your homes because of the materials it’s built from.
your own Kitchen because of cleaning products.
your yard because of the insecticides you spray.
your car because of the materials used in the upholstery and the fumes that come into your car while driving.
Nowhere outside because of the pollution due to gas/diesel engines.
See chart. http://www.burningissues.org/comp-emmis-part-sources.htm
Ignore the fact that the EPA Report was vacated as fraudulent.
Ignore over 250+ studies showing no harm from SHS.
They don’t tell us that living close to major traffic hi-ways or large Urban areas increase the incidence of Cancer or Heart Disease by 50% or more.
Ignore the businesses going broke across the Country because of Bans.
We do have, agencies using misinformation to control others for profit not health.
Smoking Studies.
http://encyclopedia.smokersclub.com/163.html
VirgilLof KY8:08AM April 07, 2009
CBP, you asked, "Why take a chance on even a "modesk risk"?
A modest risk? You call something that's 87,000 times as deadly as secondhand smoke a "modest risk" ?
Of course the FDA and the companies won't even admit that a "modest risk" exists... although they'll jump all over those wisps of smoke.
People need to restore some balance in their thinking about just what "risk" means in life. Our social mores and our fears and lifestyles are being driven by advertising campaigns and yellow journalism rather than by common sense.
Michael J. McFadden
Author of "Dissecting Antismokers' Brains"
Michael J. McFaddenof PA1:37AM March 22, 2009
These children are our future! Why take a chance on even a "modesk risk"? If some companies can make products without formaldahyde, then they all can.
Geri Gowersof SC12:47PM March 19, 2009
This is so sad! The FDA should be doing more to protect our children. Fortunately there are options out there. I get my natural & environmentally-friendly products at http://www.d3plaza.com.
Rob Gibsonof MD11:18PM March 15, 2009
Now that you have added to the false alarm, you have an obligation to also alert your readers to an updated story in today's Washington Post, headlined: "Review Finds Modest Risk from Children's Toiletries"
According to this story in the Wash. Post, they found formaldehyde concentrations in baby shampoo of up to 610 parts per million(ppm). This was described as "tiny" or "low" amounts of the chemical.
But let's consider a rather small (400 cubic meters) and relatively poorly ventilated (6 air-changes/hour) restaurant, with 30 customers, ten of whom light up twice per hour. Would you be worried about taking a child there after all the frightening ads and news stories about things like formaldehyde in cigarette smoke? You'd probably whisk your baby out of there faster than a waiter could pick up a tip.
According to the Surgeon General's figures those ten smokers will emit a total of 17 mg of formaldehyde into the air per hour. That formaldehyde is diluted in 2400 cubic meters of air, giving a concentration of .007ppm.
That "deadly threat" you'd normally whisk your child away from is 87,000 times safer (at least in terms of formaldehyde) than the baby shampoos described as having "tiny" or "low" levels of formaldehyde. Of course smoke has other chemicals as well, but their "threat concentrations" according to the EPA are usually significantly less than formaldehyde.
Meanwhile the FDA now wants to vastly stretch its workload to include regulating tobacco. There's clearly a problem here. Either the threat of wisps of airborne smoke have been greatly exaggerated, or the 87,000 times more deadly baby shampoos should have wiped out virtually every child in America. In either case, adding tobacco regulation to the FDA's workload seems like rather a bad idea.
Reference: 1979/1986 SG Reports, 1999 Massachusetts Benchmark Study: .856 mcg/cigarette total formaldehyde emissions, sidestream and mainstream (multiplied by 20 cigarettes per hour to equal 17 mg emissions per hour) A similar full analysis for a "small smoky bar" can be seen near the bottom of:
http://www.antibrains.com/shs.html
As you'll see, the formaldehyde concentrations in smoky air are actually far greater in terms of EPA safety levels than those of many of the other "deadly chemicals" you've heard about in secondhand smoke (note the last column showing the numbers of cigarettes needed to reach those levels)... so this is most certainly NOT a case of "cherry picking."
Michael J. McFadden
Author of "Dissecting Antismokers' Brains"
Michael J. McFaddenof PA7:11PM March 13, 2009
Jonson and Johnson's baby shampoo? Wow, this is a real eye opener, for something marketed as "gentle". This will change my purchase behavior.
Perleof CT6:53PM March 13, 2009
Interesting bit of news. Organic can not be that difficult to locate. Wonder how the manufacturers are able to convince USDA not to demand full labeling when know dangerous indgidents directly or indirectly are part of the chemical makeup of consumer goods. Why can't the major brand companies market products that are 100% safe for consumers, especially for the young?
"Organic" is a byword for higher pricing, manufacturers should be looking into improving the bottom line and provide safe products for consumers. Seems like a win-win situation.
Norron Lee, Srof MA8:22PM March 12, 2009
What a lousy piece of reporting. What levels are being found in these products? What are the toxicity profiles of 1.4-dioxane and formaldehyde? Does the reporter even know the scope of 'contaminated' within this context?
I doubt it.
Rather than parroting what some [possibly well-intentioned] group hands you as a press release, do some real reporting that describes what this really means. It could be that the Campaign for Safe Cosmetic Use is backed by money that makes their allegations suspect.
Helena Rubensteinof KY7:10PM March 12, 2009
What a lousy piece of reporting. What levels are being found in these products? What are the toxicity profiles of 1.4-dioxane and formaldehyde? Does the reporter even know the scope of 'contaminated' within this context?
I doubt it.
Rather than parroting what some [possibly well-intentioned] group hands you as a press release, do some real reporting that describes what this really means. It could be that the Campaign for Safe Cosmetic Use is backed by money that makes their allegations suspect.
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VirgilL of KY 8:08AM April 07, 2009
Michael J. McFadden of PA 1:37AM March 22, 2009
Geri Gowers of SC 12:47PM March 19, 2009
Rob Gibson of MD 11:18PM March 15, 2009
Ann Shannon of NJ 11:00AM March 14, 2009
Michael J. McFadden of PA 7:11PM March 13, 2009
Perle of CT 6:53PM March 13, 2009
Norron Lee, Sr of MA 8:22PM March 12, 2009
Helena Rubenstein of KY 7:10PM March 12, 2009
Helena Rubenstein of IL 7:10PM March 12, 2009