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Location: USA Topic:
Edmund Contoski
Death by Smoking Ban
April 20, 2008
In order to
get smoking bans passed, it was necessary to create an atmosphere of
hatred toward the “enemy,” to work people into a frenzy over a threat to
their health, whether the threat was real or not. What mattered was not
truth or science but whether the desired result—smoking bans—could be
achieved. So truth and science were quickly sacrificed to
the-end-justifies-the-means policy of anti-smoking organizations.
Michael Seigel, MD, is both a medical doctor and public health official.
He has 21 years experience in tobacco policy research and currently
teaches at the Boston University School of Public Health. Though
adamantly opposed to smoking, he says: “The anti-smoking movement is
driven by an agenda—an agenda that will not allow science, sound policy
analysis, the law, or ethics to get in its way.”
Dr. Seigel has
cited over a hundred anti-smoking groups—including the American Cancer
Society, the American Lung Association and the American Heart
Association—for misleading the public with fallacious scientific claims.
His website, www.tobaccoanalysis.blogspot.com, details an astonishing
array scientific misrepresentations, outright lies and hypocrisy by
anti-smoking groups. These tactics have proven effective, even as they
have become ever more shrill and absurd.
Recently Dr. Siegel ran
a Most Ridiculous Secondhand Smoke Claim Tournament. The national
championship was won by the St. Louis University Tobacco Prevention
Center. Its winning entry introduced the scare of radioactivity from
secondhand smoke by the claim it contains plutonium 210, which does not
exist anywhere in the known universe. The St. Louis group previously had
claimed secondhand smoke contained asbestos. When that was debunked, it
issued a correction substituting plutonium 210 for asbestos. The
American Cancer Society managed to make the Final Four in this liars
tournament with this entry: “Immediate effects of secondhand smoke
include cardiovascular problems such as damage to cell walls in the
circulatory system, thickening of the blood and arteries, and
arteriosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) or heart disease,
increasing the chance of heart attack or stroke.” Ridiculous though that
statement is, it failed to top the entry of the St. Louis University
Tobacco Prevention Center, and ACS was eliminated from the
competition.
The U.S. Surgeon's General's Office also figured in
the contest with: "Even brief exposure to secondhand smoke has immediate
adverse effects on the cardiovascular system and increases risk for
heart disease and lung cancer." But it went down to defeat from Action
on Smoking and Health, which came up with this whopper: “Even for people
without such respiratory conditions, breathing drifting tobacco smoke
for even brief periods can be deadly. For example, the Centers for
Disease Controls [CDC] has warned that breathing drifting tobacco smoke
for as little as 30 minutes (less than the time one might be exposed
outdoors on a beach, sitting on a park bench, listening to a concert in
a park, etc.) can raise a nonsmoker’s risk of suffering a fatal heart
attack to that of a smoker."(!)
That such monumental lies have
been instrumental in the passage of smoking bans is a measure of the
gullibility and scientific illiteracy of the general public and elected
officials. Of course, it is also a demonstration of the dishonesty of
the smoking ban activists and the absence of genuine evidence for their
cause. As the independent health consultants Littlewood & Fennel
testified in their report to the National Toxicology Program's Board of
Scientific Counselors, the anti-smoking movement is driven by “avowed
anti-smoking advocates determined to somehow prove that ETS
[environmental tobacco smoke] is a human carcinogen in the
face of irrefutable evidence to the contrary.”
The
constant repetition of phony claims about health hazards of secondhand
smoke, carried out by a well-financed campaign, has obscured the many
studies debunking these claims. For example, the Congressional Research
Service concluded: “It is possible that very few or even no deaths can
be attributed to ETS [environmental tobacco smoke].” Further, it stated
that nonsmokers exposed to pack-a-day ETS every day for 40 years have
“little or no risk of developing lung cancer”—much less dying from it.
The CRS is part of the Library of Congress and has all the resources of
that esteemed institution at its disposal. It is highly respected,
nonpartisan, accepted by both Republicans and Democrats as fair and
impartial, has no ties to tobacco companies, no regulatory or other
agenda, and accepts no outside funding.
