None of those give you or the people around you cancer.
Fat people make you eat more food, though - thus potentially making you fat:
http://forums.overclockers.co.uk/showthread.php?t=18629930
None of those give you or the people around you cancer.
Fat people make you eat more food, though - thus potentially making you fat:
http://forums.overclockers.co.uk/showthread.php?t=18629930
Drinking, then.Comparing smoking to cars is just stupid.
Smoking related illnesses costs the NHS around the £2 billion a year mark and yet we provide five to ten times that amount back in tax revenue as a consequence to the country.
You know your argument is falling apart when you have to resort to "but I pay loads of tax because of it"..It's all taxation - You should be thanking me for subsidising your way and just accept that the occasional whiff is the price you pay.
If I won the lottery I would start smoking again. Only stopped because the cost. Thanks to government only the rich smoke now.
And yet, in spite of aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaall the anti-smoking campaigns, people are still smoking... which doesn't bode well for your argument, either.You know your argument is falling apart when
And yet, in spite of aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaall the anti-smoking campaigns, people are still smoking... which doesn't bode well for your argument, either.
The ONLY way you will stop this and obtain your eternal life fantasy of having slightly cleaner air is to ban the sale of tobacco outright, criminalise its use, withdraw all support (medical and otherwise) for smokers and clamp down hard on anyone found smoking.
Meanwhile, I'm going for a cigarette - Who's coming?![]()
ash.org.uk said:Smoking rates have more than halved since 1974
when 51% of men and 41% of women smoked
No-one has ever surveyed me about my smoking, so immediately those stats do not include everyone.Uhh,
I'm an obese, alcoholic that chain smokes.![]()
No-one has ever surveyed me about my smoking, so immediately those stats do not include everyone.
They're representative of one section of the population only.
Stats can also be manipulated, misinterpreted and downright inaccurate. I'm sure governments would *never* alter or skew statistical reports to reflect the complete opposite of the truth... but since ours did exactly this when reporting on London bus-lane use by two-wheelers and motorcyclists who were untaxed, the possibility is there for some fiddling.
Also, in many databases, I am actually listed as a non-smoker too, so that's the idea of quoting "A European study" out the window...
Generally, I find that a lot of smokers I have known have all started in school, wanting to blend in with the 'cool kids'![]()
However, some just started due to going out on nights out kind of thing.
I have never smoked anything, so cannot comment, as I wasn't a cool kid.![]()
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Couldn't agree more. Went back to London this summer and was amazed how vaping has taken off but, and its a big but, Essex boys vaping look so ridiculous i think i would rather just quit entirely.
Is that the point of them? They look so big and stupid, like sucking on a light sabre hilt, that you quit through shame.![]()
Fat people make you eat more food, though - thus potentially making you fat:
http://forums.overclockers.co.uk/showthread.php?t=18629930
Assuming the data they are using is useful in itself.Also statistics are usually pretty useful as long as they are conducted using accepted methodologies and interpreted using the information contained in the reports.
Assuming the data they are using is useful in itself.
Having a similar problem at work over a flooding study - Out of a whole network, only a few people say they have experienced flooding, despite us having photos of the flooded properties where people are outright denying it... and this is a study offering FREE flooding alleviation systems!!
The point is that many smokers lie about their smoking, to avoid the usual nagging off a doctor or some other reason.
Assumption?That will all be part of the methodology and will be compensated for.
Assumption?
Yeah, fallen foul of that one, too... It's still guesswork.
Still not feeling in any way inclined or driven to quit, though.
I'd be happy for them to do that. It'll probably happen sometime in the future and we'll all look back in sheer incredulity that people willingly sucked lungfuls of tar down into their lungs and slowly killed themselves.The ONLY way you will stop this and obtain your eternal life fantasy of having slightly cleaner air is to ban the sale of tobacco outright, criminalise its use, withdraw all support (medical and otherwise) for smokers and clamp down hard on anyone found smoking.
Pretty much happens already - Most of the fuel price is tax and it generally only goes up. That along with fuel companies buying and then closing public transport routes, forcing more people to use fuel-dependent cars...Again, the taxes argument. Why? Maybe we should let people speed everywhere in their cars, afterall they'll end up paying their fines and giving the taxman some extra money. So that's probably ok, right?