Don’t kick your butts to the curb!

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I smoked cigarettes for many years, more than I care to recount here.  I finally slew the nicodemon about 6 years ago, and it was one of the best things I ever did.  When I think of all those times I exposed my critters and non smoking friends and family to second hand smoke and cigarette butts I am ashamed.

Now, however, I am a ruthless and passionate anti-smoker.  I cough vigorously when I walk by the nic monsters sucking smoke in front Wal-Mart and the movie theater.  Just last week I saw a slack jawed South Georgia inbred, about 6 months pregnant, puffing away in front of the Pizza Hut.  I could barely restrain myself from making a remark but I knew that what I said would make no difference to the illiterate swamp breeder so I just let it pass, but the vision will forever remain with me.

Fortunately for the non-smokers, now well in the majority, at least 20 states are planning on enacting serious smoking bans and plan to have them in place by 2013.

The smoke, however, is not the only killer.  The butt is also full of toxins and poisons that can be ingested by children and animals and how often have you seen an inhaler simply toss the butt without regard to where it lands?  I know about it because I used to be one of those people.

There is hope, however, and you can read about it here:

Each year more than 360 billion cigarettes are smoked in the United States. Where do all those butts go? Public roads, waterways, parks and beaches. New research released today further demonstrates the negative impact that cigarette filters and discarded cigarette butts have on the environment. Cigarette butts contain heavy metals that can leach into waterways, posing a threat to aquatic life. The new data is part of a special supplement – funded by the national public health foundation Legacy® – in the journal Tobacco Control. In observance of Earth Day, Legacy urges smokers to quit smoking, and if they can’t, to properly dispose of cigarette butts and filters.

Tobacco is the No. 1 cause of preventable death in the United States, and cigarette filters/butts are the No. 1 littered item found on beaches and in urban environments. According to environmental cleanup reports, nearly 2 million cigarettes or cigarette filters/butts were picked up internationally from beaches and inland waterways as part of the annual International Coastal Cleanup in 2010. This number includes more than one million from the United States alone, underscoring the fact that cigarette butts play a major role in polluting the already taxed environment.

According to the new research, cigarette butts have potentially toxic effects on ecosystems, for example, in one laboratory test, one cigarette butt soaked in a liter of water was lethal to half of the fish exposed. Some other new research findings include:

    Poison centers report hundreds of cases of cigarette butt consumption among children under 6 years old, with some cases of moderate toxicity due to nicotine poisoning.

    Tobacco products are the single largest type of litter collected along US roadways and on beaches.Tobacco industry research reveals that there might be misconceptions that cigarette filters are readily biodegradable or inconsequential as litter. However, in reality, even under ideal conditions, cigarette butts can take years to degrade, merely breaking up into small particles of plastic, toxic waste. 

    Cigarette litter clean-up costs can be substantial to local authorities.

“This special supplement brings together the currently known science about cigarette butt waste and sets the stage for a new research agenda – one focused both on preserving our environment and protecting our public health,” said Cheryl G. Healton, Dr. PH, President and CEO of Legacy. “Cigarette butts comprise approximately 38 percent of all collected litter items from roads and streets—the carcinogenic chemicals that they contain make their use the leading cause of preventable death worldwide, yet they are commonly, unconsciously, and inexcusably dumped by the trillions (5.6 and counting) into the global environment each year.”

Tobacco litter is not only an eyesore, but clean-up costs to cities can be substantial. An economic study based on a litter audit in San Francisco, California, found the clean-up cost to be more than $5.6 million annually. In an effort to reduce that cost, the San Francisco City Council imposed a 20 cent per pack “litter fee” on cigarettes sold in the city in 2009.

Additionally, there is growing momentum in cities, counties and municipalities to pass laws keeping cigarettes out of parks and beaches. As of April 1, 2011, 507 municipalities across the country have prohibited smoking in their parks and 105 have passed laws prohibiting smoking on public beaches in an effort to reduce the impact that cigarette butt waste has on their communities.

Still smoke?  Quit!  If I can anyone can, so make this the most memorable Easter ever, and throw away those “butts’ for good!

Many thanks to our friends at World Wire for the quoted text.

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About Post Author

Professor Mike

Professor Mike is a left-leaning, dog loving, political junkie. He has written dozens of articles for Substack, Medium, Simily, and Tribel. Professor Mike has been published at Smerconish.com, among others. He is a strong proponent of the environment, and a passionate protector of animals. In addition he is a fierce anti-Trumper. Take a moment and share his work.
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Marget Krall
10 years ago

Severe deficiency of niacin in the diet causes the disease pellagra, which is characterized by diarrhea, dermatitis, and dementia, as well as “Casal’s necklace” lesions on the lower neck, hyperpigmentation, thickening of the skin, inflammation of the mouth and tongue, digestive disturbances, amnesia, delirium, and eventually death, if left untreated.

jenny40
13 years ago

My father smoked himself to death. I hate those damn things and I won’t listen to the contrary. Thanks for this article.

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