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Obama Creates Thousands of New Jobs
Independent Individualist ^ | 6/15/09 | Reginald Firehammer

Posted on 06/18/2009 7:02:20 PM PDT by Hank Kerchief

The jobs are risky, but very lucrative for those willing to take the risks, and require no previous experience or special training. Almost anyone with a driver's license (or at least the ability to drive) can do this job.

How did Obama do it?

What People
Who Don't Smoke
Look Like
A recent Senate vote brought tobacco under the regulation of the FDA. The effort, spearheaded by Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., in the Senate and Calif. Democrat Henry Waxman in the House (no doubt because of their medical expertise—Kennedy, for example, is considered the government's chief expert on alcohol consumption).

This is very important legislation. It is obvious that tobacco is something a lot of people want to use (which is what the government is counting on), and will continue to use no matter what regulations are put in place, which the government knows perfectly well, but will now be able to increase taxes on and control the distribution of this almost endless revenue producing product.

And it will create two whole new classes of jobs: 1) the army of regulators that will be needed to control tobacco production, distribution, and sales, and 2) the army of tobacco smugglers that this much more profitable version of tobacco (like alcohol during prohibition) will create. Definitely a win-win proposition for employment.

Almost as Good as Global Warming

For the government, the Smoking lies have been almost as good as the Global Warming lies, just not as big. Of all the so-called science proving all the terrible things smoking does, there is no hard-science at all. It is all exactly the same kind of junk-science (surveys and statistics) used to put over the Global Warming scam.

Almost everyone buys it. It's why fools like American Heart Association CEO Nancy Brown can say things like, "The Senate vote is a significant victory for all Americans as we try to reduce the devastating toll tobacco use has inflicted on our communities." When you are driving around your community, keep a sharp eye out for all those heaps of dead bodies and collapsed buildings tobacco is inflicting on your town.

The truth does not matter to these people, especially if they can use their junk science to keep people terrified — don't smoke or you'll die from cancer or heart disease; don't go out in the sun or you'll get skin cancer and die; don't drive without a seat-belt or you'll have an accident and die. Does no one think that perhaps it is not too good for you to be terrified of every blessed thing that exists?

The Smoking Truth

The primary truth is, it would not matter if smoking a cigarette would kill you without fail before nightfall, it is wrong for any government to prevent the production, sale, and use of anything that all individuals involved freely choose to do. There is ultimately only one reason cigarettes (and most other substances) are regulated at all and that is the belief that some people have a right to force other people to do what they think is best for them; and they cannot bear that some people might actually be enjoying their lives without their interference.

Real Men
Real Women
[Click to see
enlarged.]
The truth is that hard science, that is real science, does not identify a single confirmed health issue with tobacco, but does find huge numbers of medical benefits. You will not find that in any MSM sources, because they have become an arm of government terrorism force.

In fact, however, all the excuses for regulating tobacco are lies. Tobacco is used because people enjoy it. They would not use it if they didn't, and doing something you enjoy is good for you. But there are even greater benefits of smoking—benefits the government and its well-controlled media are intentionally hiding.

Among those benefits are the following:

  1. Improves and prevents Parkinson's disease.
  2. "Reduced MAO B (monoamine oxidase) enzyme (smokers in their 60s have MAO B of nonsmokers in their 20s); also here). Lowering of MAO B is the Holy Grail of life-extension."
  3. "Glutathione (chief antioxidant in human body) and catalase (another key antioxidant which neutralizes alcohol damage, cyanide poisoning, etc.) doubled in smokers." In addition to glutathione, which is the body's master antioxidant and metal detoxifier, many other lesser antioxidants and detoxifiers are similarly strengthened.
  4. "Nicotine suppresses cell death of neurons (it also promotes vascular growth factor, e.g. growth and branching of capillaries)"
  5. Reduces osteo-athritis (up to threefold)
  6. Reduces incidence of colorectal cancer in women
  7. People who smoke fare better than nonsmokers when exposed to occupational hazards
  8. Reduces schizophrenia symptoms
  9. Reduces incidence of Alzheimer's and other degenerative diseases
  10. Smoking is protective against thyroid cancer
  11. Severe gum recession, less of a risk for smokers
  12. Children of smokers have lower odds for suffering from allergic rhino-conjunctivitis, allergic asthma, atopic eczema and food allergy
  13. Nicotine stops the growth of tuberculosis
  14. Smoking prevents a rare skin cancer
  15. Smoking reduces the risk of breast cancer
  16. Nicotine is therpeutic in treatment of ulcerative colitis
Real Men
Real Women
[Click to see
enlarged.]
Documented here:

Smoking is Good for You!

