One invokes the bodies natural reward system, the other is an artificial introduced drug. Not that similar to me at all.
An artificially introduced drug that accesses the body's natural reward system.
When did they do that? Some of my grandparents smoked 30+ a day circa 1920.
The
WHO testimoney of Jeffrey Wigand makes for interesting reading.
Addiction to cigarettes has always been a problem, but not all people are susceptible to addiction (another interesting area of research) and boosting nicotine does make it happen faster and more certainly. Also, the changing social conditions means that nowadays that we're used to encountering mostly those who are regular smokers.
I'm not really trying to argue that it's possible to have "good smoking" - a large group of people, that confine smoking to a casual activity, that obtain the social benefits without the adverse effects. I'm just pointing out that all use isn't necessarily detrimental.
Something we almost agree on

I'd say most reasonable people know how addictive cigarettes are and don't want to run the risk of becoming addicted.
You know what's sad? That you think we mostly disagree just because I tend to point out (regardless of what "side" I'm on) both sides of the issue (i.e. whichever "side" I think is being ignored). Too contrarian, maybe.
So if you provided a drug in pill/liquid/powder form that gets you "high" teenagers wouldn't take/inject/sniff it? Do I really have to provide the evidence to refute that?
Here you are talking about something different - more like the reasons people use heroin or cocaine. Nicotine doesn't give the same kind of "high" (different reward system).
Smoking is not a "meaningful" experience. It is a pleasurable experience because of our nervous system is hyper-sensitive to nicotine. It is also an operant conditioned habit. Smokers are like Skinner's rats, pressing the leaver for their reward. People who smoke more in social situations have simply associated the two activities.
Yes, that it what I mean. The social association is relevant. I'm thinking of comparing it to having a beer at the pub with your friends. Associating the activity and the physiologic effects becomes strongly reinforced and it's hard to give up that package, even when on a day-to-day basis the reality doesn't match the picture (huddling outside in the cold vs. lounging with the cool kids).
The smart people who smoke on this forum are very good at making up excuses and complicated reasons about why they continue to smoke. But it's all b******t. Given that most of them are probably atheists too - this life is it for them - it is not reasonable for them to shorten it by years and run a much higher risk of having a miserable death.
I think they know that, too. But the remote future tends to be heavily discounted.
Yes, I'd agree that given the choice of a cigarette or the more honest but less cool inhaler/pill/syringe, then most nicotine addicts would choose the cigarette. That's why, if a government anywhere in the world had the b***s they would have to legislate to force the tobacco companies to produce safer ways of peddling their drug. But it won’t happen, I know.
You never know.
I'll be back in a week. I'm going to get "high" on the ski slopes of Austria
Break a leg? Or did I get that mixed-up with something else....
Linda