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2006-11-15 06:57:36 · 4 answers · asked by Christopher W 1 in Society & Culture Other - Society & Culture

4 answers

Who cares.....it's their choice.....

2006-11-15 07:00:01 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

There is no way to say. It takes years to die from cigarette smoke, but you can tell the difference in how you feel over time.

I grew up in a house where my step-mother smoked for many years. She quit when she got pregnant. I was 15 at the time.

After she quit, we repainted the living room and the old white paint was yelled from the cigarette smoke. It took most of a year, but I noticed that I could breath better and I did not get my annual cold.

In fact, I have not gotten an annual cold for many years now. I do get sick once in a while, but not consistently like I did when I lived with a smoker.

It does make a big difference, but again it is not an immediately identifiable difference.

Take care,
Troy

2006-11-15 15:17:00 · answer #2 · answered by tiuliucci 6 · 0 0

thats a hard one to answer.. depending on where...

A billion people will die from tobacco-related diseases such as cancer this century unless more are encouraged to quit, a UK expert warns. In the last century the death toll was about 100m, including 7m in Britain.

Smoking currently kills about five million adults a year globally. Each year, about 30m people take up smoking around the world, Professor Peto said.

He added: "If more than 20m of these continue to smoke and half are killed by their habit, then we are going to have more than 10m tobacco-related deaths a year.


http://www.acculaserplus.com/Abillionwilldiefromsmoking.htm

2006-11-15 15:03:17 · answer #3 · answered by life 4 · 1 0

I saw a smoker run over today...1

2006-11-15 15:00:20 · answer #4 · answered by Lotus Phoenix 6 · 0 1

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