Some sell beer. It all depends on the area.
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CVS is going to stop selling tobacco products
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My city decided to forbit pharmacies from selling cigarettes last year for this reason.
And I said EXACTLY what was said in this first post. Not a bad idea for image, but a bit messed up if we sitll sell OTHER unhealthy things. Most people consume these things in moderation, but before the ban, my store's top 3 Categoies? Cigarettes, beverages, and grocery. And we're not exactly health food central for those last two. My store sells a SHITTON of junk food. In mass amounts. To the same people.
Look, I do not like smoking in any way, shape, or form. But everyone who smokes KNOWS it's bad for them; it's THEIR CHOICE to keep doing so, regadless of my personal feelings on the habit. Yes, secondhand smoke and all that, but with smoking being banned more and more in certain places, it's less of a concern now than 15 years ago, at least when it comes to general public exposure.
The same of tobacco in this country will never be banned. So if we as a country as a whole want to do something about how unhelathy they are, we can start with forcing the tobacco companies not to put so much carcinogenic crap in them. That's just my opinion on the matter.
At least the articles I've read acknowledged how much money they're going to lose from this decision. I just hope it means paycuts for the big wigs, and not cutbacks on the people who actually WORK in the darn stores. I can tell you my store lost a LOT of business from the city law, especially since we were the ONLY store open in the middle of the night within walking distance for a lot of people (you'd be shocked at how many people came in for a pack at 3 am). Now they have to walk further, and the convenience stores are raking in the dough. Because while this may motivate SOME people to quit, it's only going to be those people who were planning on being serious about doing so anyway, with this being the last straw to break the camel's back. You're not actually going to help make PEOPLE healthier; if they want their smokes, they'll just go somewhere else to get it.
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i'm more suprised a pharmacy DID sell them. the chain of stores i work for haven't sold cigs in... well, has to be far over a decade.
and when they stopped it was more of a "yeah, i guess that makes sense" reaction from the community. then again, they stopped selling them not because of the nicotine, but cuz of all the other chemicals in them that are hell for the body (like methanol and ammonia). we still sell plenty of stop-smoking aids that are loaded with nicotine.
i'm sure once vaps become more common, if a pharm could sell just plain, unchemicaled tobacco leaves and vaps they may go back to it. but for now there isn't money in it so why bother.All uses of You, You're, and etc are generic unless specified otherwise.
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Originally posted by Cats View PostAnd I said EXACTLY what was said in this first post. Not a bad idea for image, but a bit messed up if we sitll sell OTHER unhealthy things.
Originally posted by Cats View PostBut everyone who smokes KNOWS it's bad for them; it's THEIR CHOICE to keep doing so, regadless of my personal feelings on the habit.
Originally posted by Cats View PostSo if we as a country as a whole want to do something about how unhelathy they are, we can start with forcing the tobacco companies not to put so much carcinogenic crap in them.
Hence the emergence of e-cigarettes. Which will only kill you half as fast. -.-
Originally posted by Cats View PostYou're not actually going to help make PEOPLE healthier; if they want their smokes, they'll just go somewhere else to get it.
Originally posted by siead_lietrathuai'm more suprised a pharmacy DID sell them. the chain of stores i work for haven't sold cigs in... well, has to be far over a decade.
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Originally posted by HYHYBT View PostA caffeine addiction isn't even harmful; at least, studies range from "slightly bad for you" to "slightly good for you."
If the study just says, "A cup of coffee is good for giving you enough caffeine to keep you awake until your body catches up to activity", I'd buy that.Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers
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Originally posted by Cats View PostMy city decided to forbit pharmacies from selling cigarettes last year for this reason.
with this being the last straw to break the camel's back.
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostHence the emergence of e-cigarettes. Which will only kill you half as fast.
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I copied and pasted my reply from another site on this.
Only 2 Billion Dollars for the entire year in cigarette sales? That is why they are dropping it. The last time I was in a CVS (last year) they didn't have many cigarettes at all and their prices for them were way too high (I walked to the gas station across the street and got the same for half the price). The CEO may be saying health but it is just the profit margin. And the fact the distributors won't sell to them when they are making no money.
