11-08-2006, 06:48 AM | #121 (permalink) | |||||||
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It gives workers the right to notify their employer or OSHA about workplace hazards. It gives them the right to request an OSHA inspection of their workplace It gives them the right to protection from employer discrimination if they exercise their other rights. It gives them the right to see OSHA citations issued to their employer. And it requires the employer to correct violations found by OSHA. If you don't believe me, go to work. There should be a poster in the breakroom (or somewhere public) outlining these rights. If there's not, that too is an OSHA violation. Quote:
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If you really want to eat it, and you're bringing your own (so it doesn't contaminate my regular pasta) I really don't care. That's your choice. Quote:
Again, we get to the workplace safety issue. Workers cannot choose whether or not to be exposed to that cigarette smoke. You might have a case if the employer made gas masks available to his employees so they don't have to breathe that crap in, but we both know that would be silly even if it did happen. |
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11-08-2006, 07:52 AM | #122 (permalink) |
Crazy
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I've been looking into a few things here and I have to say, I'm getting more and more convinced that the real argument for about half the people on this thread have now is, "how much control over our lives should government have." While the other half are still arguing, "smoking is bad for me so I don't do it and you shouldn't be able to make me." While the parallels are there, the issues really aren't connected. Smoking in this case is more of an example of how government is trying to control our lives rather than the issue of concern, for some, and I suppose I am becoming one of those.
Smoking is horrible. If you can, STOP. See my perfume example above, non smokers do stink and make people sick. They just don't see that smelling themselves up is actually causing harm to others. The response to my question proves the non-smoker's argument in this case is right. Other people will never actually be courteous and respectful of others needs without external controls to the issue. You know there is a significant number of people that develop illnesses ranging from a skin rash to asthma attacks due to this entirely unnecessary practice, yet unless some actually DIES from it, there is no need to expect people to stop swimming around in that crud. Hurting people doesn't count apparently as harming them. I am a subscriber to the harm principle which is basically that no part of my freedoms should ever be curtailed unless not curtailing my ability to practice my freedoms would harm another person. This means that yes, I do believe that laws not specifically designed to protect should not exist. Cities that lower the speed limit on low traffic wide roads for the sole purpose of gathering more revenue for the city by encouraging breaking that unreasonable and often unexpected speed limit, without need, piss me off. Laws should be for protection ONLY. This is where we come into conflict. Whose rights do we protect and whose safety do we ensure? We have to protect everyone. Smoking bans on public places must be in place because smoking is dangerous, being in an enclosed area with a smoker is dangerous, and therefore laws need to be in place to protect against that danger. Now to the more complex problem, are privately owned restaraunts and bars public? Not really. They are, by definition, privately owned. There is an expectation that a large portion of the public population will be present there, but they are in fact PRIVATELY OWNED PROPERTY. Publicly accessible does not mean the same as public property. It is typically believed that working is not a right. It is good for society to have our citizens working, but it is not a right. If my smoking is not a right and therefore there should be no laws in place to protect me from unreasonable bans on that right, then the same MUST be said of workers, because frankly their right to work is not any more guaranteed than my right to smoke, though it is more widely valued. I hold by my statement that we must take care how much we allow the government to control behaviors. We will be instruments of our own loss of liberties. I do want to note here that my stance changes if we are discussing whether or not it is better for the public to limit where I can smoke. I am discussing here only the extent of governmental controls over behavior that I am comfortable with. I KNOW it is better for the public at large if I don't smoke in public. Even before the bans went into place I did not sit in the smoking section of restaraunts. I tried to stay away from those areas where people were forced to walk very close to me in order to get into an establishment. I think it is very important that we, as citizens, try to respect each others needs and wants, even when we don't share those wants.
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~~^~<@Xera @>~^~~ "A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing." ~Erno Philips
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11-08-2006, 08:12 AM | #123 (permalink) | ||||||||||
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
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Workers can choose. They can leave. They can seek other employment. There. is. no. force. Quote:
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Smoking? That's a lot more feasible as far as warnings go.
