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Wysłany: Sob 9:42, 12 Lut 2011 Temat postu: cheap marlboro cigarettes |
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A new American Cancer Society report says cancers associated with lifestyles and behaviors related to economic development,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych],[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], including lung, breast, and colorectal cancers, will continue to rise in developing countries if preventive measures are not widely applied. The finding comes from the second edition of Global Cancer Facts & Figures and its academic publication,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], Global Cancer Statistics,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], published in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians.
Both publications were released on World Cancer Day, Feb. 4, 2011. The latest edition of Global Cancer Facts & Figures includes a special section on cancer in Africa, where according to the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) about 681,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych],000 new cancer cases and 512,400 cancer deaths occurred in 2008, numbers that are projected to nearly double by 2030 due to growth and aging of the population.
According to estimates from IARC,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], there were approximately 12.7 million new cancer cases worldwide in 2008, 5.6 million of which occurred in economically developed countries and 7.1 million in economically developing countries. There were approximately 7.6 million cancer deaths worldwide in 2008, 2.8 million of which occurred in economically developed countries and 4.8 million in economically developing countries. By 2030, the global cancer burden is expected to nearly double, growing to 21.4 million cases and 13.2 million deaths.
And while that increase is the result of demographic changes ?C a growing and aging population ?C it may be compounded by the adoption of unhealthy lifestyles and behaviors related to economic development, such as smoking, poor diet, and physical inactivity. On one hand, as a liberal, I embrace the purpose behind the ban. I respect science-based public policy, and want action that promotes the public good.
But as a liberal, I also want citizens to build a positive relationship with their government, a trust that may be jeopardized by an overreaching legislative act and by intrusive enforcement. Furthermore,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], as a liberal,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], I want the public to see the government working effectively, and I worry the enforcement of this law will be haphazard at best, and discriminatory at worst. Then theres the fact that I enjoy hanging out at bars. Our pubs are democratic spaces and the venues for our national network of political social clubs called Drinking Liberally.
Drinking Liberally isn't about the alcohol you are welcome drink water or coffee, juice or soda but about the social community that forms around talking politics (and I should note that plenty of conservatives attend). But we do meet in bars despite the evidence that alcohol consumption has a potentially deleterious effect on personal health and alcohol abuse is extremely destructive to society. We have our vices. Shouldn't smokers be allowed to have theirs?
Even through a recession in which other tax revenues have ebbed for the state, about $700 million or more each year continues to flow into the state Treasury from New Jersey's $2.70-per-pack tax on cigarettes the sixth-highest cigarette tax in the nation. There is legislation on the books that called for millions to be spent on anti-smoking and smoking cessation programs from this pot, but there are no dictates about how money is spent in the state budgets that are passed each June.
The budget overrides the law,said Edward Kazimir, an ardent anti-smoking campaigner who helped start the Comprehensive Tobacco Control Program in the state Department of Health and Senior Services when he worked there for more than two decades. A lot of people don't understand that just because we have a law that calls for spending on these things, that doesn't mean it happens.
Then there's the landmark settlement the big tobacco-makers agreed to with state attorneys general in 1998 to put an end to all the Medicaid reimbursement lawsuits the companies were facing. Since New Jersey started receiving payments from this settlement in 2000, it has received no less than $220 million a year and as much as $405 million.
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