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Originally posted by Racket_Man View PostWhat I have a problem is this ----- They STILL sell very unhealthy things like soda, candy , chips, gum, ice cream, "energy" drinks, "modern" parmacutical chemicals that have seriously nasty side effects, etc.
A little hypocritical from my point of view.
Those other products are very unhealthy for you, granted. But tobacco use leads to so many adverse health effects, and the consequences of smoking can pop up decades after you quit: just ask Leonard Nimoy, who has been diagnosed with COPD several decades after quitting.
Quitting the other products will actually improve your health. Yes, the many unhealthy food choices have led to an epidemic of obesity in the US, which leads to hypertension and diabetes. But those conditions will actually reverse themselves once you lose the weight.
Quitting smoking will dramatically lower your risks, but the fact is damage to your tissues begins with the first puff, and your risks for cardiovascular disease, lung disease, and cancer go way up and never completely go back down again. It's better never to start.
I'm wondering what my risk factors are after having been exposed to second hand smoke for 20 years (my parents smoked like stacks).
Originally posted by HYHYBT View PostHow many people have ice cream or whatever as a treat now and then, as opposed to people who do the same with cigarettes?
Originally posted by TheHuckster View PostPeople's addiction to caffeine (I'm one of them) are due to the morning-kickoff effects it has, while nicotine historically has had two purposes: To get people hooked on cigarettes and to wean people off cigarettes via patches or gum.
Historically, tobacco was used by Native Americans for religious purposes. Europeans were exposed to it and liked the kick so much they took it home with them. They didn't care about religious uses; they saw a cash cow.
Tobacco production is time insentive and physicially difficult work. Early settlers planting crops used indentured servants, fellow Europeans who were poor and had their passage paid in return for seven years labor, to start the first tobacco farms but couldn't get the labor they needed. So they started importing Africans. At first the African immigrants had limited indentures as well (even though they were bought by slave traders), but eventually Virginia by law made all indendures for Africans "dura vitae," for life.
In short, tobacco production was the direct cause of slavery in colonial America. When the bottom fell out of tobacco production (never to recover), they switched to cotton.
It wasn't until the 30's or forties that the additive process started with cigarettes.
Originally posted by TheHuckster View PostSugar might be physically addictive, but it's still a necessary part of one's diet. Obviously candy and soda give your body an excessive burst of sugar, but if you consume candy intelligently and responsibly, there is nothing wrong with the occasional pack of candy.
I remember as a child soda was an occasional treat. It wasn't the caffeine I craved, it was the sugar. I also remember when the "Throwback" sodas became available. They are most certainly less sweet.
And processed sugar is NOT a necessary part of our diet. We get sugars (fructose mostly) from fruit and some vegetables. Processed sugars (glucose) is a different molecule and is not a necessary part of our diet.
Originally posted by TheHuckster View PostI totally disagree with the notion that junk food is as bad as cigarettes. What this boils down to for me is cigarettes have absolutely no benefit to one's health or well-being, even if consumed sparingly. Candy can still have benefits if one's blood sugar is low and they want a quick solution to it, or if they simply want a snack that doesn't replace a hearty and healthy meal.
The only benefit candy has is to the severely hypoglycemic diabetic who needs the quick boost. Other than that there are NO health benefits.
We can do far better than candy for snacks.
Originally posted by HYHYBT View PostIn that sense, alcohol is much worse; second-hand smoke is much less harmful than first-hand, being so much more diluted and (these days, anyway) rare in most places, and being on nicotine doesn't make people act dangerously like alcohol does.
But CVS doesn't sell alcohol anyway. At least, not the drinking kind.
You ever been around someone desperate for a smoke? Aside from turning people into raging assholes, people will do very strange things to keep a tobacco addiction going. I've seen jail inmates smoke their Bibles.
And CVS does sell the drinking kind of alcohol: beer and wine. Last I checked, you do drink that. If you meant they don't sell liquor, then you'd be right.
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostCaffeine is actually decent against some kinds of cancer and helps with Parkinson's.