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I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. Last edited by FoolThemAll; 11-08-2006 at 08:23 AM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
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11-08-2006, 09:08 AM | #124 (permalink) | ||||||||||
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I think yesterday's nationwide voting on various gay marriage bans is atrocious but I'm apparently in the minority. I have to accept that and move on, even though that really IS a human rights issue, whereas yours is a minority convenience issue. You don't want to get up and walk all the way to the door to have a cigarette. You're not BANNED from having a cigarette. You can smoke all you want. Just not where you will harm others. Analog called it at the beginning. This argument is a bunch of smokers who want to smoke in public despite knowing they are hurting everyone around them with their habit. It's not only an indefensible argument, it's inexcusable as well. |
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11-08-2006, 09:10 AM | #125 (permalink) | |||||||
Tilted
Location: Washington
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""I also assume that you think smokers imply this "I really don't give a crap if you get cancer" when you go around them and they don't immedietly put out their cigarette."" Quote:
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""Smokers don't want to smoke around you. You want to be around smokers in privately owned public places. This is the argument you keep avoiding. You are forcing your self unto them in their space. Anti-smokers and Non-smokers are different. For example: you are an Anti-smoker I am a Non-Smoker please try to keep this in mind."" Changing gears. ""Hey let's qoute some more single sentences out of the middle of a paragraph shakran, qouting people's arguements out of context is fun for debate! Watch."" Quote:
""See it's stupidly easy to make an airtight argument in this way. I am completly right on my point but you were never arguing my right to smoke in my home so my retort is false as much of your counter arguments are false in this same way."" Shakran you seem firm on this subject yet you still don't have any arguments with an ounce of validity for any three of my main points. Which are: 1. Business owners should have the right to choose if smoking tobacco goes on on their property. 2. Anti-smokers and Non-Smokers have the ability to stay away from smokers indoors in non privately owned buildings. 3. Anti-smokers and Non-Smokers are not forced to enter buildings where smoking is allowed. ""Because these three arguments are true: the smoking ban is a law that is unjustified and takes away ones right to choose for him self, this includes you my freind shakran."" ""Shakran you can dance all day with chemicals in rivers and grammar corrections all while mis qouting me. All you're doing is drawing attention (maybe your own attention) away from the truth. Which is that you have no argument for the smoking ban. While I have kept firm to my points you have jumped ship on many of yours. Your points become increasingly indirect and vague.""
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I'm sitting at my desk right now waiting for you to reply to the above message. Last edited by DaElf; 11-08-2006 at 09:19 AM.. |
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11-08-2006, 09:29 AM | #126 (permalink) |
pigglet pigglet
Location: Locash
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it looks to me like this all hinges on the private/public portion of the business owner's location. i'm looking into this now, perhaps an attourney can answer it lickedly split like, but it seems that a private business run in an area zoned for commercial real estate, where the public is explicitly invited to enter, is considered more of a hybrid entity between a private residential area, and a public government building or park area. in conjunction with this, these businesses have to conform to certain public regulations and safety codes. not by means of disclosure, but by means of eliminating certain hazards. this isn't about someone telling granny that she can't smoke in her house while she knits sweaters to sell on ebay. i don't understand what's so mystifying about the public interest when it involves the production of airborn carcinogens and biological materials that clog the airways and lungs of passersby. i think the worker safety aspect may be the strongest, easiest place to see this; but i think you can make a legal argument based solely on public health nuissance.
i just hope that i can go down to my local tobacconist / bar that sells actual beer and ale, have myself a pipe and a pale ale in the company of likeminded people who have specifically chosen that environement. i'm thinking that license for public use of tobacco products should enable that. wash, rinse, repeat.
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You don't love me, you just love my piggy style |
11-08-2006, 09:35 AM | #127 (permalink) | |
Tilted
Location: Washington
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I'm sitting at my desk right now waiting for you to reply to the above message. |
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11-08-2006, 09:47 AM | #128 (permalink) |
Lennonite Priest
Location: Mansfield, Ohio USA
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It's a moot point here in Ohio now. The voters spoke overwhelmingly and smoking lost.
