[Vision2020] "Please do not continue to confuse people with facts."
Joe Campbell
philosopher.joe at gmail.com
Fri Jul 24 09:29:52 PDT 2009
You don't even think that ADULTS are able to make decisions about whom
to marry or whether pr not to have children, so stop pretending to
respect a person's right to make decisions for him or herself!
Sent from my iPhone
On Jul 24, 2009, at 12:11 PM, "the lockshop" <lockshop at pull.twcbc.com>
wrote:
> It would seem that you, Mr. Moffet, and our city council have a
> mighty low opinion of the intelligence of the patrons and employees
> of bars and taverns. I can't speak for your students but, I find it
> very difficult to believe that by the time a citizen reaches the age
> of 21 in the United States he hasn't heard the anti-smoking mantra
> to the point of nausea.
>
> How lucky we are that there are people out there who will take it
> upon themselves to prevent emancipated Americans from making their
> own decisions with regard to the risks they take in life.
>
> g
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: TIM RIGSBY
> To: starbliss at gmail.com ; vision2020 at moscow.com
> Sent: Friday, July 24, 2009 7:47 AM
> Subject: Re: [Vision2020] "Please do not continue to confuse people
> with facts."
>
> I would like to add the idea of this saying,
>
> "Don't let the facts get in the way of a good story."
>
> Either way Ted, you brought up some very valid points that tend to
> be forgotten when people discuss tobacco/smoking regulation and
> legislation. What scares me as a Health Teacher is when I hear my
> junior high and high school aged students talking about how safe,
> they think anyway, Hookah bars are. When asked if they would ever
> smoke cigarettes, they claim that they won't. Yet what these
> students don't realize is that they are actually smoking tobacco at
> the high school hookah parties. What is even scarier is a lot of
> the parents think that hookah is a safe alternative as well.
>
> The hookah bar closest to my house in Boise is constantly packed
> with young people all of the time. Often times, other substances
> are being laced into the tobacco as well and these young people are
> unknowingly smoking illegal drugs along with their fruit and tobacco
> mixture.
>
> I predict in the not so distant future, Boise and possibly the State
> Legislature will enact legislation to regulate/control these hookah
> establishments.
>
> Here is a question to ponder. By definition based on Idaho Code,
> what is a hookah bar categorized as? A restaurant, a bar, a private
> club? If it falls under the bar definition, then people under 21
> should not be allowed in. It seems as though hookah bars would
> fall into an undefined gray area of the Idaho Clean Indoor Air Act.
> However, Moscow seems to have covered hookah bars in their recent
> ban of smoking, I could be wrong though.
>
> " 'Politics is the art of controlling your environment.' That is one
> of the key things I learned in these years, and I learned it the
> hard way. Anybody who thinks that 'it doesn't matter who's
> President' has never been Drafted and sent off to fight and die in a
> vicious, stupid War on the other side of the World -- or been beaten
> and gassed by Police for trespassing on public property -- or been
> hounded by the IRS for purely political reasons -- or locked up in
> the Cook County Jail with a broken nose and no phone access and
> twelve perverts wanting to stomp your ass in the shower. That is
> when it matters who is President or Governor or Police Chief. That
> is when you will wish you had voted." - Hunter S. Thompson
>
>
>
>
> Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2009 21:39:45 -0700
> From: starbliss at gmail.com
> To: vision2020 at moscow.com
> Subject: [Vision2020] "Please do not continue to confuse people with
> facts."
>
> The "Off List" response referenced, from someone I regard as one of
> the most educated and honest Vision2020 participants, that I
> received to my post below on tobacco regulation, is in total what is
> stated in the subject heading of this post. Wise words, no doubt,
> that I ignore at my own risk...
