I missed this earlier. Sorry I don't share your view of accepting everything I read or hear as a blurb.
You won't answer any of this and play the
enlightened card but just for s and giggles:
Why did the EPA state the conclusions of their study before it was completed and then change their confidence intervals, when the evidence didn't support their claim, to reach those conclusions? If I can't use this study as an argument because it is dated, then why does the Surgeon General include it in his 2006 report?
Why is SHS considered a Class A carcinogen when the EPA's own internal review supported the B1 classification? Why did they abandon their own protocol?
Here are the actual do ents from the EPA's Environmental Criteria and Assessment Office. I'm sure you'll debunk these because it says tobacco in the web address:
http://tobaccodo ents.org/pm/2046458093.html
http://tobaccodo ents.org/pm/2046458094-8097.html
http://tobaccodo ents.org/pm/2046458107-8109.html
Why doesn't OSHA support a ban if there is a consensus founded in
good science, as you claim?
If asthma is such a big deal because of SHS, then why have asthmatic deaths doubled in the last 30 years while smoking has declined during that same time frame?
If there are no safe levels of SHS as the SG claims, then shouldn't we be all weary of burning charcoal, driving a car or starting a camp fire as all contain many of the same contaminants as SHS?
And how is it that there are no safe levels of SHS yet there are safe levels of things like exhaust fumes, radon, etc? Where are the bans, as opposed to universally accepted limits, dedicated to ridding the world of these much deadlier contaminants?
Indoor parking garages seem counterproductive, don't they?
Why are dosage levels rarely accounted for when regarding SHS? Am I to believe that the mantra "The dosage is the poison" only applies to every carcinogen
except SHS? Really?