but don't force your tired arguments down our throats. Smoking is a personal choice, so leave it at that, please. I've met one too many non-smokers who's been trying to "save me", which really just annoys me and won't ever work.
Re:We need deadlier cigarettes (Score:5, Insightful)
Excuse me, stopped having wars?
Not sure if you were being sarcastic but that statement was qualified with the preceeding phrase "there hasn't been a full out war between major powers since WWII". Which to my knowledge is correct, the "we" in the quote you took was of course referring to the "major powers" and "war" was "war between major powers".
Seriously though, I'm a smoker and I absolutely love smoking. I can spend 10 minutes doing abosolutely nothing but enjoying a cigarette. Don't ask me why, because I don't know. I can find plenty of worse ways to go. Smoking really works for me and I don't mind trading off a few years of my life for it.
I understand and respect how and why non-smokers can be annoyed by smoke, that's fine and understandable, but don't force your tired arguments down our throats. Smoking is a personal choice, so leave it at that, please. I've met one too many non-smokers who's been trying to "save me", which really just annoys me and won't ever work.
You sound like a nice person so I'd rather you didn't die a few years earlier, but that's just me. Note that in addition to your harming own health you are damaging the health of others, both directly through second hand smoke and indirectly through reinforcing the social acceptability of smoking. I don't know if you have children but if you did would you truly want your children to start smoking... did I just play the "won't sombody think of the children" card? (don't feel obliged to take that point seriously;)
Either way if you really do like smoking and feel the cost is worth it than go ahead, but I'd ask you to be considerate of where you do smoke. Consider it like talking on your cellphone, alone in your house, sure, in a theatre, not so good. I can tell you I never really enjoy walking through a cloud of smoke (and smokers) hanging around the entrance to a building on campus. As well I've heard cigarette smoke can be extremely annoying to former smokers. Again, as with any decision look at all the different costs and benefits impartially and decide accordingly.
Re:We need deadlier cigarettes (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, you're right. I was a bit fast on the reply-button there. No, we haven't had any all-out wars between major powers since ww2, but I'm not sure that can be attributed to nukes alone. The way of war has changed a lot too. Wars are now fought more through propaganda than ever before, just look at the media... "Keep the people scared, so they're more easilly convinced that invading every middle-eastern country is a capital idea!" :-p (Ok, j/k - at least about the last part of the former sentence.)
You sou
Re:The difference is... (Score:5, Insightful)
Excuse me, smokers can force smokers to "escape"? (Score:5, Insightful)
You can't just slip that in - that's THE crux of the smoking bans. Somebody is going to be inconvienced, either smokers (forced to go outside or special smoking rooms) or non-smokers (forced to "escape" the fumes as you so quaintly phrased it).
These situations are not symmetrical. Smokers can still enjoy non-smoking venues. Smokers often report preferring non-smoking venues for several reasons - their non-smoking friends are more likely to join them, they can taste their own food better, they aren't tempted to light up themselves as smoke from an adjacent patron waffs by. Smokers who are quiting can't even go into smoking venues because of the last item. At worst they're inconvenienced for minutes every few hours.
Non-smokers, in contrast, don't have any choices. "Non-smoking areas" are a joke. If the smoke bothers us (and I've had to walk away from non-refundable admissions because the smoke caused my eyes to water within minutes) it's going to bother us the entire time we're there, not for a few minutes every few hours.
There's also the issue of fairness to the employees. It's easy for us to say that employees can always change jobs if they don't like dealing with smoke throughout the day, but back in the real world we know that people at this economic rung are often stuck in their job since they live from check to check and can't afford even a modest reduction in hours as the new guy.
Those are reasons for businesses to go smoke-free, is it a valid reason to make it mandatory? That's a non-trivial question -- if you think it's obviously not appropriate for the government to get involved ask yourself how you would feel if most restaurants were "white only" because the owners felt they would lose sales (from white patrons avoiding them) if they allowed non-whites to eat there. It's not an exact parallel but it demolishes the "owner uber alles" mindset.
Re:We need deadlier cigarettes (Score:5, Insightful)
I have another idea! We can force everyone to exercise every day, it would save a lot of lives! We'll make it a mandatory part of everyone's workday, right after the two-minutes'-hate.