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View Post. Laws prevent nicotine from being used as an ingredient in medicinals though. Probably because people can and would attempt to smoke it. -.-
However, there is no law preventing people from growing their own for their own use. You can't sell it without paying tobacco taxes, but you can sell it. Unlike pot in most states.
Originally posted by wolfie View PostSo you're saying that e-cigarettes are half-fast (try saying it out loud) cancer sticks?
Originally posted by Titi View PostI copied and pasted my reply from another site on this.
Only 2 Billion Dollars for the entire year in cigarette sales? That is why they are dropping it. The last time I was in a CVS (last year) they didn't have many cigarettes at all and their prices for them were way too high (I walked to the gas station across the street and got the same for half the price). The CEO may be saying health but it is just the profit margin. And the fact the distributors won't sell to them when they are making no money.Good news! Your insurance company says they'll cover you. Unfortunately, they also say it will be with dirt.
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Originally posted by s_stabeler View PostI always figured the benefit of e-cigs is they primarily have nicotine in them- so it reduces the harmful crap to just the nicotine. Then, if you reduce the amount you smoke them, you can wean yourself off cigs.
The jury is still out on just how harmful e-cigarettes are, both to the inhaler and secondhand. They keep telling us while there is nicotine in the vapor, the rest is basically just water, and it works similarly to a humidifier. According to Wikipedia, at least in the states, there isn't really any oversight as to what is put in the substances, and there hasn't been enough research to really ascertain the effects.
I, personally, didn't complain because I wasn't right next to him, and when he was using it, I at least couldn't smell it or feel any effects from it. I can't say if I was in anyway harmed by it or not, but frankly, I feel as though I breathe more toxins in the parking garage and busy streets on my WAY to the office than from his e-cig.
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Originally posted by s_stabeler View PostI always figured the benefit of e-cigs is they primarily have nicotine in them- so it reduces the harmful crap to just the nicotine. Then, if you reduce the amount you smoke them, you can wean yourself off cigs.
Of course, the e-cig companies are flavoring the product to make it palatable and enjoyable with the idea the user will get addicted and continue to use the product.Good news! Your insurance company says they'll cover you. Unfortunately, they also say it will be with dirt.
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Originally posted by Panacea View PostObesity has become an epidemic in developed nations, and food addictions are very real problems. About 30% of adult Americans are overweight according to the CDC.
When you combine that with America's culture of super sizing the fuck out of everything + its poverty rate + food oasis's + epigenetics you get a death spiral that is going to keep making each subsequent generation more obese until something is done about it.
Originally posted by Panacea View PostCaffeine is a real addiction; it changes brain chemistry. That's why people get migraines when they suddenly stop taking it.
Originally posted by Panacea View PostEven as recently as 100 years ago, sugar was expensive. Then food companies started increasing the amount of sugar to improve taste and move more product.
Originally posted by Panacea View PostI remember as a child soda was an occasional treat. It wasn't the caffeine I craved, it was the sugar. I also remember when the "Throwback" sodas became available. They are most certainly less sweet.
A cane sugar soda for me is a rare treat because its as heavy as a meal appetite wise. But its much easier to fine cane sugar soda up here than there I imagine.
Originally posted by Panacea View PostAnd processed sugar is NOT a necessary part of our diet. We get sugars (fructose mostly) from fruit and some vegetables. Processed sugars (glucose) is a different molecule and is not a necessary part of our diet.
Fructose, Glucose and the combination, Sucrose, are all natural sugars and all exist in varying amounts in fruits and vegetables. Good luck finding any fruit or veggie that only has fructose ( and if you did, good luck maintaining mental functions by eating just it ). Cane sugar is extracted as sucrose, which is equal parts fructose and glucose.
"Processed sugar", as in table sugar, is sucrose. So its 1:1 fructose to glucose. So its more filling than a source with a higher fructose ratio such as corn syrup.
Originally posted by Panacea View PostRecent studies don't agree with you. Small amounts of sugar over time lead to cardiovascular damage, increasing your risks for hypertension and diabetes.
