Smoking

Smoking


Everyday 3,000 children start smoking, most them between the ages of 10 and 18. These kids account for 90 percent of all new smokers. In fact, 90 percent of all adult smokers said that they first started smoking as teenagers. These statistics clearly show that young people are the prime target in the tobacco wars.
Smokers say they need to smoke because it makes them feel good and more relaxed. It helps to concentrate more and feel at ease. Or, they may just need to smoke because it’s so addicting. Despite these statements, the advantages and disadvantages just don’t compare. One of the largest health disputes right now and for a prolonged period of time, has been smoking. No one seems to be doing much about the issue and the people that don’t care the most and should, are the smokers. The smokers are the one’s who need to know how bad it really is. It seems the non-smokers are the people who oppose against this topic because they are affected by it too.
Passive smoke, or second hand affects the non-smokers too. Tobacco smoke contains about 4,000 chemicals, including 200 known poisons. Every time someone smokes, poisons such as benzene, formaldehyde and carbon monoxide are released into the air, which means that not only is the smoker inhaling them but so is everyone else around him. Many studies now show that this secondhand smoke can have harmful effects on nonsmokers and even cause them to develop diseases such as lung cancer and heart disease. Secondhand smoke has an especially bad effect on infants and children whose parents smoke. A number of studies show that in their first two years of life, babies of parents who smoke at home have a much higher rate of lung diseases such as bronchitis and pneumonia than babies with nonsmoking parents.
Tobacco use remains the leading preventable cause of death in the United States, causing more...

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