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The anti-smoking lobby's hidden agenda
United Pro Smoker's Newsletter ^ | June 12, 2006 | Klaus Rohrich

Posted on 07/21/2006 3:15:06 PM PDT by SheLion

Poor Heather Crowe, the Ottawa waitress who recently died of lung cancer and had lent her persona to the anti-smoking lobby as the typical victim du jour. Crowe was said to be a "typical" restaurant worker who spent 40 years working in Ottawa restaurants, all the while breathing the second-hand smoke that’s said to have claimed her life.

There are so many things wrong with Heather Crowe’s case that it begs for an official inquiry, but like all politically correct causes the anti-smoking lobby can do no wrong. Crowe, who really did die of lung cancer, was anything but a typical restaurant worker. Apparently she worked in three different restaurants, starting her day at 6:00 AM and ending her day usually around 2:00 AM the following morning. Most individuals working as servers in restaurants do not work three full shifts per day, totaling upwards of 20 hours.

In the commercials that Crowe made for the anti-smoking lobby she said she wanted "to be the last person to die from second hand smoke." If she did die of exposure to second hand smoke, it’s likely that Crowe was also the first person in the world to die from this condition. There is not one documented case of anyone ever dying of second hand smoke. Anti-smoking groups like to bandy about numbers of people who have died of second hand smoke, however the truth is that no one knows if anyone has died as a result of this because the numbers being quoted are not garnered from death certificates, but are made up through epidemiological estimates that do not involve review of individual death certificates.

What’s more, the numbers most people quote as individuals who are dying of second hand smoke vary from place to place. For instance the anti-smoking lobby of Lambton, Ontario claims that this year alone some 5,000 people will die of second hand smoke there. That seems awfully high, given that the overall population is just over 127,000. Other places use different numbers; Calgary claims it’s 3,000 deaths, while British Columbia claims it will only be 500 deaths this year.

When Heather Crowe was first diagnosed, her doctor told her that she had an inoperable "smoker’s tumor" in her lungs. As a diagnosis, the term "smoker’s tumor" is novel in that it is not a medical term and does not appear in medical dictionaries. It sounds like the doctor who made this diagnosis was following an agenda.

What’s more, when Heather Crowe sought compensation from the Ontario Workplace Safety & Insurance Board (OWSIB), the board ruled in her favor, a fact which many of the anti-smoking lobbyists tout as being proof positive that second hand smoke causes cancer as well as a plethora of other ills. The OWSIB ruling only proves that it pays to have friends in high places, of which Heather Crowe appears to have had many. A number of influential politicians, as well as Dr. Robert Cushman, Ottawa’s Chief Medical Officer of health wrote letters in support of Heather's application for compensation. Crowe’s case was supported by a study emanating from California that claimed restaurant workers there inhaled the equivalent of 1.5 to 2 packs per day. I find it curious that the details of the OWSIB ruling were never made public.

As for the study from California, the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) specifies that .5 mg of nicotine per cubic meter is an acceptable level. Testing conducted in 2004 of 18 restaurants in St. Louis Park, Minnesota disclosed that none of the restaurants had second hand smoke levels close to the allowable minimum specified by OSHA. In fact, most were far, far below the minimum.

So why all the hysteria? Can you say money? The anti-tobacco lobby is being controlled in large part and funded by pharmaceutical companies that are doing a land office business in selling smoking cessation medications. That’s the real hidden agenda of which I doubt even the staunchest anti-tobacco crusaders are aware.

But let’s face it, when organizations such as the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) distribute millions of dollars to anti-smoking groups, maybe someone should take a closer look at this foundation. The board of directors of the RWJF includes some very interesting people. Robert Wood Johnson IV is the chairman and CEO of the Johnson Company, a New York investment firm that seems to hold an inordinate amount of pharmaceutical investments. Other directors include what appears to be the entire former board of directors of Johnson & Johnson Company, which incidentally is a major manufacturer of alternative pharmaceutical nicotine products. Robert E. Campbell is the retired chairman of J & J; George S. Frazza and was corporate counsel and member of the J&J executive committee. Edward Hartnett is the retired group chairman of J&J Pharmaceuticals. Ralph S. Larsen is former chairman and CEO of J&J. So, it’s evident there is a lot of interest in the RWJF to encourage governments to impose smoking bans. Could this by any chance have anything to do with the fact that RWJF is holding in excess of $5 billion in J&J shares?