The best way to view sugar is as a fuel injector. The brain needs a constant supply, but it needs it at an optimum rate. Too little you starve the engine, too much, you flood it. Hence rate of intake is as important as amount. Which is why things with a lower glycemic index are better because they release sugar more slowly into the system. Its the sudden spikes in blood sugar that are bad such as downing a litre of Coke.
Originally posted by Panacea View PostWe can do far better than candy for snacks.
Originally posted by Panacea View PostWhoa, let's not get too far ahead of ourselves here. There is some evidence that caffeine does these things. However, it is still an addictive product with real downsides. It stimulates the heart, and is not a great thing for heart patients to take too much of.
Caffeine disrupts the process in cancer cells that controls DNA repair. Hence its being studied to pinpoint the mechanism in the hopes of being able to use it to outright murder cancer cells in the body.
As for Parkinson's, not only does caffeine improve symptoms it also slows the onset and progression. Caffeine both confers some protection to the degradation and blocks some of the misfiring signals in the brain.
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Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostObesity in the US is a sort of cruel downward spiral of which food addiction is a rather minor component.
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostI already explained the mechanics of caffeine on the brain and why they're kind of laughable in the face of nicotine addiction -.-
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostIn the US, sugar is still expensive because of your tariffs. That's the problem that lead to the emergence of cheap processed sources.
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostThey're also more filling as they have a better balance of fructose to glucose. Glucose is filling and has a better effect on appetite control factors in the body. While Fructose can actually fark with the brain by causing a brief spike in hunger and has a weaker long term affect on appetite control.
You've greatly oversimplified glucose and where it comes from. While glucose can be synthesized from natural sources, it is actually a metabolite of glycogen. It is metabolized in the body into glucose through a process called glycogneolysis, which occurs primarily in the liver. However, when most of us eat glucose these days, we primarily eat it as a processed sugar; we process it from a variety of sources the most prevalent being corn sources. High fructose corn syrup is 55% fructose and 42% glucose. It's in everything that is a processed food. It is very difficult to find any processed food that does not contain it.
Some vegetables are great sources of natural sugars: beets for example. However, that is sucrose, not fructose or glucose. It's still a processed sugar when we eat it in any form other than as a beet: which most of us do (via cane sugar, mostly). However, sucrose lost ground to high fructose corn syrup due to the tariffs you mentioned, so Americans eat more glucose (and fructose) than sucrose these days because of its presence in so many other things.
Like bread. It blew my mind when I realized HFCS is in bread.
Whether or not fructose "farks up the brain" is not settled. The studies are preliminary. All sugars are considered equally bad when consumed in amounts too high, and there is still a lot of debate over whether HFCS is really worse than sucrose, or vice versa.
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostThe best way to view sugar is as a fuel injector. The brain needs a constant supply, but it needs it at an optimum rate. Too little you starve the engine, too much, you flood it. Hence rate of intake is as important as amount. Which is why things with a lower glycemic index are better because they release sugar more slowly into the system. Its the sudden spikes in blood sugar that are bad such as downing a litre of Coke.
However, if too much glucose remains in the circulatory system the molecule is large enough to injury the tiniest of blood vessels: the capillary beds. Over time, these injuries result in a lack of perfusion to other tissues that create damage to organs, delay healing, and destroys nerves. This is why diabetics lose their toes first; as the furthest from the body, they are most vulnerable to these changes. It is also why diabetics often have cardiac co-morbidities such as MI and congestive heart failure.
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostI think the immediate problem there is people viewing candy as a snack to begin with. Candy is a once and a while treat. >.>
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostI'm not getting ahead of myself. Andara commented that there are typically medical benefits to such substances even in the face of their drawbacks. I pointed out what research has shown about caffeine thus far, which is actually rather promising.
Of course, I'd love to see such a simple and commonly available substance work as billed.Good news! Your insurance company says they'll cover you. Unfortunately, they also say it will be with dirt.
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Originally posted by Panacea View PostThe impact of food addictions is often overlooked. Many obese, particularly the morbidly obese, have significant food addictions that greatly inhibit their ability to control their diets and lose weight.
It's not that such people are addicted to food as much as food is a comfort to those suffering from trauma, and in too many cases, being fat is a defense against unwanted attention.Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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