Then there was the
Congressional Investigation by the U.S. House of Representatives of
EPA's report on secondhand smoke. It found EPA guilty of “conscious
misuse of science and the scientific process to achieve a political
agenda that could not otherwise be justified.”
The American
Cancer Society has sponsored at least four studies over the years, all
of which failed to find any statistically significant health risk from
secondhand smoke, according to the standard cited by its own director of
analytic epidemiology. But that hasn't kept the ACS from claiming
secondhand smoke is dangerous. The most powerful statistical study ever
done on the subject was the Enstrom-Kabat study. It covered 100,000
people for 38 years. The ACS financed it, help set it up, and provided
data for it until preliminary results indicated the opposite of what the
ACS wanted. It then withdrew its financial support and denounced the
study, which was eventually published in the British Medical
Journal, one of the world's foremost medical journals. The study
concluded: “The results do not support a causal relation between
environmental tobacco smoke and tobacco related mortality.”
Statistically, the risk of secondhand smoke is far smaller than
the risk of getting lung cancer from drinking pasteurized milk.
Epidemiologists use “relative risk” (RR or Risk Ratio) as a means for
gauging the severity of risk. The U.S. Surgeon General has stated the RR
for secondhand smoke is between 1.20 to 1.30. The risk for lung
cancer from drinking pasteurized milk is 2.14. And the relative risk for
getting cancer from drinking the municipal tap water that tens of
millions of Americans drink every day in thousands of cities across the
U.S. is 2.0 to 4.0. But where are all the dead bodies from the millions
of people exposed to this far higher risk? Do you know of any?
So how can secondhand smoke, which has a far lower relative risk, be
killing thousands of people as claimed? In 2001 the International Agency
for Research on Cancer, in Lyon, France, reported: “ETS exposure during
childhood is not associated with an increased risk of lung cancer. No
clear dose-response relationship could be demonstrated for cumulative
spousal ETS exposure.... Even exposure to ETS from other sources was not
associated with lung cancer risk.”
While secondhand smoke has not
been shown to represent a statistically significant health risk, deaths
continue to mount from smoking bans. In a recent article in the
Journal of Public Economics, researchers set forth evidence
that smokers are driving further to where they can smoke, resulting in
more fatal accidents involving alcohol. This could be due to driving
longer distances to where smoking is permitted outdoors or where
enforcement is unlikely, as well as driving across borders to where
smoking in bars is legal. The study covered 120 counties, including 20
which banned smoking. It found that alcohol-related fatal car accidents
increased 13%. For a typical county of 680,000 people, this is
equivalent to about six deaths. And this pattern did not diminish over
time. Where smoking bans had been in place longer than 18 months, the
fatal accident rate increased 19%. The trend is especially apparent
where border-hopping to smoky bars is possible—indicating very strongly
the effect of smoking bans on the accident rate. Fatal accidents in
Delaware County in Pennsylvania increased 26% after the adjacent state
of Delaware went smoke free. And when Boulder County Colorado went smoke
free, fatal accidents in adjacent Jefferson County went up by
40%.
There is also another category of deaths from smoking bans.
The well-financed campaign of ever more virulent and fraudulent claims
of ETS health dangers has spawned a level of hatred that has produced
violence and death. We hear reports of deaths of a kind we never heard
before the smoking ban campaigns. In Minneapolis, where I live, the
Star Tribune carried an article headlined: “Man Charged with
Severing Wife's Tongue and Windpipe.” It states the man slashed her
throat because she smoked a cigarette to celebrate her birthday. She was
in critical condition, and he was charged with attempted murder. We
never used to see stories like that, but here are some more:
Utah: A teenager was murdered for smoking in downtown Salt Lake
City.
Ohio: Man Beaten To Death For Not Giving Up Cigarette.
Ricardo Leon, 23, died.
UK: Nurse stabbed to death at hospital in
an outside smoking area.
UK: man killed wife and two sons over
her smoking. John Jarvis, 42, stabbed his wife Patricia in the heart and
then murdered their sons, John, 11, and Stuart, eight.
Louisiana:
Pregnant woman shot over cigarette. 18-year-old refused to stop
smoking.
Calilfornia: A 21-year-old woman was stabbed several
times early Saturday outside a Carlsbad home when she went outside to
smoke a cigarette, police said.