Smoke isn't safe. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Smoke isn't safe. (Score:3, Insightful)
There is 160,000 lung cancer deaths alone in the US. The majority of this is due to cigarette smoking.
If we could reduce this number by only 1%, that would result in over a thousand lives saved each year. If we could reduce it by 10%, it would be ober ten thousand lives saved each year.
Candles and Incense (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Smoke isn't safe. (Score:3, Interesting)
bans on smoking in public places tend to be based on the annoyance an essentially selfish mob -- despite the lack of any evidence to suggest that there are any detectable consequences to periodic outdoor exposure, or occasional indoor exposure to secondhand smoke.
(when you ask the "smoking ban" crowd about the major reasons to support their proposals, it usually has something to do with not liking how their clothes smell when they get back from a bar.)
smoking bans are centered mostly around "
Re:Smoke isn't safe. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Smoke isn't safe. (Score:3, Insightful)
And it isn't selfish to impose cigarette smoke on people who don't want it anywhere near them? Particularly the ones for whom even small amounts of passive smoking triggers asthma attacks.
Reminds me of a news article I saw about some truck drivers
Re:Exactly (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Smoke isn't safe. (Score:3, Insightful)
No, I think you don't get the point the GP poster was trying to make. The fact is that you are mortal, and when you were born you
What I'm waiting for is... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What I'm waiting for is... (Score:3, Insightful)
That's why they're called addictions! Step down from your moral argument: the pope is just as likely to get addicted to heroin as Joe sixpack. That's why it's dangerous.
Re:What I'm waiting for is... (Score:3, Interesting)
As far as ecstasy is concerned, it's pretty much the same story, and they believe that use results in serious long time repercussions, not to mention the same problem as cocaine. You never know when the same dose will kill you.
Cause or Risk Factor? (warning pro-smoking) (Score:5, Interesting)
My physician smokes 2+ packs a day. He's 80. He runs, avoids trans fats and high glycemic foods. Many of my older customers smoke but also maintain good diets and exercise.
I started smoking at 21. I had bad bouts with kidney stones that no medications or diet helped. A San Francisco quack Chinese herbal nut told me to smoke. 5 years with zero kidney attacks. Giving it up at 26 gave me 3 years of kidney pains. Smoking again relieved it. Since I stopped a few weeks ago, the pains are back.
My TMJ was also reduced from smoking. It has affected me since the age of 11.
I'm not saying smoking is safe or healthy. I am saying it has some benefits, and the high carb high trans fat diet of most Westerners is far worse. If it wasn't for high taxes and tort suit payments, I'd continue to smoke. I know I live a healthier life because of it.
By the way, I ran a half marathon while smoking 10 cigarettes, and am in great physical shape (good blood pressure, cholesterol, etc). Don't believe the hype.
Re:Cause or Risk Factor? (warning pro-smoking) (Score:5, Insightful)
As far as passive smoking -vs- unhealthy diets, if someone on the next table eats a bag of pork rinds, my eyes don't start to water and I don't leave the building smelling like an ash-tray. If someone on the next table eats the world's healthiest dinner but lights up, I end up leaving smelling like an ash tray. That's the difference - a person's unhealthy diet doesn't affect nearby strangers but their smoking will. That's the main problem with second hand smoke. I couldn't care less if it's totally harmless to me in the long term - in the short term it gives me what feels like an allergic reaction (stuffiness, watering eyes, lethargy) which isn't very pleasant. That's why there is a move on to ban smoking in public places. In the privacy of your own home, knock yourself out - I couldn't care less whether you smoke marijuana or tobacco. But in enclosed public spaces, please refrain from it - those of us who don't smoke find it at best smelly, at worst, feeling a bit ill.
Would you quit driving (Score:3)
Re:Cause or Risk Factor? (warning pro-smoking) (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Cause or Risk Factor? (warning pro-smoking) (Score:5, Interesting)
Some of us more than a bit ill. Second-hand smoke causes me real short-term problems. I've heard people say that cigarette smoke isn't an allergen; it's chemical sensitivity. Whatever you call it, the effect is the similar to - but more potent than - my other allergies. My eyes burn and water, I cough and sneeze, and my sinuses fill, which often leads to a sinus infection, which means a week of misery and $100 of antibiotics. Probably a day missed from work. I used to live in Iowa, so there were a number of places I just couldn't go - bars, bowling alleys, etc. I had sinus surgery to to prevent the infections, with disappointing results.