>
> Notice there is limited or no discussion of some of the critical
> facts my post presented: that tobacco (nicotine) is a physically
> addictive drug, with underage tobacco addiction common, raising
> questions if whether adult "choice" is in effect regarding employees
> or consumers in tobacco related decisions; that tobacco is the
> leading cause of premature death (nuclear waste or energy or even
> nuclear weapons production is not even close as a cause of premature
> death); that other drugs doing less harm to society than tobacco are
> criminalized and prosecuted aggressively, involving civil and human
> rights violations, yet who among those opposing regulation of
> tobacco, will as aggressively advocate for these drugs to be managed
> by free choice and the marketplace, rather than a government "Big
> Brother?" Some, perhaps... While there are others who should know
> better playing some on this list as fools, for the sake of debate,
> or political advantage, or popular image or whatever... Or they are
> as deluded as those they are debating with...
>
> My response to the "Off List" comment discussed here:
>
> Ummm... OK, I guess... However, being an idealist in belief that
> expressing the truth is morally mandated (where did I get that
> dangerous idea? I''ll end up in serious trouble! Oh, I forgot, I
> already am...), I may not comply. I recently read a variation of
> this same expression in James Lovelock's "Revenge of Gaia:" "Don't
> confuse me with the facts, my minds made up." Lovelock was
> referring to this mentality regarding the rejection of nuclear power
> by many in the environmental movement.
>
> Ted
>
>
> Please do not continue to confuse people with facts.
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Ted Moffett
> To: Moscow Vision 2020
> Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 1:55 AM
> Subject: [Vision2020] Tobacco: Targeting the Nation’s Leading Killer
> : Centers for Disease Control
>
>
> Tobacco (nicotine) is a physically addictive drug. Once
> addicted, "choice" becomes a problematic concept. And many people
> become addicted while underage, encouraged to continue their
> addiction in bars, where cigarettes are often shared between
> customers.
>
> The fact tobacco is physically addictive is absent from the comments
> of many opposing the smoking ordinance, as are the facts regarding
> the magnitude of the damage. Comparisons to other harmful behaviors
> are drawn (fatty food, etc.), suggesting that a slippery slope of
> regulation will lead to government control over too many aspects of
> life, but many of these behaviors do not involve a drug addiction.
> Of course alcohol has dramatic negative impacts. But workers in
> bars are not forced to drink the drinks the customers order, as they
> breathe the smoke of the customers.
>
> I find it incredible that the health of workers exposed to an
> addictive drug when they breathe in the workplace is approached so
> callously. They can work elsewhere, it's announced with smug
> authority, as if in this economy workers have the luxury of choosing
> whatever job suits their fancy, rather than an urgency to take
> whatever work they can find. If it was cocaine or heroin or
> methamphetamine that workers were exposed to, the attitude might be
> different.
>
> Profits from exposing workers to addictive drugs in the workplace
> should be protected based on free market, free choice, adult
> responsibility? If this is the logic, where are the protests
> against laws imposed on those selling cocaine, heroin or
> methamphetamine, et. al., to consenting adults, which can result in
> long prison sentences? Let the free market decide! Why stand in
> the way of profits and the free choice of adults?
>
> If those opposing the smoking ordinance were consistent in their
> outrage against limits on the free market, their ideology might have
> more intellectual credibility. Instead, the libertarianism proposed
> is inconsistent and conformist. Or perhaps those opposed to the
> smoking ordinance will now protest that bars do not allow legal
> cocaine, heroin or methamphetamine use? Think of the profits to be
> made! And remember, tobacco prematurely kills more people than
> those three drugs combined...
>
> If attempts were made to criminalize tobacco like cannabis is,
> resulting in prison sentences, home invasions, for sale or use, I
> would oppose this vehemently. But an ordinance regulating smoking
> in bars does not stop any adult from legally using tobacco products
> in settings where they do not expose workers.
>
> If worker freedom of choice was a valid argument to justify the
> exposure of workers to tobacco smoke in bars, than OSHA could be
> mostly eliminated. After all, if workers exposed to hazards
> monitored or banned by OSHA don't want to work with those risks,
> they can work elsewhere, as long as signs posted in the workplace
> inform them of the risks. A "Big Brother" government bureaucracy
> gone.