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government
KEYWORDS: anti; antismokers; augusta; bans; budget; butts; camel; caribou; chicago; cigar; cigarettes; cigarettetax; commerce; conspiracytheory; darwin; denial; epa; fda; governor; individual; interstate; kool; lawmakers; lewiston; liberty; maine; mainesmokers; marlboro; msa; niconazis; osha; pallmall; pipe; portland; prosmoker; pufflist; quitsmoking; regulation; rico; rights; rinos; ryo; sales; senate; smokers; smoking; smokingbans; taxes; tobacco; tobaccoaddicts; winston
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To: moog
10 years ago, I was making a point.

Today, it is WAR!

41 posted on 07/21/2006 6:17:44 PM PDT by Hunble
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To: moog

Could be.


42 posted on 07/21/2006 6:20:41 PM PDT by Gabz (Taxaholism, the disease you elect to have (TY xcamel))
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To: SheLion

I'm not sure about second hand smoke, but my wife is a nurse and has treated many many many people with lung cancer, and all of them had first hand smoke.

She must be in on the conspiracy too! I'll be watching her.


43 posted on 07/21/2006 6:22:00 PM PDT by KoRn
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To: KoRn
My wife has been an RN for the last 30 years. For years, she would lecture me about smoking.

In our home, we have designated smoking an non-smoking areas. Mutual respect was something that we learned about, before we even got married.

Today, I am the healthy one in this family. Sue has been in the hospital so often over the last few years, that a "high-priced hooker" would be cheaper!

Since the year 2000, my wife has had medical costs totaling over $250,000. I tease her, since she walks more like a Chimp than a Human.

So NEVER lecture me about the dangers of smoking!

This smoker has been smoking since he was 16 years old. Today, at the age of 51, I can run circles around most people.

Thank God that this smoker is responsible for the care of his darling wife. Without this smoker, she would have lost everything.

44 posted on 07/21/2006 6:38:58 PM PDT by Hunble
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To: Hunble
Good luck. I don't even smoke cigarettes, but I got your back.

I just stopped by the JR Cigar Store by me. There used to be a sitting area where old men would smoke their cigars and yap. Many people would buy a cigar to light up, while they shopped and mingled about.

Now, thanks to New Jersey's smoke nazis, there's no smoking in the cigar store. In the freaking cigar store!

45 posted on 07/21/2006 6:40:26 PM PDT by dead (I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
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To: Hunble
" This smoker has been smoking since he was 16 years old."

I smoke as well, and I intend to quit as soon as I'm up to it lol. I believe most people with lung cancer may smoke, but most people who smoke don't get lung cancer. It's just a horrible disease that's convenient to scare people with. It gets the most 'bang for the buck'.

46 posted on 07/21/2006 6:43:41 PM PDT by KoRn
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To: dead
Saturday, I will have people visiting my home. They intend to take blood, urine samples and conduct other invasive medical test.

Why? Because my wife wants to save $20 per month on my life insurance!

Hmmm, let me think about this. My darling wife is subjecting me to invasive medical probings to save her $20 a month?

Remember, my wife and this insurance company are betting money on MY LIFE! Since I will be dead, why should I care who gets the most profits from my death?

I all honesty, I intend to be totally drunk and 'smoking like a chimney' whey they show up on Saturday.

Like I have stated before, THIS IS WAR!

47 posted on 07/21/2006 6:50:55 PM PDT by Hunble
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To: SheLion

Thanks for the ping!


48 posted on 07/21/2006 9:22:00 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Hunble

"Today, I will smoke in their rooms, and there is nothing that they can do about it!"


I go to a Hell's Angel bar sometimes, that complies with California nonsmoking laws, it would convince me of your dedication if you would try to smoke in there.


49 posted on 07/21/2006 10:27:13 PM PDT by ansel12 (Life is exquisite... of great beauty, keenly felt.)
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To: Hunble
Sorry you feel you have to puff anywhere you want.

I am an asthmatic who is allergic to tobacco smoke and has wound up in an ER on more than one occasion as a result. I love to have to change hotel rooms when I check in because the previous guest had to satisfy his drug addiction in a nonsmoking room -- or move to a different room because the guest in the next room had to satisfy his drug addiction in the middle of the night.