I've moved to California, where they have seen reason. I can go anywhere. I'm incredibly sensitive to smoke, so I do have occasional problems still. I'll smell smoke and see a coworker who walked past and is now 100 feet away; the smell lingers. If I smell it, I know it will cause me problems. If I don't smell it, it still might. (I once had a pretty bad reaction to a hotel room that smelled just fine to me. Never found out why.) I deliberately shun people who smell like smoke. If I am forced to be near them, I take a shower as soon as I get home.
Re:Cause or Risk Factor? (warning pro-smoking) (Score:3, Insightful)
That is not clear at all. You hear more from the smokers because they're obnoxious assholes. When strangers smoke near me, I generally give them an unpleasant look and move away. They never know or care how much of a problem they're causing me. Do you smoke? Do you get those looks? Next time, ask why.
It is common to some have
Re:Cause or Risk Factor? (warning pro-smoking) (Score:5, Funny)
All at the same time?
No, no, no (Score:4, Informative)
Disclaimer: I smoke, and after having tried to quit twice and turned into a raging hellbeast on account of it, I am going to wait until things are a bit more stable before I try again. Its actually quite entertaining in hindsight; there is a euphoric initial period, where all the senses that were dulled by the drug come roaring back (like pins and needles all over your body for days) followed closely by a manic depressive section, and then there is a long trudge through what can only be described as psychotic paranoia, in the true clinical sense. Small problems become niggling problems, which must be someones fault, and then these people must be taught not to make the same mistake again. Its pretty hard to keep in check.
But hold on a second there sparky, the only evidence you present is anecdotal, and for all we know you could be pulling it directly from your posterior. Let me try...
I had severe headaches since I was 18, but then I started smoking because after all the doctors couldn't help, a homeopathic practitioner mentioned it might be beneficial.
Sounds just as good as yours, and is just as pulled out of my arse. Anyway the real issue isn't so much health as it is the addictive nature of nicotine. Its a drug, that has no benefits, is toxic in every respect, and it should be just as outlawed as heroin. I recall reading somewhere that the withdrawal symptoms are actually more severe, how true that is I cannot attest to. The only reason it is allowed is because it was in common use before the laws really started to crack down on drugs.
Most smokers smoke and continue to do so because they like most people foolishly started in their rebellious teens, and are now hooked on the things well into adulthood.
So stop talking shite.
Damn Ex-Smoker words below (Score:5, Informative)
I set a day and time for me to quit (Friday at 17:00) and chainsmoked up to that point. At 17:00 I placed the remainder of the pack on my counter and left them there. When I had a craving, I smelled the tobacco and placed the pack back on the counter. The aches from the wonderful chemicals leaving my joints were relieved by ibuprofin. And I kept saying to myself, I have gone (insert time) without a cigarette, I will wait a few hours and get one if I need it. The mantra kept repeating, setting goals and pushing them higher and higher.
I threw the pack away three months later with the same contents as it had that Friday. Food and drinks tasted better, my newborn son's asthma went away (I smoked outside, but the smoke comes in on your hair, hands, and clothing), and my wallet was fuller.
I feel so much better now that I would suggest quitting to anyone. People around you will understand if you are a bit of a Hellbeast, and will forgive you if you matter to them. If they don't, screw them they don't care for you anyway.
Re:No, no, no (Score:5, Funny)
When I first tried to quit I was just like you psycotic. I realised I needed to mellow out so the second time I tried I made sure I masturbated... heaps. It kept me calm, mellow and collected and was fun at the same time.
