flockofseagulls104 wrote:The argument to create some 'Common Sense' laws for gun control is about as valid as adding some 'common sense' laws against suicide vests.
People who are going to use guns for bad purposes are going to use guns for bad purposes no matter what the laws are. Same with suicide vests. Or pressure cookers. The problem is not the tool, it's the person.
And by the way, we all believe that second hand smoke is a big killer, and we've made all kinds of laws against it. But apparently it ain't true. At least the largest, most comprehensive study we've undertaken says it ain't.
http://jnci.oxfordjournals.org/content/ ... jt365.full
I am not advocating anything, just making a point. Nobody's gonna change the laws we've made based on a false assumption no matter what the facts are. Because it's political.
Sorry, Flock, wrong again. Nice try, your attempt to say that secondhand smoke isn't a big killer based on one disease.
Unfortunately, secondhand smoke is indeed a big killer. The study you cite indicates that lung cancer doesn't increase significantly from secondhand smoke. However, secondhand smoke is clearly a huge risk factor for heart attacks, well beyond the 5% required for a factor to be statistically significant. The Pueblo Study indicates a number of 27%.
Saying that it's OK to fill the air your loved ones breathe with toxic poisons because it doesn't increase lung cancer is like saying that everybody should gulp huge amounts of coffee because it decreases the likelihood of liver cancer. If I'd kept gulping coffee like I did when I was in my early 30s, I'd probably be dead from a hypertension ailment right now. But I woulda been safe from liver cancer.
Here's the URL for the site where I found the key findings below:
http://www.no-smoke.org/download.php?fi ... mation.pdf
Pueblo Heart Study Fact Sheet
About the Study:
The Pueblo Heart Study was an observational, scientific research effort designed to assess the potential impact of a newly
enacted smoke-free ordinance on heart attack admissions in Pueblo, Colo.
The study evaluated the number of heart attacks in Pueblo, Colo., during a three-year period from January of 2002 to December of 2004. This time frame covered the year and a half before the Smoke-Free Air Act went into effect on July 1, 2003, as
well as a year and a half afterward.
Findings of the Pueblo study were present ed at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2005 conference in Dallas on Nov. 14.
Key Findings:
The study showed that heart attack rates in Pueblo decreased by 27 percent after implementation of the city’s smoke-free ordinance.
In the year and a half before Pueblo’s smoke-free ordinance went into effect, 399 heart attack patients were admitted to Pueblo’s two primary hospitals. In the year and a half following enactment of the ordinance, the number of heart attack
admissions dropped to 291, representing 108 fewer heart attack patients or a decrease of 27 percent.
Pueblo, Colo., is the second U.S. community to examine data on hospital admissions for heart attacks following the institution of a comprehensive indoor smoke-free ordinance.
The Pueblo study’s findings are similar to a study done in Helena, Mont., which noted a 40 percent drop in hospital admissions for heart attacks during a six-month period when Helena first implemented its smoking ordinance. Pueblo’s study reinforces the Helena findings based on similar but improved methodology, including a sample size that was three times the one used in Helena.
-- In Iroquois society, leaders are encouraged to remember seven generations in the past and consider seven generations in the future when making decisions that affect the people.
-- America would be a better place if leaders would do more long-term thinking. -- Wilma Mankiller