BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
Lead occurs naturally in ground water and all living things have been ingesting water with trace amounts of lead in it for millennia. At the risk of being Captain Obvious, it’s likely evolution has caused organisms to adapt to and tolerate lead content as a matter of survival.
There's also trace amounts of asbestos in the air all around us. In this case, asbestos is just a mineral fiber that floats around.
GARTHWILSON wrote:
Without lead, solder tends to crack more easily. Consumer PC accessory boards I've gotten that were RoHS quickly got cracks in the solder connections that had to handle some stress, like an SD-card socket. Re-soldering with leaded solder fixed them, and kept them working.
Lead is extremely ductile. It's like a tree blowing in the wind: it flexes. This is why plumbers caulked cast iron pipe joints with lead: everything in a building moves at least a little bit (from foundation settlement, temperature change, and so on), and the lead in the joint is ductile and moves along with it, instead of cracking.
GARTHWILSON wrote:
I spent years in a boarding school in another country where our water came to us in lead pipes. A high percentage of those kids went on to become doctors and engineers; so I'd say the lead didn't have any negative impact on our brains.
The solution to this concern of lead supply pipes (which was a concern even 100 years ago) was to run the water for a minute or so every morning. It's only a problem when water stands in the lead pipe for hours or days at a time. Also the inside of the lead pipe develops a film or coating from the contents of the water. Once someone has flushed the stale water of out the supply pipes, the risk is greatly reduced.
sburrow wrote:
2) Lead is heavier than air, so lead isn't present in the fumes.
I would double-check the accuracy of this statement if I were you.
barrym95838 wrote:
I think the point the "zealots" may be trying to make is that smoking bans and other things like motorcycle helmet laws are designed to reduce the burden on the health care and insurance systems, to the benefit of all.
These bans on vices, including smoking, are also in a large part motivated by the dependents whose livelihoods are adversely affected, and these dependents have no choice in the matter. In your example, it's second-hand smoke.
AndersNielsen wrote:
sburrow wrote:
1) Folks back in the day lived quite longer than a lot of folks do today, but we are *told* that most people died early by "the experts". We do have antibiotics and other things keeping us alive longer than expected, and honestly just better hygiene in general (i.e. we use soap/disinfectants before surgery). But people back in the day were eating real foods and herbs, and didn't have pharma drugs. The human body is amazingly adaptive to the surrounding environment.
"Folks" most certainly
did not "live quite longer than they do today". Malnutrition was one of the biggest parts of that statistic.
Death by fire (not necessarily an entire building ablaze, but also from kitchen fires) and death by suicide (self-administered poison and gunshots being typical agents) were more common in the past.
People also died from causes that have largely been eliminated in today's environment: it was more common to be killed or injured by livestock such as horses, mules, and cows. Remember that cities too were full of livestock 110+ years ago. Also, with gas lighting, people who had little experience with gas light (maybe they lived in the country, or in a small city without a gasworks) and who stayed in a hotel with gas light would make the mistake of blowing out the flame as if it were just like a candle. But they did not know to turn off the gas key, so they would go to sleep and be asphyxiated by the gas in their closed room.