Re:Cause or Risk Factor? (warning pro-smoking) (Score:3, Interesting)
A small sampling of the more popular studies:
http://www.springerlink.com/(dt10aj3uaf0uc555jygud a55)/app/home/contribution.asp?referrer=parent&bac kto=issue,5,10;journal,57,79;linkingpublicationres ults,1:100150,1 [springerlink.com]
http://www.anesthesiology.org/pt/re/anes/abstract. 00000542-199805000-00001.htm;jsessionid=DulLk2jICr 21YEWNWncR3KAVuVUI511gQGn56CR2brpxYvhd46WX!4796555 35!-949856144!9001!-1 [anesthesiology.org]
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/abstrac t/110504879/ABSTRACT [wiley.com]
And be
They've had these for YEARS!!! (Score:5, Funny)
bans? (Score:5, Insightful)
hopefully not. All the bans are not about health of smokers, it's about fresh air for non-smokers. Who cares if that stinking person over there inhales deadly stuff, or less deadly? It all stinks the same.
Re:bans? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:bans? (Score:5, Insightful)
have you noticed the small holes on the filter? By covering those, you'll inhale more smoke and thus more nicotine. The tobacco industry made research on where to put those holes so that people will generall cover them.
It's all about getting people hooked on nicotine addiction in order to sell more tobacco. This is a industry with long established practice of lying (including to the US Congress), faking research data and keeping "unwelcome" research from ever getting public.
Re:bans? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:bans? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:bans? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:bans? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:bans? (Score:3, Insightful)
Two big problems with this:
Environment (Score:5, Interesting)
Not only is it a useless and harmful pastime to people, it greatly hurts the environment. Up here in New England (USA) we even have stories of deer venturing onto roads to eat cigarette butts and causing accidents, all because they are addicted. It is also just unsightly to see them all over roads and sidewalks. All things considered it is harmful to everything and everyone.
Re:Environment (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah. Those damn deer should be kept well away from roads and sidewalks... They are a nuisance.
Re:Environment (Score:4, Funny)
What, do you expect smokers to put the butts in their ashtrays or something? They smell terrible and stink up the car. It's much better to throw them out the window where you don't have to worry about those nasty, filthy things anymore.
But what about the nicotine (Score:2)
Barbarians at the Gate (Score:2)
"Tastes like sh** and smells like a fart!
Got ourselves a real winner here!"
Of course, for a non-smoker, that applies to all cigarettes.
Hmmmm... (Score:3, Insightful)
Zero chance of it having any impact. From the article:
"John Britton, professor of epidemiology at Nottingham University, said: "Anything involving inhaling smoke is unsafe. These new cigarettes could be more like jumping from the 15th floor instead of the 20th: theoretically the risk is less but you still die."
To me it sounds like those "light" smokes that floating around. Safer in theory, but in reality they're still dangerous. So don't expect smoking bans to end anytime soon.
Don't remove bans please (Score:2)
Re:Don't remove bans please (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Don't remove bans please (Score:3, Insightful)
The filters may be fine for those doing the smoking, but what about the rest of us who get stuck having to smell the other byproducts? If the location selection is up to me I'll avoid a place if I see people smoking, but where we go is not always up to me. Cigarette smoke is that nasty stuff that doesn't go away unless the ventalation system rivals that of a clean room. It gets into/onto everything, skin, hair, clothes and can't forget about food and drink, yes, you're eating what tha
Although I don't disagree with you... (Score:3, Insightful)
Just like the USA... (Score:5, Insightful)
The government? (Score:2)
What has the government got to do with anything?
Re:Just like the USA... (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh, wait, now you don't support banning something because it's addictive?
People need to make their own decisions. That's the entire bloody POINT of the United States, at least it used to be. If you want to smoke, great, go for it. Drink all the booze you want, go for a bender, and that's fine, although you have to live with the consequences. The government has no say in how much of an idiot
Re:Just like the USA... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Just like the USA... (Score:3, Funny)
why should other drugs be banned and not tobacco?
Because the marijuana lobbists are too stoned to be effective in Washington...
Rather than a 'Safe Cigarette' (Score:5, Insightful)
I smoke like a trooper (Score:5, Funny)
Haaaaaa-ha-ha-ha-ha-haaaaarggghhhhh!!!!
*cough*
passive smoking (Score:3, Interesting)
Most of the 'added safety' is in the filter.
Much of the passive smoke comes straight from the cigarette tip without passing through the filter, so there's little change there.
Smoking Bans... (Score:4, Insightful)
One cigarrette can lessen a dining or movie experience for a large number of people, and over time the smoke and ash saturate the environment.
Thus even if there are nos mokers present, it can still smell, and therefore taste, of smoke.