What I find interesting is that issue 18 in Cleveland passed (it adds a 40 cent per pack tax to support the museums), however, you are not allowed to smoke anywhere in public now. Plus, Issue 5 (makes smoking illegal in any workplace) sets up a "clean air fund" that adds a "not yet determined tax" to packs. So it proves my point, to non-smokers they truly cannot live without the taxes, they want the taxes they leech off the taxes, but don't "pollute" their air. So let's say we smokers start quitting or buying on the black market, from the internet, Indian reservations etc. What's going to happen to these places that need our money? Something else will have to be taxed the way cigarettes are to make up for the lost revenue. What will it be? Coffee? I can't stand the smell of coffee, how many road ragers are hopped up on caffeine? Why do I have to smell the noxious fumes of coffee? Fast food? I don't like McDonald's or the others, the smell pollutes the air in the neighborhoods with a stench brought by their deep fryers that have been said to create carcinogens.... and they subject primarily high school employees to this. Now, the businessman in me sees this as a huge money making chance. I open a smoking club costs members $50/year to get in, I allow smoking and I make sure we are a happening club. And I make it a hot nightclub and I get non-smokers wanting in but I deny them, I'm sure lawsuits will ensue for discrimination. Or I allow non-smokers to join and they start suing because I allow smoking, in, imagine this.... "a smoker's club". Oh wait, Issue 5 made sure that can't happen because it's still a workplace and even if all my employees are smokers, it's illegal. So I use club members and reduce their membership rates and pay them under the table. So why don't we just make these evil things illegal? You don't want them anywhere, we are pariahs, you use our taxes and raise them but refuse to find some form of middle ground to cohabilitate. You can't make them illegal and when the numbers of smokers decrease to where the tax revenue is seriously hurt, see how fast the tide on smoking changes. The medical healthcare industry alone makes BILLIONS upon BILLIONS on smokers, do you really think they are going to allow you to stop smoking? But today, it is a moot point. It's cool.... but in the end you just gave up rights of business owners and people. Whether you recognize or admit it, you did. And these power hungry people won't stop at smoking, power hungry people never stop. Once they get a taste of that power and see how and what blueprint to use to take rights away..... they are going to keep going, because in the end this was all about having power over someone else.... Congratulations, just hope and pray you aren't next.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?" Last edited by pan6467; 11-08-2006 at 09:51 AM.. |
11-08-2006, 09:49 AM | #129 (permalink) | |||||||||
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
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2. Nah, that's okay, I prefer the 'leave my private property if you don't like it' option. [quote]Correct, because it's already true. The hope is that if we repeat it in just the right way, you'll figure that out It's not true. It's blatantly obvious that there's no force and that there is a choice. Quote:
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You've shown so far that you can only get a semblance of a defense for your position when you (A) falsely classify restaurants as public property and (B) falsely claim that employees have no choice in the matter.
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I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. |
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11-08-2006, 10:05 AM | #130 (permalink) |
Tilted
Location: Washington
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[QUOTE=FoolThemAll]
Frankly, that's only an external cost because the government made it one. Reductio ad absurdum, there again goes the road down to banning fast food. Let's stick with natural direct external costs, not indirect artificial ones. Otherwise, the government would have a way to justify banning any unhealthy activity. Understand the distinction?[/QOUTE] Oh you mean like wearing a helmet or a seat belt?
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I'm sitting at my desk right now waiting for you to reply to the above message. |
11-08-2006, 11:08 AM | #131 (permalink) | |
pigglet pigglet
Location: Locash
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i'm going to back up roach's comment from earlier. roll your own, and yes you can get filters to roll in if you want. if your local tobacco store doesn't carry bins or preweighed ounces of rolling cigarette tobacco, I'd suggest seeing if they carry Samson or American Spirit. You'll save money. I agree that restricting your ability to smoke in public while raising taxes is pretty crappy.
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You don't love me, you just love my piggy style |
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11-08-2006, 02:29 PM | #132 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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https://www.lilbrown.com/Rolling-Tob...-STOKKEBYE.htm
stokkebye tobacco is really pretty good and you can usually find it for about 20 bucks a vat at a tobacco shop and less if you order online from places like the above...i like tobacco stores and also need papers (i loose them all the time) so i go that way. it is about 20% the price of prepackaged cigarettes (depending on how much you smoke)--they last quite a while and the canisters keep it moist, and it does not have the accelerants and preservatives and other chemical crap that manufactured cigarettes do. just tobacco, which is not great healthwise of course, but certainly is not as bad for you as tobacco plus that other junk. american spirit is much too harsh for me--it makes me feel like i am running steel wool on my throat. i used to smoke gauloises lighter tobacco but gauloises no longer exports to the states. and you can get filters. and it still sucks trying to quit.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
11-08-2006, 04:20 PM | #133 (permalink) | |
pigglet pigglet
Location: Locash
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yeah, if you smoke gallois...that shit is tree bark. cous-cous, strong coffee and algerians come to mind. complete agreement on the difference between processed tobacco and what you can get in tobacco shops. it's not healthy, but at least its tobacco, not "tobacco product." ick.
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You don't love me, you just love my piggy style |
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11-08-2006, 04:23 PM | #134 (permalink) |
Watcher
Location: Ohio
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Though this thread now has many points on it, and some of them are valid – many are off topic fluff – so I thought I’d drop my 2 cents in at this point.
