|
Lukie
|
08-17-2008, 03:51 PM
Post subject: Smoking bans in public places
|
#1 (permalink)
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: back with a vengeance
Posts: 3,307
|
|
Here's a post I've been meaning to make for a while. It's also been a while since we've had a good debate. Ohio has somewhat recently passed a law banning smoking indoors in public places. Many states have similar laws.
I think this is a fantastic law (it's not often I can say that). I mean, it's easy to say 'if you don't like it, leave', but what gives you the right to shit in somebody else's lungs? As I see it, it's an issue of comfort and health.
I am a non-smoker so I may be a little biased, but I'm also a libertarian, generally dislike government, and support many rights which would not personally benefit me.
|
|
|
Play for FREE and practice your game at...
Join the FTR Poker Forum to disable these banners and start posting!
|
|
givememyleg
|
|
WHO YA GONNA CALL?!??
Administrator
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: ISHPERMING MISHIGEN
Posts: 5,042
|
|
I'm a non-smoker, and absolutely hate second hand smoke from cigarettes, but I think banning smoking in public places is wrong. If someone wants to make a restaurant non-smoking, then they should be allowed. However, why should they be forced to make their store/bar/whatever non-smoking?
Another example that recently came up, is the university on my hometown is going to be enforcing a smoking ban next school year. This means you can't have any form of smoke tobacco on campus, or else you get a ticket. I can definitely understand not allowing people to smoke inside the building, and maybe even outside where people walk between classes, but this ban includes even the parking lots and in your own car. You won't be able to go to your car to smoke, you would have to leave campus entirely. Just kind of seems like it's infringing on peoples rights. If people want to smoke and kill themselves, they should be able to do it, no matter how stupid it is... I guess?
But I'll be honest, I love that I can go into a poker room anywhere in the US and never have to smell cigarette smoke.
|

Get your own badge! Click profile at the top and FTR Badge from the left nav.
"The Dragon in My Garage" by Carl Sagan
I say onto you, I've felt the dragon! I felt the touch of his tail, the breath of his fire, and I know without a shadow of a doubt that the dragon exists!
|
|
Ragnar4
|
|
Full House
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Billings, Montana
Posts: 1,284
|
|
Being a nonsmoker and being allergic to smoke I had to give the Law in Washington banning smoking in public places the "slow clap that gets faster".
|
The older I get, the more I start wondering; Just what in the hell is going on here?
|
|
euphoricism
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Your place or my place
Posts: 3,610
|
|
I fucking hate when someone is smoking near me, because it smells like shit. However, I firmly believe he or she has every right to smoke in public, and I also believe it should be 100% up to the business as to whether they will allow smoking or not. It is not the job of our legislators to decide what I do with my business or my body.
That said the dangers of second hand smoke have been grossly overstated and based upon bad misleading data and so I do not particularly worry about that aspect.
Also, I'm not anti-tobacco, as I smoke hookah regularly in my own home.
|
|
|
|
bigspenda73
|
|
Straight Flush
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Pwnsylvania
Posts: 7,546
|
|
The casinos fucked the bars/restaurants in Vegas when I was there with this law.
Some good friends of mine lost their jobs because of it.
|
|
|
|
bigspenda73
|
|
Straight Flush
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Pwnsylvania
Posts: 7,546
|
|
Oh I totally love the law, just think the entire US should ban smoking. It's a filthy disgusting habit.
|
|
|
|
Lukie
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: back with a vengeance
Posts: 3,307
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by bigspenda73
Oh I totally love the law, just think the entire US should ban smoking. It's a filthy disgusting habit.
|
The .gov makes far too much money off of it for this to ever happen. I'm not even arguing that it should be made illegal, just banning it indoors in public places seems about right to me. I agree that it's a filthy discusting habit.
|
|
|
|
BankItDrew
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Losing Prop Bets
Posts: 2,789
|
|
Owners discretion.
|

Girlfriend: Why are the werewolves more important than living life?!