California: Smoker Gunned Down. A
gunman fatally shot a man outside a sports bar in unincorporated Hayward
as the man took a cigarette break, authorities said
Friday.
Illinois: Smoker Falls To Death. Ian Honeycutt, 28, of
Glenview, tumbled from a ninth-floor apartment, blown off a window sill
by a gust of wind while smoking. His aunt asked him not to smoke inside,
police sources said.
Ireland: Eamonn Mulvenna, 20 year old victim
died when he fell from a fire escape being used as a smoking area
because of the ban.
Canada: A 65 year old smoker dies out in the
cold.
Alabama: Smoker Attacked. He was standing in a parking lot,
smoking a cigarette when he was attacked.
New York: 60 year old
man beaten unconscious for smoking.
Florida: Father Stabs Son
Over Cigarette.
New Zealand: Abduction And Rape Of Smoking Woman.
The incident proved people would be more vulnerable if they had to go
outside and smoke, something Prime Minister Helen Clark had not thought
of, he said.
Ireland: Three men had jaws broken as they smoked
outside pubs in Sligo, Kilkenny and Dublin.
Colorado: Bar Owner
Blames Smoking Ban For Rape. A Pueblo bar owner says the smoking ban
that forced his female employee outside is directly responsible for her
rape.
Texas: Date Rape Pill Put in Drink, While Going Outside
for Cigarette. Maria says she and two other friends stepped outside to
smoke a cigarette. She says it was during that time that someone spiked
her drink.
UK: A female backpacker fell 100 feet to her death
from the roof of a hostel early yesterday. The 20-year-old Canadian
plunged six storeys into a lane at around 3am. One theory is that she
climbed onto the flat roof of the no-smoking Edinburgh Backpackers
hostel for a cigarette.
Colorado: Courtney Chinn, 25, of
Colorado Springs was shot and killed in an area near the Anchor Lounge
where smokers congregate on September 20, 2003. [It is said] the problem
of crime outside of bars where smokers gather will
persist.
Africa: Baby sister killed in brothers' anti smoking
crossfire. 3 Year Old Girl Dies In Smoking Ban War.
UK: Boy
smoker hanged himself. A 12-year-old boy hanged himself with his school
tie rather than admit to his parents that he had been caught
smoking.
Wisconsin: Girl kills herself after being caught with a
cigarette.
Massachusetts: Melissa Pierce and Angela Aiello,
after leaving the bar to smoke, were struck in the heads with a metal
pipe. Richard Jervah of Lynn was pushed through a plate glass window.
Arthur Brestovitsky was stabbed in the chest, face, and arm.
The
above examples are from http://encyclopedia.smokersclub.com:80/4.html,
which contains over a hundred examples of such violence. We didn't hear
stories of these kinds of violence before the smoking ban activists
started fomenting hatred with their jihad (holy war) against
smoking. It's time for them to admit their lies result in killing far
more people than secondhand smoke does (if it kills any at all).
Once again, it is clear that, regardless of the good intentions
of the jihadist do-gooders, lying and a policy of the end justifying the
means simply do not work. Those tactics cannot make a safer world than
truth, science and respect for individual rights--including property
rights. Liberty is still the best answer--in fact, the only answer--to a
better, safer, healthier society. But some people never learn; they keep
trying to prove that force is better than freedom and individual rights.
And their mistakes continue to be paid for with the blood and lives of
innocent people.
I am a retired environmental consultant. I have
never smoked, never owned or worked in a bar or restaurant, never owned
stock in a tobacco company or ever received one penny from the tobacco
industry or anyone else for my views on secondhand smoke. For more of my
writings on this subject, see
http://www.amlibpub.com/liberty_blog/2006/07/surgeon-general-trades-integrity-for.html. http://www.amlibpub.com/liberty_blog/2007/03/unfounded-scares-about-secondhand-smoke.html
http://www.amlibpub.com/liberty_blog/2005/07/secondhand-smoke-and-heart-disease.html,
http://www.amlibpub.com/liberty_blog/2005/07/smoking-ban-of-meeker-county-minnesota.html,
(includes a link to my complete testimony at Meeker County.) http://www.amlibpub.com/liberty_blog/
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