CHOKE on this!

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Philip, Jan 5, 2005.

  1. Philip

    Ken Weitzel Guest

    Hi...

    With all due respect Natalie, do you wear perfume in
    public? Use scented hand soap? Or pretty smelling
    (in your opinion) detergents or fabric softener?
    Scented hair products? Shoe polishes?

    If yes (and I suspect it will be) then you know you're
    greedily harming a fair number of people. Not for a
    difficult to control addiction, but solely for your own
    personal vanity.

    Ken
     
    Ken Weitzel, Jan 6, 2005
    #41
  2. Yes, I never dated a smoker. Kissing a stale ashtray is not very
    appealing... My wife smokes very little, then mostly not at home and never
    in front of our son.

    Did you say you're an ex-smoker...?...

    In fact I enjoy an occasional cigar myself and I am very concerned that our
    (UK) government is going the North American way by trying to impose a
    near-blanket ban on smoking in pubs and restaurants. Luckily there are two
    years for consultation and I hope they will back off. Measures to protect
    workers in smoky establishments are already being taken on a voluntary basis
    and this can be strengthened, perhaps even with legislation.

    DAS
    --
    For direct contact replace nospam with schmetterling
    ---

    [...]
    [...]
     
    Dori A Schmetterling, Jan 6, 2005
    #42
  3. Philip

    Wickeddoll® Guest

    Nope - I can't stand the irritation
    LOL - doesn't apply to me, but I know what you mean

    Natalie
     
    Wickeddoll®, Jan 6, 2005
    #43
  4. I stopped when I was thirteen... :)

    DAS
    --
    For direct contact replace nospam with schmetterling
    ---

    [...]
    [...]
     
    Dori A Schmetterling, Jan 6, 2005
    #44
  5. Philip

    Huw Guest

    I think you miss the point, which is that diesel exhaust is so much
    relatively cleaner than cigarette exhaust. This doesn't highlight the well
    known fact that cigarettes are a nasty habit tolerated until now by millions
    of non smokers whenever they socialise, but it highlights the absurd
    negative press about particulates directed by pressure groups against diesel
    engined cars.
    It turns out that it takes about 3.5 modern diesel cars to create as much
    particulate pollution as a single cigarette.

    Huw
     
    Huw, Jan 6, 2005
    #45
  6. CarcinogenS?

    The only significant carcinogenic pollutant is, AFAIK, particulate carbon.
    That is going down rapidly with particulate filters, and I doubt you would
    breathe much in unless you are standing really close.

    How may of us eat burnt toast and charred steak?

    Or lean over a pan of frying bacon? (Get that whiff of nitrosamines!)

    DAS
    --
    For direct contact replace nospam with schmetterling
    ---

    [...]
    [...]
     
    Dori A Schmetterling, Jan 6, 2005
    #46
  7. Philip

    Wickeddoll® Guest

    Not me, sweetie
    Once in a great while...

    Natalie
     
    Wickeddoll®, Jan 6, 2005
    #47
  8. Philip

    Wickeddoll® Guest

    *ahem*

    HELL NO :) Just tried to date one
    cigars stink very badly, IMO, but I do like the smell of cherry tobacco in a
    pipe.

    See, the big fight here in the U.S. is that smokers want to be able to go out
    and have drinks and smoke. The problem is that everyone has to inhale that
    crap with them, so they're discouraged about going out. In Arizona(I left
    there in June), they now have smoker's bars, where you can smoke all you want
    without being stigmatized by we smoking Nazis. I think that's a good idea -
    as everyone present wants to be around other smokers.

    Natalie
     
    Wickeddoll®, Jan 6, 2005
    #48
  9. Philip

    Wickeddoll® Guest

    LOL that's funny, cuz when *I* was 13, I took one whiff, barfed my guts out
    and never tried it again. Thank God!

    Natlaie
     
    Wickeddoll®, Jan 6, 2005
    #49
  10. Philip

    Philip Guest

    "Cigarette Exhaust". LOL You should register that one!
     
    Philip, Jan 6, 2005
    #50
  11. Philip

    Huw Guest

    Luckily the cigarette exhausts at both ends. The greater part of the exhaust
    is filtered, mainly by the smoker's lungs. The filter has a fairly long life
    and regenerates every morning when the smoker coughs up phlegm. Of course it
    doesn't last forever but equals the life of the rest of the system on
    average.
    The exhaust does stink way more than the exhaust of a modern diesel though
    and worse, it permeates clothes and furnishing to linger for several days.