Girlfriend: Are you on the forums doing the werewolves again?
Girlfriend: Soo... you forgot to run that errand, but you had time to werewolf? Wtf?
|
|
Lukie
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: back with a vengeance
Posts: 3,307
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by euphoricism
I fucking hate when someone is smoking near me, because it smells like shit. However, I firmly believe he or she has every right to smoke in public, and I also believe it should be 100% up to the business as to whether they will allow smoking or not. It is not the job of our legislators to decide what I do with my business or my body.
|
Might as well keep it legal in all places then (many states still do this). As a practical matter, you know as well as I do that no bar is going to ban smoking in their establishment if given the choice. Makes terrible business sense. I disagree that everyone should have the right to smoke in public-- it negatively affects the health and comfort of many people arond them.
Quote:
|
That said the dangers of second hand smoke have been grossly overstated and based upon bad misleading data and so I do not particularly worry about that aspect.
|
I've heard this argument many times. Care to offer up any credible sources? I'm not disagreeing you; I'd just like to learn more about the subject.
|
|
|
|
Lukie
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: back with a vengeance
Posts: 3,307
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by BankItDrew
Owners discretion.
|
http://www.scientificblogging.com/gr...pollution.jpeg
|
|
|
|
mrhappy333
|
|
Full House
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Hartford, CT
Posts: 1,078
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by Lukie
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by bigspenda73
Oh I totally love the law, just think the entire US should ban smoking. It's a filthy disgusting habit.
|
The .gov makes far too much money off of it for this to ever happen. I'm not even arguing that it should be made illegal, just banning it indoors in public places seems about right to me. I agree that it's a filthy discusting habit.
|
I feel the same way, but I also am a non smoker.
CT has passed this law a few years ago. Its just awesome to be able to go out to dinner or bars with my friends and not come home smelling like an Ashtray.
The law also states they need to stay 25ft away from entrance and exits to building which never happens.
Now its time to ban smoking on Construction sites!!
|
|
3 3 3 I'm only half evil.
|
|
badgers
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Spewing
Posts: 3,372
|
|
A similar law was recently passed in UK and as a non-smoker it has made pubs and clubs so much nicer to go in and I don't have to come home stinking. Also I think it's much better for the staff. Smokers would probs disagree but whatever I also think it should be banned.
|
3k post - Return of the blog!
|
|
Halv
|
|
pro crastinator
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: No hindsight for the blind.
Posts: 1,842
|
|
Indoor smoking in public places has been banned in Norway since 2004. A bit of an uproar in the beginning but now everyone seem okay with it. Me, I love it.
Fucking smokers!
|
|
|
|
will641
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: getting my swell on
Posts: 1,610
|
|
i think that it should be up to the private business'. i personally hate second hand smoke like everyone else, but i also think it would be hugely hypocritical of me to say that we should ban smoking in public places. i mean if you call yourself a libertarian, my feeling is you should be applying the method or theory or w/e you want to call it of having little to no govt, you should be applying it to all areas and not picking and choosing which ones necessarily convenience you.
|
|
Cash Rules Everything Around Me.
|
|
BankItDrew
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Losing Prop Bets
Posts: 2,789
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by Lukie
|
I was referring to smoking indoors within the walls owned by non-governmental officials within business. I hardly see how posting a link to a picture that depicts owners of vehicles on roads of public property that is outdoors that might contribute to this thread.
If you were me, you might instead reply with the following (a happy smoker n a train):

Take that ! YAY for no relation !
I'm a smoker and I do not approve of the indoor smoking ban of bars and restaurants, etc. I do not feel this way because I am a smoker, I feel this way because rights were taken away from more people than just the smokers - the owners of the establishments. Your rights and my rights should not increase just because we walked into a place with walls surrounding us. The decision of smoking/non-smoking should have continued to be under the approval of the people who own those walls. Maybe their business will suffer, maybe it won't.
