Philip Morris email

here is the product. you would want to use the caplets along with the spray..you start out taking the caplete at 4 capsules a day for two days ..then three for two days then 2 then one the last two days..after the 8 days are up your done..you are smoke free. the spray is used between the capsules three times a day if you get a urge to smoke you spray some of the spray under your tongue when you want a cig . works like a charm i had stoped smoking three times with it..it worked every single time.
i havnt had a cig in around 7or 8 years or so now.
 
Wow, listen to the smokers wail. I quit when smokes hit the dollar mark, good riddance I say. The goverrnment is just doing you a favor. By taxing cigarettes out of your reach, you will become a much healthier person. See, the government loves it's citizens,~LOL~.
 
Hey well the government spent us into a hole. So they plan on fixing it by taking more of our money.
Fuck those rich gready ass fucks.
Just think about how much money we could save if we let marijuana users out of jail. We could actually keep rapist,child molesters and murderers in jail.
Instead we fill our jails with users and the real scum get out early because of over crowding. Just a rant
 
Yes, but the poor don't...and when the economy is offline, depression sets in and people increase their smoking habits..one of the poor's few pleasures. The Govt. knows this and takes advantage. It doesn't hurt big tobacco because they already raised their prices ahead of the tax.

If the poor were clever, they wouldn't be poor.

out. :blsmoke:
 
Wow, listen to the smokers wail. I quit when smokes hit the dollar mark, good riddance I say. The goverrnment is just doing you a favor. By taxing cigarettes out of your reach, you will become a much healthier person. See, the government loves it's citizens,~LOL~.

Not out of my reach, it's not even the taxes that have pissed me off to the point of quitting. It's the purpose that those taxes are going towards.

If the government was going to say, save those tax dollars (and I mean actually save them, not invest them in worthless the government owes itself IOUs) for use on treating smokers, or redirect them towards cancer research, then I wouldn't have a problem with it.

Instead they are insisting that I subsidize some one else's healthcare.

So, I'm giving them the ultimate fuck you, and quitting, and depriving them of the tax dollars.

41 Left...
 
Exactly why i opted out of social security years ago. The return is about 2%. 2%!!!

As someone should have told Madoff...only the govt. is allowed to run Ponzi schemes...



out. :blsmoke:
 
Not out of my reach, it's not even the taxes that have pissed me off to the point of quitting. It's the purpose that those taxes are going towards.

If the government was going to say, save those tax dollars (and I mean actually save them, not invest them in worthless the government owes itself IOUs) for use on treating smokers, or redirect them towards cancer research, then I wouldn't have a problem with it.

Instead they are insisting that I subsidize some one else's healthcare.

So, I'm giving them the ultimate fuck you, and quitting, and depriving them of the tax dollars.

41 Left...

once they instill a program, it needs to be paid for.
when smoking declined, we seen a soda tax, bottled water tax.
Oh, you will pay...indeed:o
I personaly wouldn't quit anything by force and clearly they have forced your hand. while a healthy choice, its not really your choice now is it?
I wouldn't give them the satisfaction of control :finger:
what, you want to live forever... in 1984?:-P

ways around cig prices. I live in chicago, things fall off trucks all the time, get the word out your looking to buy.
you could buy filter papers and make your own for next to nothing.
http://www.ryotobacco.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=CTGY&Category_Code=troll
 
once they instill a program, it needs to be paid for.
when smoking declined, we seen a soda tax, bottled water tax.
Oh, you will pay...indeed:o
I personaly wouldn't quit anything by force and clearly they have forced your hand. while a healthy choice, its not really your choice now is it?
I wouldn't give them the satisfaction of control :finger:
what, you want to live forever... in 1984?:-P

ways around cig prices. I live in chicago, things fall off trucks all the time, get the word out your looking to buy.
you could buy filter papers and make your own for next to nothing.
http://www.ryotobacco.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=CTGY&Category_Code=troll

Eh, I also have more useful things to do with that money

Cable Internet, and additional investing.
 
Eh, I also have more useful things to do with that money

Cable Internet, and additional investing.

Support the cable bandit and or invest it?
blaa haha you're better off smokin:-P


Dr Gonzo
You're going to need plenty of legal advice before this thing is over. As your attorney, I advise you to rent a very fast car with no top. And you'll need the cocaine. Tape recorder for special music. Acapulco shirts. Get the hell out of L.A. for at least 48 hours.
 
