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Air pollution or smoking: Which is the greater cancer risk?

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Pollution
52% 94 votes Total: 182 votes
Smoking
48% 88 votes

Pollution

by Donald Bentley

Created on: May 16, 2008

Air pollution or smoking: Which is the greater cancer risk?

Let me start out by saying I am no Doctor, but I would think common sense would tell any possessor of it, a rare thing in these times, That there is no way smoking could cause more damage in anyway than pollution to a non smoker. While smoking is a nasty little hard to kick habit it has been around a lot longer than the industrial age. I kindly doubt smog and all that other kind of air pollution killing people today, was around in those days.

Now I have no doubt smoking kills, but so do guns, knives, cars, planes, war, and we do not even want to go into the many diseases other than cancer that can cut life short. How much smoke comes out of a cigarette compared to an industrial smoke stack? How much comes out compared to a car exhaust? Lawnmowers, generators, chainsaws, and the list goes on and on. Just because you may not see smoke coming out of a lawnmower or any other number of things does not mean it is not polluting the air. There is a reason they tell you not to operate these devices in a air tight room, they will kill you. They all put out deadly fumes into the air. and there are a lot more pollution creating devices going on at any given time than there are people blowing smoke out into the air at any given time.

Also since today's activist whine and cry and carry on about anything they can find to whine about we should ask ourselves are we talking about cancer in the people who smoke or cancer risk to a non-smoker. I would think this question would not even be ask to a person who smokes. Lets face it the smoker knows he is at greater risk because he is breathing in the pollution and the smoke. So this brings me back to the point of the risk to non smokers.

People who smoke die of cancer as well as people who do not and never have smoked. So do a search on "cancer in the air" see how many sites you come up with verses second hand smoke sites. My bet is the pollutants in the air will far outweigh the amount of second hand smoke sites. While your at it you might want to search out how much pollution is created in making one microchip. Almost every product on the market has them. How much pollution is created when anything made of plastic is created? Look around your house, where would you be without it? How much is created in making your car and all the parts for it? How many pollution does it cause to make the power for your nice comfy house everyday? To make a single sheet of paper? the list goes on and on.

The activist should give up all theses things and more before they ask a smoker not to smoke. It is not right to ask someone to give up something they like to do while your an even bigger part of the problem. The good book tells us remove the log from your eye before you try to move the splinter from your brothers eye, and that's what the smoking issue and many other issues boil down to. The fact is the driving to a rally against cancer causing second hand smoke, will cause more damage, by getting in the car and going to the rally than a smoker would produce in a life time. So if your concerned with doing away with cancer causing things start at the top with the biggest pollutant no matter how it might affect your pleasures of life and work your way down to the smallest. By the time you get down to the smokers we are likely to be back in the stone age.

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Smoking

by Joe Mccarthy

Created on: January 20, 2008

Out of the two, air pollution and smoking, I, like most people, would consider smoking a greater risk for cancer. The first point that comes to mind is simply this: The lungs of nonsmokers are affected by air pollution. The lungs of smokers are affected by pollution and smoking.

With that said, there remains the subject of "second hand smoke." At first glance you would assume that this means nonsmokers are also affected by both pollution and cigarettes. But by what degree. Ventillation lessens the risk for nonsmokers because they are not taking the direct hit into their lungs like the smoker is. Read most household products that contain harmful chemicals and you will be informed to "use in a well ventallated area." Far more smokers die from lung cancer than nonsmokers from second hand smoke. The notion of second hand smoke does not mean pollution and cigarettes are an equal risk for cancer. That would be true, of course, if the nonsmoker were to climb a ladder and take a direct hit from a smokestack on a continuous daily basis.

Even using a score card, the smoker still strikes out. The non-smoker is subjected to: 1. Air pollution, 2. Second-hand smoke. The smoker is subjected to, 1. air pollution, 2. smoking, 3. second-hand smoke.

Pollution is prevalent in some areas more than others. But no matter where on this planet you place these two people, whether it's in a smog filled city, the desert, the arctic region, a national park, or on a cruiser in the middle of the ocean, the smoker has that extra strike against him by constantly filling his lungs with a full strength pollutant. He literally becomes a smokestack.

However, my arguement only supports the idea that the PERSON is at greater risk of cancer when they smoke; not that SMOKING causes more cancer than POLLUTION, or visa versa. The only way you could prove that is by separating the two. You would need two worlds; one where there was no tobacco, just pollution, and another planet were there was smokers but no other kind of pollution. Unless, of course, you're satisfied with the idea that most people who get lung cancer are smokers or were at some time in their life.

Learn more about this author, Joe Mccarthy.
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