Although your point is an unrelated one (I think your point was that: well, look at what happens when we let owners of things decide for themselves), I'll address it partially anyways... If you had your way, the following would take place:
1) You would no longer be allowed to drink alcohol outside of your own home because I am annoyed and stressed out when people who drink turn obnoxious and loud.
2) Country music and Disco would be illegal.
3) No more cup holders or cell phones in cars - cup holders hold drinks that hinder the quality of drivers when used, while cell phones are obvious.
4) The elimination of publicly owned mass transit.
5) No more airplanes owned by those other than the government, actually, we might as well throw in every form of transportation in there.
I know what you're thinking, that I may be getting a little out of hand, going over the top or too far. I am. I need to because otherwise lines are not drawn between personal rights and the rights of the masses.
Maybe I was wrong in my interpretation of the image you posted. Maybe it had nothing to do with the negatives of owners having rights. Maybe you're thinking, "If own a gun, should I have the right to kill you?" My concern is with the morality, which is dependent upon the overall feelings of the group. Now I'm rambling, even after I said I'd be partial.
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by bigspenda73
Oh I totally love the law, just think the entire US should ban smoking. It's a filthy disgusting habit.
|
Are you serious?
First of all, smoking does not decrease the lifespan of everyone. Secondly, I mention this because I want to compare it to something: Online Poker! To most, it's a habit that hurts them financially, sometimes significantly. Which in turn, hurts those around them, especially if the addicted gambler has dipped into the income of his family. If you think that smoking should be banned because it's a 'filthy disgusting habit,' do not for a second think that this and online poker are completely unrelated. Believe it or not, this habit does affect many of the people around the user. Many families have been torn apart because of it. My lifespan would greatly decrease if every night I was woken up in the middle of the night to the noise of a family member banging on their desk with their mouse because they're fucking pissed off at the game. Online poker is an extremely economically negative habit to many of its users and to those around them.
|
|
|
|
allabout
|
|
Flush
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: VA USA
Posts: 277
|
|
[quote="BankItDrew"]
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by Lukie
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by BankItDrew
Owners discretion.
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by bigspenda73
Oh I totally love the law, just think the entire US should ban smoking. It's a filthy disgusting habit.
|
Are you serious?
First of all, smoking does not decrease the lifespan of everyone. Secondly, I mention this because I want to compare it to something: Online Poker! To most, it's a habit that hurts them financially, sometimes significantly. Which in turn, hurts those around them, especially if the addicted gambler has dipped into the income of his family. If you think that smoking should be banned because it's a 'filthy disgusting habit,' do not for a second think that this and online poker are completely unrelated. Believe it or not, this habit does affect many of the people around the user. Many families have been torn apart because of it. My lifespan would greatly decrease if every night I was woken up in the middle of the night to the noise of a family member banging on their desk with their mouse because they're fucking pissed off at the game. Online poker is an extremely economically negative habit to many of its users and to those around them.
|
LOL! Sorry, but its not even close to the same thing. I don't know you, however, if I worked in a restaraunt that you went to often and waited on you while you smoked, you are affecting my quality of life. However, you can gamble all the money you have away and it doesn't affect me at all. And I don't mean this as a personal attack on you or anyone (although a lot of smokers seem to take it personally), but smoking is a habit that affects so many more people than just the smoker. To say that smoking doesn't decrease the lifespan of everyone is kinda laughable at this point in time (with all the research and data etc). Are there people that smoke every day of their life and live to be 90? Sure, but there are far more who start smoking at 14 and are dead or suffering at 40.
|
|
"Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity." - Elmer Letterman
|
|
euphoricism
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Your place or my place
Posts: 3,610
|
|
First I want to say that I believe in the philosophy that your right to swing your fist ends where my chin begins. People DO have the right to not breathe cigarette smoke if they don't want to. And they exercise that right by not going to an establishment that permits smoking. Simple.
