andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2006-05-11 06:16 pm

On getting a sense of priorities

In the last ten years, smoking has killed 4,000,000 Americans. Traffic has killed 400,000. Terrorism has killed 4,000.

(Can't remember where I stole this from)
ext_267: Photo of DougS, who has a round face with thinning hair and a short beard (Default)

[identity profile] dougs.livejournal.com 2006-05-11 05:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Maybe our 40,000 is passive smoking?

[identity profile] slammerkinbabe.livejournal.com 2006-05-11 06:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, ITA that the government has flushed down the toilet a ton of money on bogus "we will save you from teh terroristz" wars, but then, I wouldn't mind nearly so much if said wars did a thing to protect us from teh terroristz.

I guess I feel like the government already does roughly as much as it can do regarding smoking deaths and auto accident deaths. I mean, the warning labels are there, cigarettes are taxed to hell and back. The research money is there for cancer. I haven't found the laws or the responses to broken laws (DUIs, etc.) to be inadequate. I think that the rub here is that smoking and auto accidents are due to a.) people's own personal choices, b.) people's own carelessness, and c.) sheer dumb luck. (Un-luck?) Terrorism *would* be a good deal more preventable by government, if the government had a fucking clue how to go about it. Clearly, though, they don't.
drplokta: (Default)

[personal profile] drplokta 2006-05-11 06:10 pm (UTC)(link)
The government doesn't do nearly as much as it could about smoking. Think about a ten-year-long expensive PR campaign to make smoking seem like something that only dorks and losers do, which is perfectly possible given the political will.

[identity profile] slammerkinbabe.livejournal.com 2006-05-11 06:15 pm (UTC)(link)
I guess I'm just missing whether it's the government's role *to* do that. Terrorist attacks on America's soil are the government's business, no brainer. I guess I don't really get why it would be their role to run that sort of ten-year anti-smoking campaign. Like I said, smoking's a personal choice, and frankly I think I'd be offended on behalf of the people I know who do smoke if the government started hammering it into us that smokers = dorks and losers.

I don't know. I guess I have a narrower view of what the government ought to be doing with taxpayer dollars than some. To my mind, that sort of PR campaign would be better suited to a private organization.