What is smoking for me?
This is a topic that every smoker has come to grips with. With the words "this is my last cigarette" they put out one, and soon another, but neither of them was the last one. Cigarette addiction, for them, was an unbreakable habit that was always at hand in countless situations, namely, the smoker enjoyed a cigarette after sex, during a free moment, or to keep from tearing up the group during a friend's smoke party and missing out on any essential information that he would have lost if he hadn't participated. But the harm to health trumps any healthy benefits, a tangled piece of paper, containing strange-looking smelly contents, full of health-threatening poisons, topped with an innocuous-looking filter, by which the manufacturer was perhaps only trying to reduce the health effects of the smoker and therefore prolong his life. The euphoria begins the moment we ignite this deadly cocktail of lethal substances. Some 4,000 chemicals enter the smoker's body, including carbon monoxide, nitrous oxide, nitrosamines, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, hydrogen cyanide, heavy metals, radioactive polonium, radon and tar. Substances that have been used or are still used for the following purposes, for example: hydrogen cyanide, for killing Jews during the Second War (Zyklon B), Arsenic (A heavy metal that interferes with breathing and blood vessels, if a person were given a dose of 200 mg they would die. ), Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons which pose a serious risk to humans, their danger lies in their carcinogenicity (causes cancer), Nitrosamines which have been shown in animal tests to cause carcinomas and in humans to cause lung cancer, nitrogen oxide, which causes tooth decay, conjunctivitis and respiratory problems, carbon monoxide, which prevents the transfer of oxygen from the lungs to the tissues and causes tissue suffocation, and tar, which is another cancer-causing substance.
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