I fully agree that it should be up to the business to decide whether they want smoking allowed inside or not. I don't see why they would, smokers are used to standing outside and smoking. But in any case I'm not fine with the government telling a business "YOU can't let YOUR customers smoke inside of a store YOU own on land YOU paid for." That's fundamentally against the spirit of our constitution and the concept of "individual liberty". The government needs to stop being my babysitter, protecting me from the evils of the world.
Quote:
|
As a practical matter, you know as well as I do that no bar is going to ban smoking in their establishment if given the choice. Makes terrible business sense.
|
If non-smokers don't like a smoking bar, they can find another one. It's that simple. If there are a significant number of people who are so bothered by cigarette smoke that they stop going to bars, then an industry of smoke-free bars will pop up and/or smoking bars will change to non-smoking bars. Its not like non-smokers are the minority.
Quote:
|
I've heard this argument many times. Care to offer up any credible sources? I'm not disagreeing you; I'd just like to learn more about the subject.
|
I like Penn & Teller's Bullshit episode on this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKcibsUqN2A
Theres more to that episode but i can only seem to find pieces. See if you can torrent it, it's good.
In any case the basic problems is that the studies that are often quoted (like the 38-year EPA one) treat people who live with a smoker and people who have ever stood next to a smoker as equally likely to get cancer, and they aren't. That is, they're not equal sample populations. Extracting the fact that people who have ingested huge quantities of second hand smoke every day for 15 years get cancer at X rate and then applying it to people who might visit a bar once a month to predict that they'll get cancer at the same rate is absolute foolishness, but that's exactly what they do.
The facts are that we don't have the facts and yet we're acting on rumors and say-so. I'm not saying second hand smoke can't hurt you. I'm saying we just don't know how much and for what length of time, and we should stop making public policy based upon "conventional wisdom". The amount of misinformation is absurd!
I mean look at these two sites I found after just googling "second hand smoke"
Quote:
|
According to the American Cancer society, secondhand smoke is the third leading preventable cause of death in the U.S. It kills some 38,000 to 65,000 yearly(from the Wisconson health center webpage)
|
Quote:
|
Every year environmental smoke (second-hand smoke) kills approximately 53,000 Americans. This is the same number of Americans who died in the Vietnam War! (from the VERY NEXT LINE IN THE SAME PAGE! Which is it?! They don't fucking know because no one fucking knows.)
|
It's all Bullshit! Even the 1994 EPA study says: "[The EPA] estimates that approximately 3,000 American nonsmokers die each year from lung cancer caused by secondhand smoke."
So where did those 58,000 deaths a year come from? Oh, another EPA study from 1997. In short, they don't fucking have a clue.
I think logic dictates that until enough research has been done, cigarette smoking should not be allowed in places frequented by minors. This would include restaurants unless they had a non-smoking section. Adults are capable of making their own choices.
I can understand people who would prefer that the guy behind him stop smoking. I agree, that shit smells terrible. But the answer is not for a police officer to run up and take it from him. The answer is, "Hey, you mind putting that out? Really bothers me. Thanks man." And if he refuses (which i have NEVER had happen and my girlfriend makes me ask everytime someone lights up around her), get up and move.
Again before someone makes claims that im defending smokers, I don't smoke cigarettes, but I do enjoy hookah approximately once a week.
|
|
|
|
euphoricism
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Your place or my place
Posts: 3,610
|
|
From the skeptics magazine webpage:
World Health Organization published a study in 1998 that concluded: "Our results indicate no association between childhood exposure to ETS [environmental tobacco smoke/ Second Hand Smoke] and lung cancer risk." The WHO study also noted that there was only "weak evidence" for a risk of lung cancer from spousal or workplace ETS.
Fact: The study found a Relative Risk (RR) for spousal exposure of 1.16, with a Confidence Interval (CI) of .93 - 1.44. In layman's terms, that means
• Exposure to the ETS from a spouse increases the risk of getting lung cancer by 16%. • Where you'd normally find 100 cases of lung cancer, you'd find 116.