    Huw
     
    Huw, Jan 7, 2005
    #51
  12. SNIP

    That's a sad but not unknown effect from the newer class anti
    depressants--Zyban is just wellbutrin by another name--if you read the
    prescribing information carefully you will see this is not an unknown
    dynamic:
    http://us.gsk.com/products/assets/us_wellbutrin_tablets.pdf

    What is now being uncovered about Prozac, a different drug, but the same
    type of drug:

    http://www.cnn.com/2005/HEALTH/01/04/prozac.documents/
    http://cbs.marketwatch.com/news/story.asp?guid=%7BA8790269-F1D1-48E5-89B8-E40423B5F593%7D&siteid=google&dist=google
    http://www.examiner.ie/pport/web/ireland/Full_Story/did-sg8otgADj454ksgTbBP-2fa91M.asp

    I am so sorry about your brother
     
    Steve n Holly, Jan 7, 2005
    #52
  13. Nobody is proposing unrestricted marijuana use and banning cigarettes that
    I've seen.

    Cigarettes should not be banned, but they should be discouraged and kept
    away from others who don't want them. If marijuana were legal, I don't
    think it would be acceptable to have small children in a smoke filled room
    with it. But we still allow that with cigarettes. A study was just released
    that linked second hand smoke and lower test scores in children. I can see
    laws getting tougher, but I can't see an outright ban. Likewise, I can't
    see the government allowing marijuana smokers to drive when under the
    influence to the point that it affects their driving, or smoke it any place
    where cigarettes are not allowed.

    The real issue is whether the government should be telling us what sorts of
    flowers we can grow. Regulating our behavior is one thing, but banning one
    type of flower, allowing another, and letting people keep stuff in jars
    under their sink that's even worse is absurd. Many household chemicals are
    not only legal but also can cause much more intoxication than marijuana and
    can also cause immediate brain damage.

    When my father was growing up, marijuana grew wildly in vacant lots and
    nobody cared. Now there are laws against it and there are all sorts of new
    crimes because growing it is dangerous and it's expensive. Since a grower
    cannot rely on the police, he has to be armed. A few generations ago, there
    was nothing to protect but a lot full of weeds, there was nothing to buy,
    and most people were no more likely to smoke it than they were to smoke
    corn silk.
     
    Hagrinas Mivali, Jan 7, 2005
    #53
  14. Wellbutrin and Zyban are the same drug. It's a mild antidepressant that
    doctors discovered had a side effect that made smokers dislike cigarettes.
    It's covered by insurance companies for depression, and sold under the name
    of Zyban for smoking cessation. It's not clear if Zyban caused any of the
    side effects. Smokers get jittery when they quit. Some even get depressed.
    An anti-depressant should not make it worse, but since people who take
    antidepressants are often depressed to begin with, and could become more
    depressed without the drug, it makes sense that they could become more
    depressed with the drug too (although possibly less so.) While it's possible
    that Zyban caused the effects, it has not been established.

    Arguing that it's better to keep smoking than to risk side effects from
    Zyban is like arguing that seatbelt usage is bad since you might roll over
    into the ocean and lose a few seconds getting your seatbelt off. It ignores
    reality. You are statistically much more likely to die from complications
    of smoking than from complications of Zyban.
     
    Hagrinas Mivali, Jan 7, 2005
    #54
  15. Philip

    Philip Guest

    As Archie Bunker would say ... "just go stifle yourself" ;-)
     
    Philip, Jan 7, 2005
    #55
  16. Philip

    Guest Guest

    I wonder about other smoke, such as incense, wood smoke, (from fireplace
    or pit), cooking smoke ect.?
    --
     
    Guest, Jan 7, 2005
    #56
  17. Next time you fry your bacon just lean over and take a deep breath...and get
    a nice lungful of nitrosamines, which are reckoned to be carcinogenic...

    DAS
     
    Dori A Schmetterling, Jan 7, 2005
    #57
  18. You're as evangelical as an ex-smoker... :)

    In Manhattan in 2003 (or was it 2002?) I was in a smokers' bar (attached to
    a great steak restaurant) that had been given a one-month extension in the
    implementation of the smoking ban. It was very peculiar, almost pointless.
    Ok for me as I was visiting and fancied that smoke & drink, but for the
    locals? The extra month was not a solution.

    The problem with pure smoking establishments is that the smoke density is
    too great. Stink my clothes out. What's more, I don't inhale (....) and I
    don't want to breathe in smoke...bit of a paradox here, but who cares?

    And I am pleased to say the ashtrays in my cars stay pristinely clean, and
    in my latest car I don't even have one, having deleted it when ordering (to
    be vaguely in-topic).

    DAS
    --
    For direct contact replace nospam with schmetterling
    ---

     
    Dori A Schmetterling, Jan 7, 2005
    #58
  19. Not quite.

    My understanding is the hairs that bring out the junk in the lungs
    eventually die off (no phlegm, no regeneration) so that even cessation of
    smoking does not bring back the status quo anti. Rubbish stays in lungs,
    more diseases, more problems --> potential premature general systems
    failure.

    DAS
    --
    For direct contact replace nospam with schmetterling
    ---

    [...]
    [...]
     
    Dori A Schmetterling, Jan 7, 2005
    #59
  20. Philip

    Philip Guest

    Wonder if the same can be said about biodiesel aroma refined from used deep
    fat fryer oils! LOL
     
    Philip, Jan 7, 2005
    #60
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