Therapeutic Effects of Smoking and Nicotine

More resources:

Other resources, (Books)

Fundamentals of Statistics

ETS and Second Hand Smoke

OH, and while you enjoy that smoke, be sure to have a nice glass of red wine. "The breadth of [its] benefits is remarkable—cancer prevention, protection of the heart and brain from damage, reducing age-related diseases such as inflammation, reversing diabetes and obesity, and many more."

Smoke, drink, and be merry. You'll be happier and you'll live longer.

—Reginald Firehammer


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: addict; bho44; bigpharma; health; junkscience; oppression; pufflist; smoking; tobacco; tyranny
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To: nightlight7

what about hte resports of increased risk of lung cancer, emphasema, copd, tumors etc? I’m a smoker, and certainly not agaisnt msoking, but isn’t htere pretty hard evidence showing the icnreased risks for breathign diseases such as mentioend above?


41 posted on 06/19/2009 8:37:26 AM PDT by CottShop (Scientific belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge)
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To: CottShop
I read through the articles and if they are legit then I'd have to say that those not predisposed to cancer may benefit from smoking, so a very small percentage.
42 posted on 06/19/2009 9:06:39 AM PDT by Teflonic
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To: Teflonic

Well that may be true- but I think those predisposed to cancer might infact be a large percentage of smokers (myself included most likely- not that I’m goign to give it up- but oh well) Not sure what hte ratio of presdisposed to non predisposed is, but many peopel do die each year to cancers that may not have arisen as early in life had they not smoked it would seem- but hten again- who knows- perhaps other environmental issues were at play causing hte cancer- but smokers lungs are quite gooped up with tar and gunk, and that can;’t be good? As well, there is reported incidence of lung tissue damage due to the hot vapours from smoking over time? All I know is that I do enjoy smoking for htem ost part cept for hte breathign problems (it doesn’t help my asthma- makes it more difficult to breath for me)

I think probably it does help a significant number of people, but I do htink it is infaxct dangerous for those predisposed to cancer or lung problems and high risk folks like myself who have asthma (it might help some forms of asthma, but perhaps not all forms?)

I know smoking causing typing mistakes :)


43 posted on 06/19/2009 9:53:24 AM PDT by CottShop (Scientific belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge)
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To: One_American
I recently ordered my fist electronic cigarette.

Me, too. Four days now without smoking a cigarette. Sorry, I meant, "analog." LOL.

44 posted on 06/19/2009 10:09:53 AM PDT by kevao
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To: Hank Kerchief
...don't smoke or you'll die from cancer or heart disease; don't go out in the sun or you'll get skin cancer and die; don't drive without a seat-belt or you'll have an accident and die. Does no one think that perhaps it is not too good for you to be terrified of every blessed thing that exists?

LOLOL! It is so true that "The leftist nanny-state just cannot bear the fact that some people are actually enjoying their lives doing what they hate." At the very least, folks who do the things the nanny-staters hate will be made to pay.... Dontcha know the "experts" know better than we do what is "good for us," and will work tirelessly to try to save us from ourselves? Whether we want them to or not?

I just wish these ninnies would get a life.... And stop living vicariously through mine.

To me, there is something morbid about an excessive preoccupation with health. Plus something's got to kill you. You might as well enjoy your life as you see fit while you have it. Plus people who do so tend not to be the ones who nitpick and meddle in the lives of others.

Very interesting essay/post, Hank! Thank you so much for putting it up.

45 posted on 06/19/2009 10:27:40 AM PDT by betty boop (Tyranny is always whimsical. — Mark Steyn)
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To: kevao

Interesting


46 posted on 06/19/2009 10:30:10 AM PDT by Old Professer (The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, then writes again.)
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To: betty boop

[[To me, there is something morbid about an excessive preoccupation with health.]]

We need a government ‘health Czar’ to tax people who over-worry about being healthy because htese people are giving themselves health problems thatr affect ME financially! They cause our insurance rates to rise! Let’s go after these inconciderate dolts!


