Hello,
I would like to suggest that the practice of tobacco smoking, in and of itself - may not be a particularly hazardous or dangerous activity.
Many will have seen informative postings by the member here, Nightlight, on this topic. For example, the fact that experiments, often sponsored by the anti-smoking lobby, conducted upon animals in the past - for many years failed to demonstrate a strong causative link between tobacco smoking and lung cancer in the animal model.
1For a long time, it was commonly thought that the primary carcinogens in cigarette smoke were toxic chemicals such as nitrosamines, acetaldehyde, benzene, and such similar.
However, recently, new information has come to light which now shows that the chief cause of lung cancer and respiratory disease in cigarette smokers is in fact
radiation poisoning from Polonium-210 and Lead-210.Remember Alexander Litvinenko? His drawn, grey, haggard face photographed from his hospital bed shortly before his death from (apparent) radiation poisoning? I recall reading some Irvine Welsh book, wherein he writes about smokers - how it’s as if the cigarette’s smoking them; sucking the life out, turning their face grey, drawn, haggard, and so on..
Internal documents produced by the tobacco companies indicate that they were well aware, as far back as the 1950s and 60s, of the fact that the massive doses of highly dangerous
ionising alpha particle radiation that every cigarette smoker was/is internally exposed to
,2 will
cause lung cancer in a significant proportion of smokers over a 25 year period (On average, 13 percent).
3Incredibly, Big Tobacco has secretly had the ability to remove the radioactive Polonium-210 from cigarettes for many years, but has refused to do so; for fear that the treatment (washing with acid) might result in cigarettes less enjoyable to consumers, and hence, reduced profits. The acid wash technique renders the nicotine in tobacco ionised, thus less able to cross biological membranes, weakening the 'free-basing' nicotine “hit” that cigarette smoking currently delivers.
3Results: The documents show that the industry was well aware of the presence of a radioactive substance in tobacco as early as 1959. Furthermore, the industry was not only cognizant of the potential “cancerous growth” in the lungs of regular smokers but also did quantitative radiobiological calculations to estimate the long-term (25 years) lung radiation absorption dose (rad) of ionizing alpha particles emitted from the cigarette smoke. Our own calculations of lung rad of alpha particles match closely the rad estimated by the industry. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, the industry's and our estimate of long-term lung rad of alpha particles causes 120–138 lung cancer deaths per year per 1,000 regular smokers. Acid wash was discovered in 1980 to be highly effectively in removing 210Po from the tobacco leaves; however, the industry avoided its use for concerns that acid media would ionize nicotine converting it into a poorly absorbable form into the brain of smokers thus depriving them of the much sought after instant “nicotine kick” sensation.
Conclusions: The evidence of lung cancer risk caused by cigarette smoke radioactivity is compelling enough to warrant its removal.
Some interesting research was published this month, regarding nicotine vs. “de-nicotinated” cigarettes. It’s weird. The de-nicotinated cigarettes seemed to manage to alleviate cravings, promote wakefulness, trigger dopamine release, etc. - almost as effectively as those containing nicotine.
4 Although the dopamine release varied between the left and right striata, depending on nicotine content.
More research is needed…
Regarding electronic cigarettes; do you trust your source? the FDA found the highly poisonous Diethylene glycol in some units, rather than the expected Dipropylene glycol.
5 Still, at least there’s no irradiation of internal organs occurring…
Also, with electronic cigs, the MAO inhibiting component is conspicuous by its absence. I did find that one company has developed an "enhancing lozenge" for use with electro cigs (and vaped THC, apparently). A freebasing accessory, perhaps?...
6I’m a smoker at the moment; I have purchased a cache of seeds and will be attempting to grow my own. We need to know more about the "acid wash technique", and why it's apparently not being used by industry at all at this time.
We also need to know more about the levels of radioactive isotopes taken up by tobacco plants from the atmosphere generally, vs. the levels taken up from soil which has been artificially polluted by phosphate fertilizers.
PRE_SUB EDIT: I found something re: the latter - an US government document from 1969...
7The Po210 content in various U .S . tobacco types ranges from 0.15 to 1.01 pc/g1,2. The natural abundance of Ra226 in tobacco soils is between 0.52 and 1.53 pc/g-generally higher in fields of continued cultivation and heavy phosphate fertilization.
Tobacco plants grown in chambers enriched with Rn222 in the atmosphere (500 times greater than normal background) only had twice the amount of P0210 as the control, indicating that airborne Rn222 and its daughters are not the major source of Pb210 or Po210 in leaf tobacco.3
Evidence obtained so far shows that major portions of these radio-elements were probably absorbed through the roots . Pb210 applied to growing tobacco leaves was not freely translocated with other areas.
1TSO, T. C., HALLDEN, N . A ., and ALEXANDER, L . T. : Science 146 : 1043-1045, 1964 .
2---; Tobacco Sci 10 : 105-106, 1966.
3TSO, T . C . HARLEY, N., and ALEXANDER, L . T . : Science 153 : 880-882, 1966 .
1 http://carcin.oxford...9/1488.full.pdf2 (apparently estimated at around 10 Sv for the quarter-century, or 5,000 times the maximum annual permitted dose for US nuclear energy workers!) (from
3)
3 http://ntr.oxfordjou...4/1/79.full.pdf4 http://ntr.oxfordjou...5/1/11.full.pdf5 http://www.fda.gov/d...h/UCM173250.pdf6 http://www.prnewswir...-186000012.html7 National Cancer Institute Monograph 28, June 1968. Page 211. Accessible at
http://legacy.librar...id/zan85c00/pdfHere is the searchable archive of 80 million pages of documents previously kept secret by the major tobacco companies: http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/
There's some crazy interesting shit hidden away in there...
Edited by f.v.c., 28 January 2013 - 09:17 PM.