Support the cable bandit and or invest it?
blaa haha you're better off smokin:-P


Dr Gonzo
You're going to need plenty of legal advice before this thing is over. As your attorney, I advise you to rent a very fast car with no top. And you'll need the cocaine. Tape recorder for special music. Acapulco shirts. Get the hell out of L.A. for at least 48 hours.

Time will tell...

Hopefully soon, over 20 months left... ugh, this is worse than having to count down how much I have left on my vehicle.

Though I'm still waiting for the Pontiac G5 the government owes me... oh, wait, that's right, the government didn't lend money to GM on my behalf, it did it on the behalf of the State...

Fucking State...
 
47 hours since I smoked a cig.

They should be taxing the fuck out of perfume and cologne, that shit is actually worse for a person than cigs.

The perfumes that are made today have about 500 to 600 chemical substances in it. The chemicals ethylene glycol monophenyl ether, propanoic acid; methyl anthranilate, isosafrole, cinnamnaldehyde, dimethyl succinate, ethylene glycol diacetate, succinic acid, aniline-D5, T-Butyl alcohol, benzyl chloride, formic acid, methyl formate and many more are used in perfumery. Some chemicals are fixatives, some are solvents and some are for giving synthetic fragrance to the perfume.


There are many other chemicals that are used in making perfumes which are toxic. The toxic chemicals that are found in perfumes for making different fragrances include ethanol, acetone, camphor, toluene, benzaldehyde, formaldehyde, benzyl alcohol, limonene, benzyl acetate, linalool, musk amberette, g-terpinene, musk xylene, beta-phenethyl, musk keytone and methylene chloride.


Ninety to ninety five percent of chemicals that are used today in making perfumes contain petroleum base. The petroleum base chemicals are the toxic chemicals that are on the listed in the list of hazardous wastes of EPA (Environmental Protective Agency). Being injurious to health, these chemicals are highly used in perfumery and are not banned because people enjoy their fragrances.
 
47 hours since I smoked a cig.

They should be taxing the fuck out of perfume and cologne, that shit is actually worse for a person than cigs.

The perfumes that are made today have about 500 to 600 chemical substances in it. The chemicals ethylene glycol monophenyl ether, propanoic acid; methyl anthranilate, isosafrole, cinnamnaldehyde, dimethyl succinate, ethylene glycol diacetate, succinic acid, aniline-D5, T-Butyl alcohol, benzyl chloride, formic acid, methyl formate and many more are used in perfumery. Some chemicals are fixatives, some are solvents and some are for giving synthetic fragrance to the perfume.


There are many other chemicals that are used in making perfumes which are toxic. The toxic chemicals that are found in perfumes for making different fragrances include ethanol, acetone, camphor, toluene, benzaldehyde, formaldehyde, benzyl alcohol, limonene, benzyl acetate, linalool, musk amberette, g-terpinene, musk xylene, beta-phenethyl, musk keytone and methylene chloride.


Ninety to ninety five percent of chemicals that are used today in making perfumes contain petroleum base. The petroleum base chemicals are the toxic chemicals that are on the listed in the list of hazardous wastes of EPA (Environmental Protective Agency). Being injurious to health, these chemicals are highly used in perfumery and are not banned because people enjoy their fragrances.

Well they obviously have a damaging effect on nasal nerves. I mean, what other explanation is there for how much some of those people use?
 
My wife doesn't wear it and neither do I. Funny for men it's called cologne..... uh huh, perfume. try that sometime on the next DUDE you come across wearing "cologne". Nice perfume fella...:lol:
 
once they instill a program, it needs to be paid for.
when smoking declined, we seen a soda tax, bottled water tax.
Oh, you will pay...indeed:o
I personaly wouldn't quit anything by force and clearly they have forced your hand. while a healthy choice, its not really your choice now is it?
I wouldn't give them the satisfaction of control :finger:
what, you want to live forever... in 1984?:-P

ways around cig prices. I live in chicago, things fall off trucks all the time, get the word out your looking to buy.
you could buy filter papers and make your own for next to nothing.
http://www.ryotobacco.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=CTGY&Category_Code=troll