You might wish to consider the effect you have on the innocent the next time you decide to light up in a nonsmoking area.
50 posted on 07/21/2006 10:47:24 PM PDT by Zakeet (Thank goodness we don't get all the government we pay for ~ Will Rogers)
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To: SheLion

These people don't want us to quit smoking. They are making too much money on programs, studies of fake stats, etc. etc. If we all quit smoking tomorrow they'd all be broke.


51 posted on 07/21/2006 11:04:47 PM PDT by peggybac (Tolerance is the virtue of believing in nothing)
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To: hunter112
How much grant money would dry up tomorrow if someone came up with a cheap one dose medication that cured cancer tomorrow? How many billions invested in oncology departments? How many careers would be for all practical purposes, over?

Now think of those who have groomed their positions as antitobacconazis and you have the reason for the incrementalism.

It ain't about 'health', it is an industry being milked for all it is worth. Otherwise, the eeeeevil genus Nicotina would have been banned long ago.

52 posted on 07/21/2006 11:17:09 PM PDT by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly.)
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To: SAJ
(mental note to self: do not mess with SheLion...)

ahhhhhh I'm not that bad, am I??


53 posted on 07/22/2006 3:11:53 AM PDT by SheLion ("If you're legal, you can fly with the Eagle!" - Michael Anthony)
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To: bfree
Excellent find. These people are despicable.

Lower then low!

And to think the highly paid professional anti-smokers are being paid from the taxes SMOKERS pay on cigarettes makes me want to puke.

Smokers are paying big to be controlled, restricted and banned.  Nice, eh?  not!

54 posted on 07/22/2006 3:14:36 AM PDT by SheLion ("If you're legal, you can fly with the Eagle!" - Michael Anthony)
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To: hunter112
If someone successfully quits smoking, they have a limited use of the smoking cessation treatment. It's not a permanent cash cow.

Yes, but just think of how many people CAN'T quit smoking and they continually buy Big Pharms drugs to try to quit!

Don Imus has chewed Nicorette gum for "12 years" at $49.95 a pop for each box.  That money adds up!!!

55 posted on 07/22/2006 3:16:56 AM PDT by SheLion ("If you're legal, you can fly with the Eagle!" - Michael Anthony)
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To: Zakeet; Hunble
I am an asthmatic who is allergic to tobacco smoke and has wound up in an ER on more than one occasion as a result. I love to have to change hotel rooms when I check in because the previous guest had to satisfy his drug addiction in a nonsmoking room -- or move to a different room because the guest in the next room had to satisfy his drug addiction in the middle of the night.

You might wish to consider the effect you have on the innocent the next time you decide to light up in a nonsmoking area.

Excuse me, but I have a question:  if you are so allergic to cigarette smoke, why do you hang around smokers or go where smokers are?  If I were you, I wouldn't go anywhere near smokers.  I don't get it.

56 posted on 07/22/2006 3:26:10 AM PDT by SheLion ("If you're legal, you can fly with the Eagle!" - Michael Anthony)
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To: peggybac
These people don't want us to quit smoking. They are making too much money on programs, studies of fake stats, etc. etc. If we all quit smoking tomorrow they'd all be broke.

Exactly!

And the states scream they want smoke free but can't balance the damn state budgets without cigarette taxes.

Think they might be talking out of both sides of their mouths???  heh!

57 posted on 07/22/2006 3:27:34 AM PDT by SheLion ("If you're legal, you can fly with the Eagle!" - Michael Anthony)
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To: SheLion

The real drug of addiction is denial.


58 posted on 07/22/2006 3:27:52 AM PDT by Raycpa
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To: Hunble
Today, I will smoke in their rooms, and there is nothing that they can do about it! If the rooms smells of smoke (after you check out)..they will charge you to defunk it.
59 posted on 07/22/2006 3:32:49 AM PDT by maineman
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To: SheLion

I've been railing against the transfer of profits from "big tobacco" to "big pharm" for awhile now.

The tobacco companies should start referring to "medicine" in their cigarettes and then go to court over it when the FDA raises hell. Turn it back on them. Discovery and trial would be a blast.

The collusion between government and pharmaceutical companies is the worst kind.


60 posted on 07/22/2006 3:35:34 AM PDT by bluefish (Holding out for worthy tagline...)
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