Hi Tamar,
>>There's a lot of this faux science going around. Second-hand smoke, for example. Most state's smoking bans and a good number of federal laws are based upon the assumption that seciond-hand smoke is hideously bad for you. Now, logic and common sense would dictate that second-hand smoke IS bad for you, or as George Carlin put it, you wouldn't want to eat a second-hand ham sandwich. Having said that, there are no thorough scientific studies on just how bad it is. So all these laws are built on assumptions without hard fact.
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>You said "no thorough scientific studies on just how bad it is," so you acknowledge that, in fact, there are studies that conclude second-hand smoke it bad for you. (It wasn't hard for me to find them.)
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>Typically, studies aren't "thorough" in the sense you mean it. No one study is going to measure all the different risks from second-hand smoke. Typically, a study will measure one thing, another study will measure something, and so on. Eventually, epidemiologists take all those studies and crunch the numbers to get a bigger picture.
Yes, that's exactly what I mean. There are studies but not definitive and thorough.
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John Koziol, ex-MVP, ex-MS, ex-FoxTeam. Just call me "X"
"When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro" - Hunter Thompson (Gonzo) RIP 2/19/05