|
True Colloidal Silver - The purest silver supplement available Clean indoor air affects people like you. Here are some of their stories. Each testimonial video is available for viewing in RealPlayer, Windows Media, or Quicktime formats. All videos pop up in a new window. Evan Chan Watch Movie RealPlayer | WinMedia | Quicktime Participant of the Community Adult Mentoring Project (CAM), a program of Asian Services in Action, Inc. Transcript: "In the past I can do stuff like basketball, soccer ... really well. But since I have asthma I can't do really good in those sports. I have to be really careful about what I am doing and I have to stay away from smokers. And I have to take care of myself." Kenelle Hughley Watch Movie RealPlayer | WinMedia | Quicktime Transcript: "Everyone has the right to clean indoor air. When you're smoking, you're taking away from everybody's breathing capabilities. Especially in places such as the IX Center where you have your smoking area, but it's not like the smoke is just going to stop at some kind of boundary or something like that. You're still contaminating everyone else's air. So the idea of Clean Indoor Air is very good. Recently when we were out in a smoky environment my mother got very sick. She was nauseous and dizzy. And I was heartbroken because there was nothing that I could do. I was looking around at everybody smoking and I got very upset." Stacey (and Emma) Bene Watch Movie RealPlayer | WinMedia | Quicktime Transcript: "I love being a mom, it's by far the most important job that I have. And like most mothers I worry about my daughter's health when exposed to secondhand smoke. However, I have another concern as well, that Emma will soon be without a mommy. I'm living with cystic fibrosis, which is a chronic, progressive, and terminal lung disease. I cannot tolerate secondhand smoke, exposure will shorten my life and I have way too much to live for. When you chose to smoke in public spaces, please remind yourself of those that you harm. Emma and I cannot choose the air that we breathe, but you can choose where you decide to smoke. Please help Emma keep her mommy around as long as possible." Al Kenneda Watch Movie RealPlayer | WinMedia | Quicktime Transcript: "I'm with the Cleveland Lost Chord Club. And I wish everybody had never smoked or ever been exposed to it. The principle behind that is the layrngectomy that I've had, the heart bypass surgery, who knows what else is coming as a result. Of all the layrngectomies that our men have been exposed to, about 90% did smoke, about 10% somebody else smoked. And they have the same thing I have and they never smoked." Alicia Sokol Watch Movie RealPlayer | WinMedia | Quicktime Transcript: "I think a clean indoor air law would really give Cleveland a chance to set itself apart. Especially considering Ohio has such a high rate of smoking, it would really say a lot about our state and our city, that we are committed to giving people clean indoor spaces to work and to socialize and to spend their free time." Bianca Hill Watch Movie RealPlayer | WinMedia | Quicktime Transcript: "I have a younger brother who is five years old and he has asthma and I don't like him being around smoke. So I would like him to go to a restaurant and be able to breathe freely, free of smoke, and free of any chemicals in the air. And my my older brother, has asthma also, and he needs to be around clean air because he's allergic to everything." Dr. Derek Raghavan, M.D., Ph.D. Watch Movie RealPlayer | WinMedia | Quicktime Director, Cleveland Clinic Taussig Cancer Center Transcript: "Hi, I'm director of the Cleveland Clinic's Taussig Cancer Center. People often ask me, 'How do you reduce the chance of getting cancer?' Should you change diets? Should you do a bunch of clever things? Should you take medicines?' And there's one really simple answer: "To reduce cancer in our community and stop killing people, you need to stop cigarette smoking. The worst type is people who smoke for themselves. The second-worst type is people who smoke and kill other people through passive, secondhand smoke. "Smoking causes lung cancer, throat cancer, stomach cancer, bladder cancer, and probably makes the chance of prostate cancer a bit higher. It's a really filthy, bad, evil habit and gives profits to people who shouldn't get them. Really, the easiest way to cut down cancer is to stop smoking and put people like me out of business."
|