• The 1.16 number is not statistically significant.
|
|
|
|
euphoricism
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Your place or my place
Posts: 3,610
|
|
Same site, doing the math provided by the Bullshit TV show:
here is a 25% higher risk of dying of lung cancer from being regularly exposed to passive smoke. For those regularly exposed to ETS, the death rate from lung cancer is 1 in 80,000. For those not exposed, it is 1 in 100,000. Looked at another way: For every million people exposed to ETS, there will be 12.5 deaths from lung cancer; for every million people not exposed to ETS, there will be 10 deaths due to lung cancer. This is statistically of no significance.
|
|
|
|
drmcboy
|
|
DrButtInski
Administrator
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 9,602
|
|
as a former smoker I think the law is terrible, but it worked out for me because it was right when I was quitting.
as euph says if people actually cared that much there would be a huge market for non smoking bars, there isn't. I have always found that whatever the % of smokers is (I think ~20%?) it goes up well over 50 when you start asking people who hang out in bars. Drinking 6+ beers isn't healthy either.
As for restaurants, they were all heading non smoking anyway so it's kinda a non issue to me.
Either way, vote with your feet. If the club stinks don't go, and feel free to call them and tell them why.
About the only thing I miss about smoking is getting outside more often.
|
|
|
|
mrhappy333
|
|
Full House
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Hartford, CT
Posts: 1,078
|
|
well the good news for smokers is now they all get to congregate outside, so its an easy to pick up the opposite sex, or the same sex if thats how you are.
|
|
3 3 3 I'm only half evil.
|
|
wufwugy
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 1,660
|
|
i am 100% against these laws for the sole reason that the force behind their progress is dishonest. there is definitely need to create and clarify laws regarding smoking, but 'the ends justifies the means' is a false philosophy, and we're all worse off when we allow it to be implemented.
|
|
|
|
will641
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: getting my swell on
Posts: 1,610
|
|
actually euph, penn and teller admitted they were wrong in saying that second hand smoke wasnt dangerous.
|
|
Cash Rules Everything Around Me.
|
|
euphoricism
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Your place or my place
Posts: 3,610
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by will641
actually euph, penn and teller admitted they were wrong in saying that second hand smoke wasnt dangerous.
|
Thats not true but that's how its being spun. All they have agreed in saying is that it seems like in the program they said that the study wasnt "statistically valid" (a 16% increase) when a 16% increase, while *statistically* valid, is still really unimpressive for non smokers living in a smokers household.
|
|
|
|
will641
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: getting my swell on
Posts: 1,610
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by euphoricism
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by will641
actually euph, penn and teller admitted they were wrong in saying that second hand smoke wasnt dangerous.
|
Thats not true but that's how its being spun. All they have agreed in saying is that it seems like in the program they said that the study wasnt "statistically valid" (a 16% increase) when a 16% increase, while *statistically* valid, is still really unimpressive for non smokers living in a smokers household.
|
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nrub3...eature=related
i mean, it seems pretty clear to me that they admit they were wrong.
|
|
Cash Rules Everything Around Me.
|
|
euphoricism
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Your place or my place
Posts: 3,610
|
|
yea ive seen the clip, but re-listen to that thing they don't actually say *anything* useful.
The positions are clarified here:
http://skepdic.com/news/newsletter41.html#retraction
and its basically a semantical argument about the scientific definition of "statistically valid" and the laymans version of "statistically valid". And even if we accept the 3,000 number as "true", why put out the claims of 50,000 plus (which essentially blame second hand smoke for all the heart attacks ever).
It still remains that a 16% increased risk from people who don't smoke but live with heavy smokers is not remotely useful for public policy towards the general populace.
|
|
|
|
wufwugy
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 1,660
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by will641
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by euphoricism
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by will641
actually euph, penn and teller admitted they were wrong in saying that second hand smoke wasnt dangerous.
|
Thats not true but that's how its being spun. All they have agreed in saying is that it seems like in the program they said that the study wasnt "statistically valid" (a 16% increase) when a 16% increase, while *statistically* valid, is still really unimpressive for non smokers living in a smokers household.
|
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nrub3...eature=related
i mean, it seems pretty clear to me that they admit they were wrong.
|
couple things going on here. 1. new research providing a deeper understanding of the issue. 2. public eye isnt quantifying the research accurately.
