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Nah........ !Karl Marx once called religion "the opium of the people." What if addictive substances are evil? What if tobacco is the closest thing we have in the real world to the serpent, the seductress, the devil?
Do you think evilness is a quality possessed by things?Karl Marx once called religion "the opium of the people." What if addictive substances are evil? What if tobacco is the closest thing we have in the real world to the serpent, the seductress, the devil?
For the immediate gratification that comes with feeding a habit.The real question is why do people do it?
Karl Marx once called religion "the opium of the people." What if addictive substances are evil? What if tobacco is the closest thing we have in the real world to the serpent, the seductress, the devil?
Tobacco was chosen because it kills the most people in the developed world. Its also chemically addictive, which other poor lifestyle choices like mcdonalds arent. It is worth considering that most americans die from preventable disease. If we look at heart disease, cancer, stroke, lung disease, those are the most common deaths and smoking leads to all of them. heroin is addictive, but in terms of numbers and damage done to developed society, tobacco is definitely in my top 10
Karl Marx once called religion "the opium of the people." What if addictive substances are evil? What if tobacco is the closest thing we have in the real world to the serpent, the seductress, the devil?
Think of all the people who self-admit to being addicted to food. Those that develop health issues - like diabetes, or their weight making their heart work too hard, etc. - can, basically, die from this addiction eventually. Is food evil?
Are we talking about junk food or fresh greens from a garden here?
Point being - in today's societies, almost NONE of us are "doing right" by our bodies and biology with respect to food - cutting our life-spans shorter in the vast majority of cases. So let's all hunker down with a plate of evil and call it a day.
My brother died at the age of 44 due to alcohol abuse. I can tell you that addiction did appear to be evil to me for awhile. But, in reality, inanimate objects aren't evil; it's what we do with them. A glass a wine can be beneficial, etc. That said, I see no value whatsoever in tobacco.Karl Marx once called religion "the opium of the people." What if addictive substances are evil? What if tobacco is the closest thing we have in the real world to the serpent, the seductress, the devil?
No. It's not about gratifying a habit. It's about constantly battling nicotine withdrawal. Smokers don't just go through withdrawal when they attempt to quit. They go through it every moment that exists between one cigarette and the next. The thought "I need another cigarette" is caused by the first cigarette, and the next, and the next, etc...For the immediate gratification that comes with feeding a habit.
I'm not sure that many smokers are aware when they first start. They usually start pretty young. But for those that are aware usually figure "it won't happen to me".The real question is not why established smokers smoke, but why anyone aware of the risks would pick it up.
Smoking is pleasurable no?No. It's not about gratifying a habit.
The thing I have found with many smokers is that in their attempts to quit they often last months, my friend lasted years, long after the effects of nicotine dependence have dissipated. Smoking is as much of a psychological habit as it is a chemical addiction. Getting over the chemical withdrawal is actually the easy part as many smokers (I have a lot in my extended family) who have actually quit have told me. It's the psychological attachment that's harder to break in the long run.It's about constantly battling nicotine withdrawal.
No. It's an illusion of pleasure. Have you ever heard of a smoker tell you that the first cigarette was wonderful? Isn't usually a scene of hacking and coughing? Seems like the opposite of pleasure. The only sense of relief given by smoking is of the stress caused by the desire to have another cigarette... which was only caused by the previous cigarette. The relief of this craving is confused for genuine pleasure.Smoking is pleasurable no?
You're right. It is as much, if not mainly, psychological. I don't believe it's physical attachment that makes it hard. I believe it's the feeling of being deprived of the "pleasure" of nicotine. The feeling like getting through certain moments in life just won't be as good, and the regular stresses of life will be much less bearable without nicotine... these are the feelings that usually make it tough to quit.The thing I have found with many smokers is that in their attempts to quit they often last months, my friend lasted years, long after the effects of nicotine dependence have dissipated. Smoking is as much of a psychological habit as it is a chemical addiction. Getting over the chemical withdrawal is actually the easy part as many smokers (I have a lot in my extended family) who have actually quit have told me. It's the psychical attachment that harder in the long run.