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April 5, 2006

E-mail: etc4640@dcccd.edu

Volume 36, Issue 11

Viewpoints

Home > 4/5/06 Issue > Viewpoints

Column

New smoking proposal is for the best

The campus police and Student Government recently said they would propose a smoke-free campus, which is a great idea.

Finally non-smokers won't have to take in the smell of ashtrays every time they enter campus buildings.

Research shows that even secondhand smoke exposes one to the same 4,000 toxic chemicals that a smoker inhales. It causes coughing, headaches, eye irritation, sore throat, sneezing and runny nose, breathing problems, irregular heartbeat, increased risk of heart disease and lung cancer, worsening of chest problems and allergies.

All these effects can potentially inhibit education, and removing these toxins from the air would enormously benefit all students.

Aside from keeping non-smokers away from the health hazards of second-hand smoke, maybe making it harder for people to smoke will force them to quit and add a few years to their lives.

When refusing to give up the addiction smokers can suffer at least four consequences: Physical, social, financial and emotional.

Physically ­ we covered that already, but remember it can make you really sick.

Socially ­ It stinks. Nicotine also stains walls as well as fingers, spoils clothes and furniture, and increases the risk of fire in the home. Nice touch for friends and family.

Financially - A pack of cigarettes costs $4. Buying one pack a week, you would spend $208 in a year. Imagine buying one pack a day. That is $1,460 down the drain.

Emotionally ­ It is a turnoff to potential partners and leaves you feeling like a slave to cigarettes.

Smoking is clearly a bad habit that the American people have included in their culture. But given our modern-day knowledge of its harmfulness, it would be stupid not to take steps to purge it from our society.

The movie Spartan pointed out this disgusting American characteristic when Val Kilmer saved the daughter of a high-ranking United States Government official. He told her she couldn't smoke because the kidnappers could find them by "the smell of American tobacco."

Although smoking bans are not a new idea, banning smoking in outdoor places is. But the bandwagon is growing. Hopefully all community colleges will come to their senses one day and ban the life-threatening addiction from their campuses.

Until then, though, Eastfield should step up to the plate and eliminate smoking on-campus for the good of all its paying students.

 

 

 

"Smoking is clearly a bad habit that the American people have included in their culture."

-Annetta Brewster


 


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