> --------------------------
> http://www.cdc.gov/NCCDPHP/publications/aag/osh.htm
> The Burden of Tobacco Use
>
> Tobacco use is the single most preventable cause of disease,
> disability, and death in the United States. Each year, an estimated
> 443,000 people die prematurely from smoking or exposure to
> secondhand smoke, and another 8.6 million have a serious illness
> caused by smoking. For every person who dies from smoking, 20 more
> people suffer from at least one serious tobacco-related illness.
> Despite these risks, approximately 43.4 million U.S. adults smoke
> cigarettes. Smokeless tobacco, cigars, and pipes also have deadly
> consequences, including lung, larynx, esophageal, and oral cancers.
> The harmful effects of smoking do not end with the smoker. More than
> 126 million nonsmoking Americans, including children and adults, are
> regularly exposed to secondhand smoke. Even brief exposure can be
> dangerous because nonsmokers inhale many of the same carcinogens and
> toxins in cigarette smoke as smokers. Secondhand smoke exposure
> causes serious disease and death, including heart disease and lung
> cancer in nonsmoking adults and sudden infant death syndrome, acute
> respiratory infections, ear problems, and more frequent and severe
> asthma attacks in children. Each year, primarily because of exposure
> to secondhand smoke, an estimated 3,000 nonsmoking Americans die of
> lung cancer, more than 46,000 (range: 22,700–69,600) die of heart di
> sease, and about 150,000–300,000 children younger than 18 months hav
> e lower respiratory tract infections.
> Coupled with this enormous health toll is the significant economic
> burden of tobacco use—more than $96 billion per year in medical expe
> nditures and another $97 billion per year resulting from lost produc
> tivity.
>
>
> [A text description of this graph is also available.]
>
> The Tobacco Use Epidemic Can Be Stopped
>
> A 2007 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report presented a blueprint for
> action to “reduce smoking so substantially that it is no longer a pu
> blic health problem for our nation.” The two-pronged strategy for ac
> hieving this goal includes not only strengthening and fully implemen
> ting currently proven tobacco control measures, but also changing th
> e regulatory landscape to permit policy innovations. Foremost among
> the IOM recommendations is that each state should fund a comprehensi
> ve tobacco control program at the level recommended by CDC in Best P
> ractices for Comprehensive Tobacco Control Programs–2007.
> Evidence-based, statewide tobacco control programs that are
> comprehensive, sustained, and accountable have been shown to reduce
> smoking rates, tobacco-related deaths, and diseases caused by
> smoking. A comprehensive program is a coordinated effort to
> establish smoke-free policies and social norms, to promote and
> assist tobacco users to quit, and to prevent initiation of tobacco
> use. This approach combines educational, clinical, regulatory,
> economic, and social strategies.
> Research has documented the effectiveness of laws and policies to
> protect the public from secondhand smoke exposure, promote
> cessation, and prevent initiation when they are applied in a
> comprehensive way. For example, states can increase the unit price
> of tobacco products; implement smoking bans through policies,
> regulations, and laws; provide insurance coverage of tobacco use
> treatment; and limit minors’ access to tobacco products.
> If the nation is to achieve the objectives outlined in Healthy
> People 2010, comprehensive, evidence-based approaches for preventing
> smoking initiation and increasing cessation need to be fully
> implemented.
> CDC's Response
>
> CDC is the lead federal agency for tobacco control. CDC’s Office on
> Smoking and Health (OSH) provides national leadership for a comprehe
> nsive, broad-based approach to reducing tobacco use. A variety of go
> vernment agencies, professional and voluntary organizations, and aca
> demic institutions have joined together to advance this approach, wh
> ich involves the following activities:
> Preventing young people from starting to smoke.
>
> Eliminating exposure to secondhand smoke.
>
> Promoting quitting among young people and adults.
>
> Identifying and eliminating tobacco-related health disparities.
> Essential elements of this approach include state-based, community-
> based, and health system-based interventions; cessation services;
> counter marketing; policy development and implementation;
> surveillance; and evaluation. These activities target groups who are
> at highest risk for tobacco-related health problems.
> -------------------------------------------
> Vision2020 Post: Ted Moffett
>
>
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