Posted on Mon, Mar. 30, 2009
Smokers fume over higher taxes on cigarettes

By ERIC ADLER
The Kansas City Star Compared with Julie Ginger’s more pressing problem, the tax hike on her Camels hardly seems that big.“Still, it stinks,” said Ginger, a 47-year-old single mom who, after 26 years working for a finance company, will be laid off next week.
On Wednesday, the federal excise tax on every pack of cigarettes will jump from 39 cents to $1.01. That will bring the price of a pack of Marlboros to around $5 in Missouri and even more in Kansas, which has a 62-cent higher state tax.
Ginger began smoking 15 years ago amid a divorce. Maybe the higher lug doesn’t seem like much, she said Monday, taking a drag while on a work break in front of Discount Smoke Shop in Independence. But it adds up.
“I’m not happy about it,” she and other smokers fume.
They are no happier in places with already high state taxes, such as New York, where a pack goes now for around $10 — 50 cents for a single smoke.
Cigars, chewing tobacco and pipe tobacco also will see large federal tax increases.
In the last two months, most major tobacco companies, including R.J. Reynolds and the Altria Group, the owner of Philip Morris USA, already have heaped hefty increases onto the prices of their products — making it likely that smokers already have inhaled their biggest sticker shock.
“We raised our prices in direct response to the federal excise tax increase,” said Bill Phelps, a spokesman for Altria.
The tax revenue, about $32.8 billion over the next 4 1/2 years, will be used to expand the federally funded State Children’s Health Insurance Program. The program gives money to states to provide coverage to children from families too well-off to receive Medicaid, but too poor to afford private insurance.
Smoking has declined steadily in the United States, from about 25 percent of the adult population a decade ago to 20 percent today.
“It will save lives,” Cam Scott of the American Cancer Society in Missouri and Kansas said of the higher taxes. The society estimates that for every 10 percent increase in the price of cigarettes, youth smoking decreases 7 percent and overall smoking decreases 4 percent.
“We know that this tax will prevent nearly 2 million kids from becoming smokers in the United States. One million people will quit,” Scott said.
Some smokers Monday were not interested in quitting.
“I never even heard of this tax till two days ago!” complained Harry Chance, 66, a smoker for 50 years.
So he and his brothers began stockpiling roll-your-own cans of tobacco, the price of which is anticipated to rise more than 300 percent, from about $13 a pound at the smoke shop to nearly $40 after a $26-per-pound tax soon is added.
“I got about 10 or 15 (cans) in the freezer,” Chance said.
Customers have been hoarding for weeks, said smoke shop district manager Jamie Lavanga, “stocking up like it’s a big snowstorm and they’re going to be snowed in for a year.”
One 65-year-old man, a smoker since age 10, echoed a familiar complaint: persecution.
“I don’t drink. I don’t run around. I don’t use drugs. Smoking relaxes me,” he said, insisting that the nicotine in his blood probably prolonged his life by killing bacteria.
Then he offered dubious claim No. 2: “My lungs are probably clearer than yours.”
Karla Boss, 34, of Grain Valley, said the tax comes at the worst time. Her husband, Ron, 37, recently was laid off from his job at a local Ford dealership.
“People are stressed out,” Boss said. “They’re wondering, ‘How am I going to pay the mortgage? How am I going to feed the kids?’ They want to light up a cigarette.”
Boss and her husband tried to see whether they could quit all day Sunday. They began at 8 a.m.
“We were smoking again at noon,” she said.
“I’m not even a smoker, and I think it’s terrible,” Ray Wetstone, 78, said of the tax. He entered the shop with his friend Sarah.
Wetstone, like many others, was convinced that the money probably won’t go to help children: “Ninety percent will just go to overhead. Ten percent will to go the people who need it.”
“They’ve got us everywhere,” Sarah chimed in. No smoking at work anymore. No smoking in restaurants or bars.
But Danny Harness, 67, a retired General Motors worker, said he didn’t mind paying extra for his Winstons.
“I think it’s a good deal,” he said. “It will stop a lot of young people from ever starting smoking.”
Cashier Misty Winfrey, 31, at the Valero gas station and convenience store at 1704 Grand Blvd., already has noticed that customers aren’t buying as many cigarettes as before. Some are sharing packs or buying cheaper brands.
Lavanga agrees, but doesn’t think it will last.
“People say, ‘Because of this I’m going to quit.’ They don’t. They come back.”
To reach Eric Adler, call 816-234-4431 or send e-mail to [email protected].


“I never even heard of this tax till two days ago!” complained Harry Chance, 66, a smoker for 50 years.
So he and his brothers began stockpiling roll-your-own cans of tobacco, the price of which is anticipated to rise more than 300 percent, from about $13 a pound at the smoke shop to nearly $40 after a $26-per-pound tax soon is added.
 
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