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Sunday, April 29, 2012

Poll: Are Cigarette Smokers Treated Unfairly?

Gov. Pat Quinn has propose to more than double the tax on a pack of cigarettes.

  Gov. Pat Quinn has proposed increasing the tax on a pack of cigarettes by $1 in an effort to reduce a $2.7 billion deficit in the Medicaid program, the State Journal Register reported. The cigarette tax would generate about $675 million in revenue. The state's current cigarette tax is 96 cents; Quinn's proposal would more than double it. Aside from raising revenue for a health care program, the thinking goes that such sin taxes are more acceptable because people shouldn't be smoking anyway. Smoking causes about 443,000 deaths a year in the United States, or about one in five of the nation's deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control. And smoking contributes to yearly health care costs to tune of about $96 billion. But not …

Richard Schulte

5:59 pm on Saturday, May 5, 2012

Sully: "Sorry Buc- Richard''s absurdities get to me after a while." I've been mulling Sully's comment above over in my mind. Sully didn't elaborate about the "absurdities" that he's talking about, so I can only speculate. Is it that those "green" light bulbs, CFL, contain mercury and are an environmental hazard and should be banned? Is it that we were being warned about "global cooling" and a new…   more ›

Monday, August 22, 2011

Lung Cancer Group Fights Stigma, Raises Awareness

A trio of Northbrook women push for the No. 1 fatal cancer's fair share in research resources.

Once it was the United States vs. lung cancer. The U.S. Surgeon General’s 1964 report formally linking smoking with lung cancer, after decades of suspicion, seemed to declare war on the disease. Two years later, the drawn and dying actor William Talman filmed a famous TV commercial warning viewers not to smoke like he did. In 1971, the government banned cigarette ads on radio and TV. Today, lung cancer doesn’t have such a lofty profile anymore, even though it remains the No. 1 cancer killer and increasingly afflicts non-smokers in a pattern that has baffled medical researchers. Other forms of the disease, namely breast, colon and prostate cancers, have seemingly vaulted ahead in public awareness, activism and research funds. LUNGevity …

Kay Vick

2:59 pm on Monday, August 22, 2011

My son was diagnosed with Stage IV lung cancer on October 5, 2009. He was given this news 5 days after turning 41. He will be 43 on Sept. 30 and we continue to pray for his miracle. We know they are out there. He lives CO and is being treated by some of the best doctors in CO. He NEVER smoked, and like you said ~ people just seem to "blame" lung cancer patients figuring that they did it to …   more ›

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