1. thats how science works. in no field at any time does anybody have 100% of facts. its a progress thing. this very very rarely means that previous research that had strong factual content will later be known to be completely wrong, but that understanding of the facts just gets deeper.
2. the fallacy of equivocation is applicable here. euph already pointed out that growing up in a secondhand smoke environment is not the same as a guy smoking next to you on a bus. the public not understanding the difference (or more like ignoring the difference) is an example of common usage of the fallacy of equivocation
|
|
|
|
bigmikea78
|
|
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 2
|
|
I live in Delaware, which is also a non-smoking state and I think the law is an excellent idea. The only problem is when I travel to states that do not have the same regulations, it is sooo much different, especially when going to AC, NJ.
Personally, as someone who almost lost their father due to cigarettes (he had a heart attack at age 40, smoked 3 packs a day and then quit cold turkey after this heart attack), I think these laws are a good idea, regardless of intent. Simply having a designated non-smoking area is not good enough.
|
|
|
|
will641
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: getting my swell on
Posts: 1,610
|
|
every non smoker will say that they enjoy smoke free area's, thats a given. and yeah, this law conveniences us greatly, but its not right. its like if they say we cant smoke in public areas, next thing you know theyll say you can't smoke on your front porch. why give the government more power to regulate our lives?
after they successfully ban smoking, they'll start telling us we cant fart because farts contain methane which is terribad on the environment because of oh noes global warming!
|
|
Cash Rules Everything Around Me.
|
|
euphoricism
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Your place or my place
Posts: 3,610
|
|
Quote:
|
Personally, as someone who almost lost their father due to cigarettes (he had a heart attack at age 40, smoked 3 packs a day and then quit cold turkey after this heart attack), I think these laws are a good idea, regardless of intent. Simply having a designated non-smoking area is not good enough.
|
Repeat this out loud every day until you believe it: IT IS NOT THE GOVERNMENTS JOB TO PROTECT YOUR FATHER FROM HIMSELF. THATS HIS JOB, AND THATS YOUR JOB.
|
|
|
|
mrhappy333
|
|
Full House
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Hartford, CT
Posts: 1,078
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by will641
every non smoker will say that they enjoy smoke free area's, thats a given. and yeah, this law conveniences us greatly, but its not right. its like if they say we cant smoke in public areas, next thing you know theyll say you can't smoke on your front porch.
|
will ,it's kinda like not being able to drink in public places. like at some beaches, parks, at a museam, in the theater.
|
|
3 3 3 I'm only half evil.
|
|
drmcboy
|
|
DrButtInski
Administrator
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 9,602
|
|
the people who own those places decided on those rules. No one is arguing against the OPTION.
|
|
|
|
wufwugy
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 1,660
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by bigmikea78
I live in Delaware, which is also a non-smoking state and I think the law is an excellent idea. The only problem is when I travel to states that do not have the same regulations, it is sooo much different, especially when going to AC, NJ.
Personally, as someone who almost lost their father due to cigarettes (he had a heart attack at age 40, smoked 3 packs a day and then quit cold turkey after this heart attack), I think these laws are a good idea, regardless of intent. Simply having a designated non-smoking area is not good enough.
|
you logic is exactly that which is used by the adversaries of legal internet poker
|
|
|
|
will641
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: getting my swell on
Posts: 1,610
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by mrhappy333
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by will641
every non smoker will say that they enjoy smoke free area's, thats a given. and yeah, this law conveniences us greatly, but its not right. its like if they say we cant smoke in public areas, next thing you know theyll say you can't smoke on your front porch.
|
will ,it's kinda like not being able to drink in public places. like at some beaches, parks, at a museam, in the theater.
|
yes its exactly like that. its absurd that you cant walk around drinking or be drinking in a park. at the very least there should be parks where you can drink at.
