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Indeed. Smack them for being whiney crybabies. Or, just let them kill themselves. /shrug
You are making it seem as though quitting smoking is the equivalent of trying to rid yourself of a tumor by sheer willpower.I know, I know...not everybody can be as tuff as the dragonlady of the great white river so they should all just die. WWRPD, right?
No, I'm not flat wrong. It's not impossible to quit. For anyone.
Everyone CAN do it. People choose not to.
I never said it wasn't hard, but "hard" and "impossible" are really far apart on the scale. It's NOT impossible, but it IS hard. It's easier for some than others, for sure, but it's not impossible for anyone.
You are making it seem as though quitting smoking is the equivalent of trying to rid yourself of a tumor by sheer willpower.
Fair enough, though battling one extreme with the other has a tendency to fail.No, I am being just as ridiculous in my support of those who suffer addiction as she is in dismissing their difficulties.
Fair enough, though battling one extreme with the other has a tendency to fail.
Results: There is a paucity of studies reporting relapse curves of self-quitters. The existing eight relapse curves from two studies of self-quitters and five no-treatment control groups indicate most relapse occurs in the first 8 days. These relapse curves were heterogeneous even when the final outcome was made similar. In terms of prolonged abstinence rates, a prior summary of 10 self-quitting studies, two other studies of self-quitters and three no-treatment control groups indicate 3-5% of self-quitters achieve prolonged abstinence for 6-12 month after a given quit attempt.
I'd like to shed some light on this from a numbers perspective. I do and I do not agree with both sides on this argument. I feel like one side is wrong for pretending that 'will power' is more then enough to stop quitting. Why? Because this is from a point of PURE opinion. Nothing more nothing less. Let me show why :
Addiction - Abstract: Volume 99(1) January 2004 p 29-38 Shape of the relapse curve and long-term abstinence among untreated smokers.
3-5% of people who attempt to self quit(cold turkey) succeed. That leaves a gap of over 90% who don't. Seems to me like it's not as easy to just 'quit' as some on this thread are suggesting.
Now as to why I don't agree with the other side. Well it's not so much a disagreement as what kind of precedent this sets. If a person who as a result of smoking now has lung cancer says that they weren't fully aware of the consequences of their habits, how do we reply to that? Do we say that it was their obligation to become informed about the product? Why was it the obligation of a person who smoked for 15 years but not that of one who's smoked for 30? Why wasn't it the responsibility of somebody who smoked for 30 years to seek help for their addiction? I think that allowing this kind of lawsuit to go through sets a very interesting question as far as who we'll allow to file lawsuits against companies.
Now as to why I don't agree with the other side. Well it's not so much a disagreement as what kind of precedent this sets. If a person who as a result of smoking now has lung cancer says that they weren't fully aware of the consequences of their habits, how do we reply to that? Do we say that it was their obligation to become informed about the product? Why was it the obligation of a person who smoked for 15 years but not that of one who's smoked for 30? Why wasn't it the responsibility of somebody who smoked for 30 years to seek help for their addiction? I think that allowing this kind of lawsuit to go through sets a very interesting question as far as who we'll allow to file lawsuits against companies.
I completely disagree. The government warned us that smoking was hazardous to our health. It is not the government's job to babysit us and smack our hands when we make poor decisions regarding our health.This is not the government interfering in business so much as the government defending us, as is their first job.
I think there is legitimacy to a lawsuit for someone who had already developed a smoking addiction during the period of cover-up by the tobacco industry. Not only does that show negligence by the tobacco company, but it is also intent to do knowingly do harm to the person and to society with their cover-up.
If any other industry knowingly sold arsenic laced food products for a generation, would we permit that to go unanswered with a simple "derrr, well they didn't have to eat that particular brand of food"?
I completely disagree. The government warned us that smoking was hazardous to our health. It is not the government's job to babysit us and smack our hands when we make poor decisions regarding our health.
Right. But if someone tells you that they didn't know that smoking can cause cancer or that it is a poor health decision, they are lying or live under a rock.But it is the government's job to look out for public health issues and a dangerously carcinogenic product with highly addictive qualities being marketed to young adults (often by having free samples passed out) most certainly is a public health situation.
Tobacco Lobbies. I'm not saying it's fair, but it's the reality.We don't permit asbestos in buildings anymore despite some people probably still stupid enough to use it. We don't permit the sale of meds that fail thorough investigative trials. Why do we permit the sale of a recreational substance that is as deadly or worse than asbestos or a shoddy medicine?
I completely disagree. The government warned us that smoking was hazardous to our health. It is not the government's job to babysit us and smack our hands when we make poor decisions regarding our health.
Well written and rational, as usual.I guess it depends. How much disclosure was there at the time he started smoking? At what point did full disclosure occur? What attempts were made by the plaintiff to quit the product upon full disclosure, if any? Perhaps there is some liability here but certainly not in the amount of eight million dollars.
Even if the company is at fault the man cannot absolve himself of responsibility. Quitting is hard, yes, but it is entirely possible. It simply requires a determination as to whether one holds their life in a higher regard than the pleasure they recieve from satisfying their addiction; this man chose his addiction over his life.
