raveneye -
In return, I would like something from you.
I don't have the study in front of me, but I will get it when I can--for now, please work on the assumption that I am not making this up.
How is it that a non-smoker who lives with a smoker has a much smaller of getting cancer/heart disease than a person that comes in contact with SHS in public?
The non-smoker, living with the smoker, comes in contact with a whole lot more SHS than the person who is exposed to it in public, yet the person who has the most contact with SHS has less medical problems than the person who has considerably less contact with SHS.
I am stuck on this point--it just doesn't work for me.
My logic goes: If it is as bad as they want us to believe, more exposure should result in more deaths, not less.
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Before you criticize someone, you need to walk a mile in their shoes. That way, if they get angry at you.......you're a mile away.......and they're barefoot.
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