|
|
Cash Rules Everything Around Me.
|
|
mrhappy333
|
|
Full House
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Hartford, CT
Posts: 1,078
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by will641
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by mrhappy333
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by will641
every non smoker will say that they enjoy smoke free area's, thats a given. and yeah, this law conveniences us greatly, but its not right. its like if they say we cant smoke in public areas, next thing you know theyll say you can't smoke on your front porch.
|
will ,it's kinda like not being able to drink in public places. like at some beaches, parks, at a museam, in the theater.
|
yes its exactly like that. its absurd that you cant walk around drinking or be drinking in a park. at the very least there should be parks where you can drink at.
|
werd up!
Holla!
|
|
3 3 3 I'm only half evil.
|
|
dick_pump
|
|
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 24
|
|
im all for a smoking ban..but whats public,should stay that way. its only a law cuz a bunch of assholes dont know when to say when...(its afree country,ill do what i want)..thats the kind of thinking that ruins everything...and there are a lot of people that feel that way.
i smoke.. but i dont smoke to piss peeps off...
if someone is bothered by it,i move...
or ill put it out..
i can smoke any time i want.i choose not to smoke around people who dont. cuz its polite...i have manners. unlike the majority of america....
imo
|
|
|
|
DrivingDog
|
|
Full House
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: UK
Posts: 923
|
|
I smoke and the ban doesn't bother me. I believe other people's right to clean air is more important than my nasty stupid addiction. If I worked in a bar i wouldn't want to be breathing in a carton of second hand smoke every night.
|
|
"You can fool some of the people all of the time, and those are the ones you want to concentrate on." (George Bush).
|
|
gabe
|
|
Moderator
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: trying to live
Posts: 7,964
|
|
restaurants should be allowed to allow smoking. anything else is simply UNAMERICAN.
im not a smoker though and i dont like when people are smoking near me when im sober.
|
|
|
|
2_Thumbs_Up
|
|
Flush
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Sweden
Posts: 271
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by gabe
restaurants should be allowed to allow smoking. anything else is simply UNAMERICAN.
|
America is pretty unamerican these days.
|
|
|
|
mrhappy333
|
|
Full House
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Hartford, CT
Posts: 1,078
|
|
It's a Free country as long as you do what your told.
|
|
3 3 3 I'm only half evil.
|
|
bigred
|
|
PROFESSIONAL TROLL
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Nest of Douchebags
Posts: 2,184
|
|
How is banning smoking in public places unamerican?
America is all about pursuing happiness while not negatively affecting other people who are also trying to pursue happiness. This is why murder, rape, and dwarfashacking are all illegal. Public smoking negatively affects others. Maybe not your average person but small children, older people, and people with breathing problems shouldn't be at risk because some dbag gave into peer pressure in high school and is now addicted.
Insert super exaggeration conclusion here to keep in theme of this thread: Banning slavery was viewed as unamerican too
|
|
LOL OPERATIONS
|
|
2_Thumbs_Up
|
|
Flush
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Sweden
Posts: 271
|
|
Why is it not the property owners decision? I choose if someone can smoke in my home. If people don't like that then they shouldn't be at my place.
|
|
|
|
ProZachNation
|
|
Full House
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Over there!
Posts: 801
|
|
I think it is bullshit that the government can ban smoking in private businesses absolute tyrannical horse shit.
if a business wants to allow smoking then people who hate it can go to a business that decides to ban smoking, it is win win.
What if I decide people with eye brow piercing gross me out and ruin my day. Should the government be able to ban people wearing eyebrow piercings.
People allow government infringement so easily.
ohh and I do not smoke (unless I am shit faced sometimes I do then but that is only because I am trying to hide the fact that I am outside to puke)
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by mrhappy333
I didn't think its Bold to bang some chick with my bro. but i guess so... thats +EV in my book.
|
|
|
bigred
|
|
PROFESSIONAL TROLL
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Nest of Douchebags
Posts: 2,184
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by ProZachNation
I think it is bullshit that the government can ban smoking in private businesses absolute tyrannical horse shit.
if a business wants to allow smoking then people who hate it can go to a business that decides to ban smoking, it is win win.
