Even as more people in the United States are realizing the dangers of smoking and using them less, the tobacco companies have been expanding into other countries to make up for lost revenue for years. They have been giving out free products in India to children, hooking them early. With the full knowledge that once addicted, the youth will need to purchase the products later. How despicable and more low life can they get?A documentary was done, revealing massive shipments being unloaded and distributed to children as young as eight and nine in villages by the truck load. Handing them to anyone in regions where it was virturally unknown. Followups several years later showed people hooked, trying to find ways to pay using precious resources of the village to pay.
With China's population over 1.3 billion, those same corporations know there is a massive market just ripe for the picking. As China has struggled to fight against the products flooding through the black market. Soon enough, the billions in profit will secure these death promoting CEO's and they can sit back and watch their stock grow. Secure in the knowledge that generations will be addicted outside the reach of any regulations and accountability such as the United States has held them to.
Jha noted that in wealthy countries, such as those in Europe in North America, the rates of smoking-related cancers and deaths have declined substantially, while cancer rates in China and India are rising.
Pollution has decreased in Europe and America and has exponentially risen in India and China.
Sister just diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer this June. Already spread to lymph nodes, lungs and liver. She is 60, had smoked since age 15. Otherwise has been healthy her whole life, always worked, etc. even while caring for disabled husband for 12 years. Still in shock, her treatments (chemo/radiation) have not prevented the spread to other areas. Life is short - and uncertain. It doesn't just happen to "the other guy." It happens to any of us.
Tobacco should be placed in the same category as heroin and be illegal.
Even as more people in the United States are realizing the dangers of smoking and using them less, the tobacco companies have been expanding into other countries to make up for lost revenue for years. They have been giving out free products in India to children, hooking them early. With the full knowledge that once addicted, the youth will need to purchase the products later. How despicable and more low life can they get?A documentary was done, revealing massive shipments being unloaded and distributed to children as young as eight and nine in villages by the truck load. Handing them to anyone in regions where it was virturally unknown. Followups several years later showed people hooked, trying to find ways to pay using precious resources of the village to pay.
With China's population over 1.3 billion, those same corporations know there is a massive market just ripe for the picking. As China has struggled to fight against the products flooding through the black market. Soon enough, the billions in profit will secure these death promoting CEO's and they can sit back and watch their stock grow. Secure in the knowledge that generations will be addicted outside the reach of any regulations and accountability such as the United States has held them to.
Smoking DOES NOT cause lung cancer.
Pollution has decreased in Europe and America and has exponentially risen in India and China.
Sister just diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer this June. Already spread to lymph nodes, lungs and liver. She is 60, had smoked since age 15. Otherwise has been healthy her whole life, always worked, etc. even while caring for disabled husband for 12 years. Still in shock, her treatments (chemo/radiation) have not prevented the spread to other areas. Life is short - and uncertain. It doesn't just happen to "the other guy." It happens to any of us.