Going back to the original poster’s question, rather than continuing the discussion of smoking bans (which is where most of you immediately veered – like a NASCAR crowd following the smoke) let’s move to the question of why smoking is such an interesting discussion to have. The discussion is interesting because it touches on American political philosophy, which is “Do what I say, at the point this gun.” Now, I know most of you won’t get that, but I’ll try s’plain this. What is a law? A law is an edict by government. Laws demand something of those affected by it. It could be an action people have to take, or the lack thereof. Governments choose to back up laws with enforcement. Enforcement is the gun, and I mean that literally. Think about where our laws ultimately get their power from…the barrel of a gun. Sure, that’s not the first thing that’s pulled out, but hang with me here – you’ll learn something philosophical and practical about the system we live in. To relate this back to smoking, I’ll use the theoretical breaking of our recently passed Ohio statewide smoking ban. Let’s say I go to a bar and light up a smoke. There are two possibilities: There will be civil disobedience, and the bar’s responsible parties will not ask me to put it out. or, The bar’s responsible parties will ask me to put it out, or move to the allowed area. My choices are: Put it out or move, or Continue smoking. Depending on how far I’m willing to take this, ultimately, men with guns will come and enhance my compliance with various laws I’m held responsible to. The same forces come into play with all of our laws. You will first be subject to whatever penalties come in paper form; maybe a fine, something like that. Keep in mind, all these laws end up at the same method of enforcement: Men and Women with Guns. Play that as far out as you want…you can go to jail…and if you don’t obey that, and try to escape, men with guns. Please don’t disagree with me on this point, because it’s not arguable. It’s fact. If you can’t see it, think it through. Men with guns are the ultimate tool our society has to force your compliance. Enough disobedience, in any area, brings the gun. While you’re considering this, note carefully I didn’t pass a value judgment on this method; I said that’s how it is. I didn’t say if it’s right or wrong. Now that we’ve thought about the nature of laws, let’s all compare how we think about “laws” in the abstract to what their real nature is. Examine what you’ve always thought a law to be. Most of us imagine laws functioning in a strange sort of abstract kind of way. We seldom imagine that passing something like a smoking ban really does mean we’re saying (as a society): “You, other citizen, will not do this. If you do that, ultimately, men with guns will MAKE you stop.” Now let’s re-examine the smoking discussion and why it, like most of our current discourse, is so non-productive. Non smokers have not taken a reasonable line on smoking. They have said “You will not do this, because we say so.” There have been no enactments of any of the reasonable compromises I’ve heard suggested. One suggestion I’ve read, I think in here, was that of a “smoking license” administered much like a liquor license. Reasonable people might talk about how this has ups and downs for both sides of the issue. Reasonable people might work through their differences and find a way to live together, one step closer to harmony. Maybe a “smoking license” wouldn’t be the ultimate answer; it could be some totally brilliant compromise that I’m unable to think of. My point is, that this debate (and American debate at this time in history) is not reasonable. The majority of you are participating in that totally inane and absurd, point-by-point deconstruction of opposing arguments. That is not debate. Very few TFP members are participating in reasonable debate. That goes for this thread, and many others. Non-smokers, the obvious majority, are abusing their philosophical and moral responsibilities by refusing to consider the wants or needs of their fellow Americans. (This is where you post about smokers not respecting your rights, as if two separate wrongs make a right.) This is not how a healthy society functions. This is bad. And we are all part of it. We MUST change. We must ask each other why we’re not looking for a compromise. We must ask why we don’t even bother. We must ask why we’re so willing to point the gun. We must ask why we’re so willing to aim it at our fellow citizens. We must ask: Why won’t we let smokers make their own choices? Why are we so willing to strip yet more rights from individuals? Why aren’t we talking about ways this could work for everyone? Why aren’t we willing to come together? What is wrong with you, America?
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I can sum up the clash of religion in one sentence: "My Invisible Friend is better than your Invisible Friend." |
11-08-2006, 04:37 PM | #136 (permalink) |
Watcher
Location: Ohio
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pigglet, I don't believe I originally posted what you've got there. About dogs and such. I don't have dogs, nor do I watch jeapordy.
You're obviously correct supposing where my philsophical influence comes from. I don't know who he is, but I'd give fair money to a bet he's been born and is wandering our culture. His adversaries sure are.