What if I decide people with eye brow piercing gross me out and ruin my day. Should the government be able to ban people wearing eyebrow piercings.
People allow government infringement so easily.
ohh and I do not smoke (unless I am shit faced sometimes I do then but that is only because I am trying to hide the fact that I am outside to puke)
|
Eyebrow piercing can't give the person sitting next to you cancer...or can it
|
|
LOL OPERATIONS
|
|
ProZachNation
|
|
Full House
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Over there!
Posts: 801
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by bigred
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by ProZachNation
I think it is bullshit that the government can ban smoking in private businesses absolute tyrannical horse shit.
if a business wants to allow smoking then people who hate it can go to a business that decides to ban smoking, it is win win.
What if I decide people with eye brow piercing gross me out and ruin my day. Should the government be able to ban people wearing eyebrow piercings.
People allow government infringement so easily.
ohh and I do not smoke (unless I am shit faced sometimes I do then but that is only because I am trying to hide the fact that I am outside to puke)
|
Eyebrow piercing can't give the person sitting next to you cancer...or can it
|
It doesn't GIVE you cancer it is linked!! Big difference (not really)
I still stand by my argument of separate but equal, hey it worked before it can work again.
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by mrhappy333
I didn't think its Bold to bang some chick with my bro. but i guess so... thats +EV in my book.
|
|
|
dick_pump
|
|
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 24
|
|

|
|
|
|
Galapogos
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: The Loser's Lounge
Posts: 2,322
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by 2_Thumbs_Up
Why is it not the property owners decision? I choose if someone can smoke in my home. If people don't like that then they shouldn't be at my place.
|
It's illegal to have an unsanitary prep area in their establishments because that has been deemed unhealthy. Is it not a good idea to have such a rule in place instead of saying they can make food with as much fecal matter in it as they want? Yeah I know you can see smoking but not always a dirty kitchen but I'm sure there's an example that's a more accurate comparison but you get the drift.
And people that think if there's such a demand for non-smoking establishments that one should be made, it doesn't work like that. That's cutting out a huge part of your market. Every non-smoker isn't going to come flooding your way. They're still going to eat where the food/crowd/drinks/entertainment is good.
|

Quote:
|
Originally Posted by sauce123
I don't get why you insist on stacking off with like jack high all the time.
|
|
|
Jack Sawyer
|
|
4-of-a-Kind
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Old School
Posts: 2,535
|
|
yay American freedom
and yes, I dislike second hand smoke, but I dislike this law even more.
|
My dream... is to fly... over the rainbow... so high...

Quote:
|
VHS is like a book and a book is like a stack of kindles.
|
Hey, I'm in a movie!
http://youtu.be/lGdnIrRKDTI
|
|
ProZachNation
|
|
Full House
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Over there!
Posts: 801
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by Galapogos
And people that think if there's such a demand for non-smoking establishments that one should be made, it doesn't work like that. That's cutting out a huge part of your market. Every non-smoker isn't going to come flooding your way. They're still going to eat where the food/crowd/drinks/entertainment is good.
|
Well then to bad, if it makes you that upset wear a gas mask when you leave your house.
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by mrhappy333
I didn't think its Bold to bang some chick with my bro. but i guess so... thats +EV in my book.
|
|
|
2_Thumbs_Up
|
|
Flush
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Sweden
Posts: 271
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by Galapogos
And people that think if there's such a demand for non-smoking establishments that one should be made, it doesn't work like that.
|
Obviously it does work like that. It's just that the demand isn't high enough for it to happen in bars. In restaurants where demand for smoke free areas are higher you'll see it even without a law. You said it yourself. People sometimes prioritize other things such as crowd and entertainment above non-smoking areas. That's their own choice.
|
|
|