47 posted on 06/19/2009 11:00:41 AM PDT by CottShop (Scientific belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge)
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To: cranked

Oh the hilarity.

Another Moron Ping.

24 posted on Thursday, June 18, 2009 10:19:25 PM by cranked


Cranked seems to be the street lingo of someone high on methamphetamine. And you’re knocking cigarettes? Curious...


48 posted on 06/19/2009 11:14:39 AM PDT by listenhillary (90% of our problems could be resolved with a government 10% of the size it is now.)
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To: Hank Kerchief

Under normal circumstances the natural human reaction is to avoid smoke. We naturally know that sucking fumes from burning material is bad for our lungs. Everyone who has even tried smoking knows how they had to fight down the coughing reflex to start their habit. The nasty stuff found in smokers’ lungs and reduced breathing capacity is pretty straightforward evidence that cigarettes are doing bad things.

What most smokers fail to realize is how filthy and awful they smell to non-smokers. Much of my family smokes and I after I visit them I have to hold my nose on the way to the washing machine and everything my mother sends us has to be washed multiple times to get the smell out. Every surface in a smoker’s home and car is coated in brown gunk and feels grimy- even in fastidiously ‘clean’ smokers’ homes. I grew up in that stuff, when I’m in it it seems normal, but get a little distance and it is disgusting.

This crud justifying smoking is about the equivalent to pot heads and heroine justifying their own habits. Nicotine junkies are no different that any other addict is their desperate need to justify themselves and drag others down with them.

I don’t agree with attempts to bad cigarettes or even tax the heck out of them, but let not kid ourselves that the habit is any healthier than any other addiction. I don’t want to pay your medical bills either.


49 posted on 06/19/2009 11:23:55 AM PDT by Flying Circus
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To: CottShop; Alamo-Girl; Hank Kerchief
We need a government ‘health Czar’ to tax people who over-worry about being healthy because htese people are giving themselves health problems thatr affect ME financially! They cause our insurance rates to rise! Let’s go after these inconciderate dolts!

LOLOL!!!!!!! Yes: Their (i.e., smokers) bad behavior hurts me, me, me: It's always about MEEEEEE....

That's why we have to "socialize all risk," dotcha know!!! In short, the nanny-staters are not the least bit worried about what smokers are supposedly doing to themselves; what they really want is to show that what smokers do as individuals causes the whole society to suffer in some way. On that pretext, one can justify the penalization of any behavior one happens to personally dislike, and regulate just about everything under the Sun....

It's the rare person who sees what a "shell game" this is, and what it aims at: the complete devaluation and erosion of individual Liberty on the pretext of some fictitious "General Will."

Evidently dear CottShop, you are one of those rare persons. And I'm with you.

50 posted on 06/19/2009 11:28:20 AM PDT by betty boop (Tyranny is always whimsical. — Mark Steyn)
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To: Flying Circus
I understand your perspective and admit it's nasty to those who don't smoke. If you want to talk addiction, though, don't forget the Government being addicted to the revenue. If half the smokers in the country quit this week, next week they'd be crying about the shortfall in revenue and deciding whether it was better to tax sugar or coffee to replace it.

Whatever the rationale, the real reason this is done is to raise revenue and there's no end in sight to the things they can declare unhealthy and increase revenues with.

Regards

51 posted on 06/19/2009 12:42:28 PM PDT by Rashputin (blif)
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To: betty boop
In short, the nanny-staters are not the least bit worried about what smokers are supposedly doing to themselves; what they really want is to show that what smokers do as individuals causes the whole society to suffer in some way. On that pretext, one can justify the penalization of any behavior one happens to personally dislike, and regulate just about everything under the Sun....

Indeed. Evidently that's the plan.

Thank you for sharing your insights, dearest sister in Christ!

52 posted on 06/19/2009 12:52:24 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Alamo-Girl
Indeed. Evidently that's the plan.

INDEED!!!

53 posted on 06/19/2009 12:58:18 PM PDT by betty boop (Tyranny is always whimsical. — Mark Steyn)
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To: CottShop
what about the reports of increased risk of lung cancer, emphysema, copd, tumors etc? I’m a smoker, and certainly not agaisnt smoking, but isn’t there pretty hard evidence showing the increased risks for breathing diseases such as mentioned above?