If I were addicted to highly concentrated sulfur fumes, or banging symbols loudly, I would not expect establishments to tolerate me.
Crying babies are another issue, but at least the baby will eventually grow up into a productive member of society. In theory, that is.
Safer second-hand smoke? (Score:3, Insightful)
The Racket (Score:3, Interesting)
If our government weren't addicted to the $15.7 billion dollars in taxes [mises.org] they collect on an annual basis from cigarettes, we would get safe cigarettes in a heartbeat. Right now, though, too many pet projects depend on cigarettes being dangerous for that to change.
Re:The Racket (Score:5, Insightful)
It's quotes like that that really make me wonder why our goverment doesn't legalize marijuana and tax it like tobacco. Save billions on enforcement (~80% of drug arrests are marijuana possession), and make tens of billions in taxes.
Maybe they're too to stoned to realize.
Re:The Racket (Score:4, Insightful)
You really think the government needs a reason to tax? Please. Taxing something unpopular is easy to do because the powers that be know that they aren't offending the majority. We know that red meat is unhealthy and is probably just as costly to society in the way of illness and death but when do you expect to pay a tax on Big Macs? The difference? 1 in 6 people in the US smokes, 29 in 30 people in the US eats red meat. (those are rough figures, you get the point).
So under the pretense of discouraging cigarette smoking, politicians can impose a regressive racist tax.
Racist? How, praytell, is "the man" forcing these smokes on the minority races? No one is forcing anyone to smoke. It's odd that "the poor" (which you seem to associate directly with minority races) seem to bitch and moan about every cent they spend in taxes as they smoke away a large percentage of their income. Not smoking is a very valid option. I will not be made to feel bad about the fact that minorities make up for the bulk of the poor and for whatever reason these same people feel the need to piss away what little expendable cash they have on smokes. It's their choice, I won't begrudge them for it but don't make it sound like they're somehow the victim. Just because you're poor doesn't mean you need to act stupid.
This is like some of the old women that work at the company I work for; they're on their smoke breaks bitching about gas costing 75 cents more a gallon as they puff away and talk about spending money on the Powerball lottery but in nearly the same breath they complain that if the price of gas continues to be high they will have to make the choice between "eating and driving". This is no bullshit. If you're spending 4-5 USD a day on cigarettes there should be no reason for bills to be late nor for you to not have enough money for some of the basic needs in life. I won't even go on to my thoughts about the people who pay for their groceries with foodstamps but buy a couple of cartons of smokes either...
FakeToday Prediction (Score:3, Funny)
There is NO SAFE CIGARETTE... (Score:3, Informative)
I am a smoker (Score:4, Insightful)
It's obvious...
That's it.
Re:I am a smoker (Score:3, Interesting)
About 18 months ago, I'd heard a friend that smokes complaining about how much tax money the government made off of smokers... so I took it upon myself to do a little research. With the help of Google, I was able to locate the relevant U.S. federal government sites. As it turns out, with the insane amount of money that is spent on tobacco smoking relate
Save me from them! (Score:3, Insightful)
My smoking rule: (Score:4, Interesting)
This lets all cigarettes off the list, as very little of their content is actual tobacco. The rest is chemicals, mostly formulated to give you an intense rush and keep you addicted. Try smoking pure tobacco out of a pipe for a week. You'll feel better, and you won't get dizzy with the rush of the first smoke of the morning, it tastes and smells better (non-smokers always compliment the aroma of a pipe; when did that ever happen with a Marlboro?), and, while you'll still have the habit, it won't be as extreme. Natural tobacco doesn't make you feel like a crack addict who's going to snap if you don't get your fix NOW! - it's a kinder, gentler urge which makes it easier to gradually cut down. You can make it through a whole day without and it doesn't drive you crazy.
PS Cigarettes are the only thing I can think of that one can purchase for ingestion that doesn't have any ingredient information at all. Everything else - including gum, medicine, and even things you don't ingest like cleaning products has the components listed in meticulous detail. What do you suppose the big secret is?
Re:Doubtful (Score:5, Insightful)
That, and put a smoker in a room with someone that has a "different annoying habit"... like projectile vomiting. See how long they continue to believe that everyone has the "right to be annoying to the public".