Well Jallman it's not like the negative effects of smoking haven't been known for well over two generations. As a matter of fact that history of anti-smoking campaigns go back a few centuries. I came up on this - the authors even make one of the chapters relevant to this discussion available :
'Your body belongs to the Fuhrer' (1919-49)
The most compelling evidence came from Germany. In 1929, Fritz Lickint showed a link between smoking and lung cancer and in 1935 said there was "no doubt" that it caused bronchial cancer too. Another German doctor, Franz Muller, wrote the pioneering 'Tobacco misuse and lung carcinoma' in 1939 and reported that 83 of the 86 lung cancer patients he studied had been smokers. Muller also found that lung cancer victims were six times more likely to be "extremely heavy smokers".
Now I'm not saying this study was made readily available to everyone but I think it is a sign showing that the negative effects of smoking were already being studied way longer then two generations ago.
But that's kind of the point. Isn't it? Tabbaco companies knowingly sell arcenic products. Some responsibility falls on the consumer to inform themselves on the product. Specially when it is being recommended by doctors on television. Would you buy a bottle of over the counter stuff not knowing exactly what is in it? Likewise would you just grab a rolled up cigarette from anybody without asking what it is and if it's laced with anything?
I guess it depends. How much disclosure was there at the time he started smoking? At what point did full disclosure occur? What attempts were made by the plaintiff to quit the product upon full disclosure, if any? Perhaps there is some liability here but certainly not in the amount of eight million dollars.
Even if the company is at fault the man cannot absolve himself of responsibility. Quitting is hard, yes, but it is entirely possible. It simply requires a determination as to whether one holds their life in a higher regard than the pleasure they recieve from satisfying their addiction; this man chose his addiction over his life.
Right. But if someone tells you that they didn't know that smoking can cause cancer or that it is a poor health decision, they are lying or live under a rock.
Well then maybe the government should formulate a trillion dollar education bill:This isn't exactly true. There are people who simply are not informed not because they didn't choose to be informed but because there wasn't enough information handed out to them when they were young etc. There are millions of kids today claiming that they didn't know one could get pregnant from having intercourse just once. Are they lying? I doubt it. Living under a rock? Don't think so. I don't think there is enough information to this day handed out on the hazardous effects of smoking. Just like there isn't nearly enough information as I'd like on the consequences of having unprotected sex. Instead of spending money on school programs targeting these things the government should buy more day time ad spots. In everything from the OC to Sponge Bob. Kids go to school and are told not to smoke. Some of them pay attention and some do not. But I'll guarantee the message sinks into them a lot better when they're watching their favorite programming.
They should die if they choose to. I fully support the right of each individual to commit suicide.I know, I know...not everybody can be as tuff as the dragonlady of the great white river so they should all just die. WWRPD, right?
I defend people's choices to do what they wish with their bodies. To ingest whatever the hell they want, in whatever quantities they want. I do not, however, support them blaming someone else for the negative outcomes.I'm gonna guess that you and Danarhea are the only two people who didn't get what I said. I think we all understand that it's not impossible to quit smoking. Not that I ever said it was.
I'm glad it's all clear now. You can go back to defending murderous drug dealers now.
And bashing your fellow citizens who got caught up in a deadly habit promoted by the government and by the media.
Not sure I'm following. Many, many adults pick up smoking.Good points. My main point is that adults don't pick up smoking. The habit starts when people are teens, too young to understand the consequences. Any adult who takes up the habit is a moron, but I'm not going to say they get what they deserve. People are people.
It is NOT the government's job to defends us from ourselves.I guess my other point is that once we found out how incredibly bad this is for us the people who made it should have stopped selling it. When they didn't the government should have stopped it.
This is not the government interfering in business so much as the government defending us, as is their first job.
Exactly. And exactly why his family should not be paid an exorbitant amount of money.I guess it depends. How much disclosure was there at the time he started smoking? At what point did full disclosure occur? What attempts were made by the plaintiff to quit the product upon full disclosure, if any? Perhaps there is some liability here but certainly not in the amount of eight million dollars.
Even if the company is at fault the man cannot absolve himself of responsibility. Quitting is hard, yes, but it is entirely possible. It simply requires a determination as to whether one holds their life in a higher regard than the pleasure they recieve from satisfying their addiction; this man chose his addiction over his life.
I can easily see a consumer lawsuit getting that high. Once you factor doctor bills, pain and suffering, torte damages, legal fees and then factor 4X that amount in punative damages, 8 million doesn't seem all that exorbitant anymore.
I would agree if I felt the company to be fully liable, but the man started ingesting the product under partial disclosure and continued ingesting the product even after full disclosure. I sympathize with the difficulty of quitting but in the end it was still his choice, albeit a tough one.
I understand that and I am not denying that research was in existence that linked cancer and smoking even in the 20's. There's a big gap between it being in existence and it being brought to public light, which really didn't happen in earnest until the late 60's and early 70's.
All the research in the world can exist but if large cross sections of the population are still illiterate...
I think that the public has a reasonable expectation of disclosure when a product has harmful ingredients. It shouldn't be a monumental endeavor to the doors of the tobacco company CEO to get the full truth when a company is selling something they expect you to ingest into your body.
And there is a huge difference in telling your friend a rolled up cigarette is "safe" and a company falsely marketing to the public at large. That's called fraud. In this case, I would actually call it mass murder no different in result that the tainted tylenol murders that happened many years back. It's just this time it was perpetrated by the corporation of the product.
The jury rejected Elian Hess' demand for 130 million dollars compensation, arguing that her husband Stuart Hess was partly responsible for his death since he smoked three packs a day of Benson & Hedges before he died at age 55 in 1997.
But after nine hours of deliberations the jury ordered the cigarette maker to pay two million dollars in compensatory damages to Elaine Hess, one million to her son David and five million dollars in punitive damages.
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