There is evidence, but it is all of the soft kind, the statistical correlations on non-randomized sample (just like web polls). Such 'soft' evidence only indicates that smoking is a factor within some complex web of causes and effects with 'smoking related diseases'. It doesn't tell you what role smoking played in that web of causes and effects.

For example, tobacco smoke nearly doubles three key antioxidant and detox enzymes in human body: glutathione, catalase and SOD (no one knows which of 10,000+ chemical components of tobacco smoke do that). All industrial or environmental toxins you are exposed to are neutralized and removed by these enzymes. Since tobacco smoke will nearly double your detox rates, if you are exposed to industrial toxins or if you are sensitive to them at typical exposure levels, you will feel relief from smoking and have greater motivation to smoke than someone not exposed or less sensitive. Consequently, smoking becomes statistical marker for exposure (or genetic sensitivity) to industrial or environmental toxins (or similarly for other hardships), which themselves cause 'smoking related' diseases.

Hence, this association is no different than observing that people taking blood pressure and cholesterol lowering medications will have more heart attacks in coming years than those not taking them, or that people wearing sunglasses will have more sunburns than those not wearing them. While sunglasses and sunburns are in the same web of causes and effects, the sunglasses not only do not cause sunburns but they protect your eyes and skin around them from sun exposure. It is precisely because of their protective role against the cause of sunburns (sun rays exposure) that they associate with any harm caused by sun rays exposure, such as sunburns. Whenever you see media or pharma drug peddlers leap from such associations to causal relation, you better hold onto your wallet, since are a target of a junk science scam.

The statistical correlations on non-randomized (self-selected) samples of subjects (smoker, ex-smoker, never-smoker) by themselves, no matter how strong, consistent and universal still only imply that smoking is node in some complex, largely unknown web of causes and effects in which smoking related diseases are terminal nodes. That's all it tells you. It doesn't tell you anything about where in that complex web of causes and effects (largely unknown, uncharted and unquantified by researchers) the smoking node fits, let alone that smoking node must have a positive causal feed into the disease node. None of that follows from any observed correlations on non-randomized (self-selected) samples of subjects {smoker, ex-smoker, never-smoker}.

There are at least three models which could give rise to such correlations (i.e. there are at least 3 configurations in this web of causes and effects):

A) Smoking causes 'smoking related' diseases.
B) Smoking is protective/therapeutic against these diseases or their causes
C) There is some common factor(s) CF which causally contributes to these diseases and to smoking

Antismoking "science" simply declares that only model (A) exists, hence that is the explanation, period, debate over. For normal science the debate just begins at this point. The findings of correlations, implying models (A), (B) or (C) are a mere hint indicating that one or more of these three models is the mechanism behind the correlations. The correlations on non-randomized samples simply lack resolution to discern the picture beyond this whole set and to single out any of them as "The Explanation". It is the task of the much sharper instruments of hard science (experiments, randomized intervention trials) to zoom in and find out how is the web of causes and effects, underlying the observed correlations, laid out, what nodes connect to which others and how do causal effects flow between them.

Indeed, that's how the research proceeded in the very early phase of antismoking "science", back in early 1950s (the real start was actually in 1930s Germany, motivated by Hitler's antismoking hysteria; he is the spiritual father and the role model of our present antismokers). Hard science projects were funded, researchers got busy, smoking machines were humming, puffing hard on all their pipes, tens of thousands of lucky mice, rats, hamsters, dogs, monkeys,... got free cigarettes, all they can smoke, plus several times more,... All went as it should in normal science.

But then, as the first results started coming back, the sudden dead silence fell over the lands of antismoking -- all the results went the "wrong" way, the smoking animals did better, much better, in every way and from every angle they looked at. Nothing worked. Whatever poor scientist did, even pushing the smoke concentrations right up to the edge of asphyxiation, day in day out for the full lifespan of the test animals, they simply could not cause harm by the inhaled tobacco smoke. The smoking critters, always ended up living longer, staying thinner, sharper, tougher, happier... however they twisted it and tossed it around.



This ancient medicinal miracle plant, the 'most precious gift of gods' as shamans understood it in ages past, like a kind of Asimov's robot software programmed into the biochemical networks of the tobacco plant by 'ancient gods' of sun, earth and fire eons ago, simply would not do harm to its master, no matter what. It's just that good. Well, heads were rolling, new teams were brought in, still no luck.

