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- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!fuug!anon
- From: an2531@anon.penet.fi (/dev/high)
- Subject: Re: Fuck nicotine
- Message-ID: <1993Jan23.020353.3301@fuug.fi>
- Sender: anon@fuug.fi (The Anon Administrator)
- Organization: Anonymous contact service
- X-Anonymously-To: alt.drugs
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 17:38:18 GMT
- Lines: 94
-
-
- X-Anon-To:alt.drugs
-
- I saved that cigs and radioactive article, don't remember
- who originally posted it.
-
- /dev/high
-
- +++++++++++++++++++++
- So, you thought it was the tar that caused cancer...
-
-
- Think again. Cigarette companies will have you believing
- anything just as long as you continue to buy their products. The
- fact is, although insoluble tars are a contributing factor to the
- lung cancer danger present in today's cigarettes, the real danger
- is radioactivity. According to U.S. Surgeon General C. Everette
- Koop (on national television, 1990) radioactivity, not tar,
- accounts for at least 90% of all smoking related lung cancer.
- Tobacco crops grown in the United States are fertilized by law
- with phosphates rich in radium 226. In addition, many soils have
- a natural radium 226 content. Radium 226 breaks down into two long
- lived 'daughter' elements -- lead 210 and polonium 210. These
- radioactive particles become airborne, and attach themselves to the
- fine hairs on tobacco leaves.
- Studies have shown that lead 210 and polonium 210 deposits
- accumulate in the bodies of people exposed to cigarette smoke.
- Data collected in the late 1970's shows that smokers have three
- times as much of these elements in their lower lungs as non
- smokers. Smokers also show a greater accumulation of lead 210 and
- polonium 210 in their skeletons,though no studies have been
- conducted to link these deposits with bone cancer. Polonium 210 is
- the only component of cigarette smoke which has produced tumors by
- itself in inhalation experiments with animals.
- When a smoker inhales tobacco smoke, the lungs react by
- forming irritated areas in the bronchi. All smoke produces this
- effect. However, although these irritated spots are referred to as
- 'pre-cancerous' lesions, they are a perfectly natural defense
- system and usually go away with no adverse effects. Insoluble tars
- in tobacco smoke can slow this healing process by adhering to
- lesions and causing additional irritation. In addition, tobacco
- smoke causes the bronchi to constrict for long periods of time,
- which obstructs the lung's ability to clear itself of these
- residues.
- Polonium 210 and lead 210 in tobacco smoke show a tendency to
- accumulate at lesions in specific spots, called bifurcations, in
- the bronchi. When smoking is continued for an extended period of
- time, deposits of radioactivity turn into radioactive 'hot spots'
- and remain at bifurcations for years. Polonium 210 emits highly
- localized alpha radiation which has been shown to cause cancer.
- Since polonium 210 has a half life of 21.5 years, it can put an
- ex-smoker at risk for years after he or she quits. Experiments
- measuring the level of polonium 210 in victims of lung cancer found
- that the level of 'hot spot' activity was virtually the same in
- smokers and ex-smokers even though the ex-smokers had quit five
- years prior to death.
- Over half of the radioactive materials emitted by a burning
- cigarette are released into the air, where they can be inhaled by
- non-smokers. In addition to lead 210 and polonium 210 it has been
- proven that tobacco smoke can cause airborne radioactive particles
- to collect in the lungs of both smokers and non-smokers exposed to
- second hand smoke. Original studies conducted on uranium miners
- which showed an increased risk of lung cancer due to exposure to
- radon in smokers have been re-run to evaluate the radioactive lung
- cancer risk from indoor air radon. It turns out that tobacco smoke
- works as a kind of 'magnet' for airborne radioactive particles,
- causing them to deposit in your lungs instead of on furniture.
- (Smoking indoors increases lung cancer risks greatly.)
- It has been estimated that the total accumulated alpha
- radiation exposure of a pack-a-day indoor smoker is 38 to 97 rad by
- age 60. (Two packs a day yields up to 143 rad, and non-smokers
- receive no more than 17 rad.) An exposure of 1 rad per year yields
- a 1% risk of lung cancer (at the lowest estimate.)
- Don't smoke. Or if you do, smoke lightly, outdoors, and
- engage frequently in activities which will clear your lungs.
- Imported India tobacco has less than half the radiation content of
- that grown in the U.S.
- Kicking the nicotine habit is not easy, and nobody has the
- right to expect it of you. Often physical addictions are
- reinforced by emotional and psychological needs. Filling or coming
- to terms with those needs can give you the inspiration and added
- freedom to succeed.
- Most of all, inform yourself, even if the information is
- disturbing. You are a lot less likely to be taken in by tobacco
- advertising once you know the facts.
-
-
- Nicotine, the active ingredient in tobacco smoke, has long
- been known to be highly addictive. In fact, doctors and
- pharmacologists are not in consensus as to which is more addictive
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