By 1958, the mathematical genius and father of modern scientific statistics R. A. Fisher, noticed the dead silence and subsequent squirming in the land of antismoking "science" and called their bluff (pdf):




But the time has passed, and although further investigation, in a sense, has taken place, it has consisted largely of the repetition of observations of the same kind as those which Hill and his colleagues called attention several years ago. I read a recent article to the effect that nineteen different investigations in different parts of the world had all concurred in confirming Dr. Hill's findings. I think they had concurred, but I think they were mere repetitions of evidence of the same kind...

Well, here we are, half a century later since Fisher threw the gauntlet, and antismoking "science" is still stuck in that same statistical hint loop, churning more and more correlations on non-randomized samples.

As for hard science, the experiments, that's still a no go region, a part of the town you just don't go to. See the 2005 survey of experimental field by the authority in this field, S. S. Hecht (discussed also here), with his funny euphemism for the persistently "wrong" key outcome that he refuses to name (increased longevity in smoking animals) "which complicates the interpretation of data." (p. 1489), insisting that to avoid the above "complication" that "The 4 month recovery period is absolutely necessary", i.e. what he is trying to say, but just can't get it out, is that to make sure smoking animals don't end up living longer, forcible abrupt quitting must be imposed. As to why the forcible quit makes it "work", he said "the reason for this is not clear" (it is quite clear, but he can't say it otherwise outraged smokers would string him and his paymasters on the nearest pole). If you look the dramatic survival graphs of NCI experiments brought up earlier, or this one on mice from 2005 (and similar one from 2004 on rats), the reason is pretty clear -- otherwise, the smoking test animals live longer and stay thinner, hence you can't claim with straight face that smoking caused harm to their health.


54 posted on 06/19/2009 4:10:54 PM PDT by nightlight7
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To: listenhillary

Your so....um, inciteful when it comes to making deductions on online names, better yet, mocking those you have no clue about. Does that take talent or is that simply a genetically honed malfunction? Curious...


55 posted on 06/19/2009 4:35:26 PM PDT by cranked
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To: Hank Kerchief
Smoking is good for you, and everyone who believes it isn't believes that for the same reason they believe in global warming--they have swallowed the government lies.

You keep telling yourself that. While I suppose that anyone has the right to kill themselves anyway they want, they can leave me out of it.

/flame suit on...


56 posted on 06/19/2009 8:40:36 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: nightlight7

Thanks you VERY much for that detailed post night- I’ll have to read it htrough tomorrow though- but briefly, reading a few paragraphs, it would seem there might be other circumstances at play in lung diseases as well, which I suspect might be the case too in some cases.

I NEVER understood how the smoking Nazis came up with hteir ‘second hand smoke’ rules and mandates, especially in OUTDOOR places like parks etc- what a crock of crap those laws are! Heaven forbid someone standing 20 feet away get a dirty particle or two of nicotine, or some chemical- They might develope full blown emphasema that very evenign for gosh sakes! people breath more crap in parks from cars goign by than we woudl EVER breath from smokers enjoying their breaks 20 feet away

Anyway- I’ll read the rest of your post tomorrow- again, thank you very much for such an indepth response


57 posted on 06/19/2009 8:43:40 PM PDT by CottShop (Scientific belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge)
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To: Rashputin
What it is, the nicotine?

It could be. Caffeine is supposed to help with asthma as well, as it is a stimulant. It's supposed to do something to the airways and I know people who managed asthma attacks with coke.

58 posted on 06/19/2009 8:44:45 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: Little Ray
My mother had part of a lung removed because lung cancer; my father is on oxygen for the rest of his for emphyzema.

Everyone who I know who has emphysema smoked. I'm watching my f-i-l slowly suffocate from emphysema and he only smoked lightly for a few years. My b-i-l got emphysema before he was 50.

Sure it's good for you......

59 posted on 06/19/2009 8:51:02 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: Hank Kerchief; CottShop
Believe in global warming too, don’t you? It’s “proven” by the very same science as proves tobacco harmful.

Just like the science that *proves* evolution happened, eh?

60 posted on 06/19/2009 8:53:55 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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