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I can sum up the clash of religion in one sentence: "My Invisible Friend is better than your Invisible Friend." |
11-08-2006, 04:39 PM | #137 (permalink) | |
pigglet pigglet
Location: Locash
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that was my version of a snip, leading to a quick pointless, mildly rhetorical question
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You don't love me, you just love my piggy style |
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11-08-2006, 04:43 PM | #138 (permalink) |
©
Location: Colorado
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We must ask:
Why won’t we let smokers make their own choices? Feel free to make your own choice, just don't inflict them on me. Why are we so willing to strip yet more rights from individuals? Why would anyone consider the "right" to smoke more important than the right not to smoke? Historical acceptance of smoking doesn't make it any more acceptable. Why aren’t we talking about ways this could work for everyone? Go outside to smoke. It's hard to fathom why this isn't an acceptable alternative. Why aren’t we willing to come together? Because your idea of compromise, isn't. |
11-08-2006, 04:46 PM | #139 (permalink) |
Watcher
Location: Ohio
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If I'd wanted a post, displaying the unyeilding "debate" we have on this topic. I could not have asked for a better one.
We speak at each other. Our words fall dead to the floor between us. They fall unheard and unremarked.
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I can sum up the clash of religion in one sentence: "My Invisible Friend is better than your Invisible Friend." |
11-08-2006, 04:48 PM | #140 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: In the land of ice and snow.
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Look, i don't care if we have to smoke outside. To me it's worth it. I haven't been deprived of my rights as a smoker, because smoking isn't a right. I have got a new "right", the right to go out to a bar and not have to constantly inhale smoke the whole time. The fact that such a holy fuss has been made about this issue to me is silly. It doesn't fucking matter. I have a lot of rights that are much more important to me than ones that only amount to being matters of convenience, especially when i see the wisdom of their revocation. This isn't the beginning of the end for american civil liberties. If you think it is, i recommend you go outside and have a cigarette and think about how insignificant a ban on smoking in bars/restaurants is. Smoking has been banned in hospitals for decades, and lo and behold, our american way of life has not crumbled. I imagine that you see the wisdom of banning smoking in hospitals(at least i hope you do). Banning smoking in private businesses that are open to the public is an extension of that idea. I'd rather smoke outside than have submit myself to the bloodshot eyes and to the reek of smoke every time i fancy a trip to the bar. If you think that i'm stepping on your toes as then i suppose i am. I don't fucking care, consider your toes stepped on. I'll do it again if i have to, because really, making people smoke outside isn't a fucking big deal to me. Don't blame the nonsmokers. Blame the fact that smoking isn't a healthy habit and that smokers don't seem to have much along the lines of political organization. |
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11-08-2006, 04:58 PM | #141 (permalink) |
Watcher
Location: Ohio
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Sir, you are missing the point. Non smokers are not simply "wrong" nor bad Americans. Not that I'm suprised at least one person took that from my post.
The debate is the subject of this thread, not which side is right or wrong. That seems awfully hard to grasp for most people. There is no debate. There is both sides refusing to find an accomodation that works.
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I can sum up the clash of religion in one sentence: "My Invisible Friend is better than your Invisible Friend." |
11-08-2006, 05:48 PM | #143 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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first off: pigglet---you are probably thinking of the gauloises filterless pre-rolled guys that taste like newspaper wrapped up in other newspaper that i was once told i had to smoke if i wanted to be down with the prolos.
this during a period when i thought it might be fun to become a new person. i decided to become "french leftist circa late april early may 1968". you know, as a human being. i was about 19. i thought it justified growing a moustache and running away from home. gradually i realized (a) my sort of stepmother, who told me the above, was obviously insane (b) that the cigarettes tasted like newspaper rolled up inside other newspaper and then rubbed on a street and (c) no matter how hard i tried, no matter how long i worked, i would still remain an infinite distance from being "french leftist circa late april-early may 1968." so i became a situationist. this was easier because mostly what i had to do to advance ther revolution was drink alot, and i figured now THERE is a mode of praxis i can get behind. so i engaged in praxis of the type i could get behind for a while. i threw myself out of my own group a few times because that was the other thing that situationists did alot and it didnt seem to ever matter that there were no people in the group. this too seemed like a viable form of praxis to me. then one day, after i had thrown myself out of my own group again, i realized that i had been drinking for a very long time and that the revolution still had not arrived. what's keeping it? i wondered. so i found stokkebye and made up roachboy. so ends "the life of roachboy" brought to you by all the tobacco companies on earth and now a message from our sponsors: smoking---it's what revolutionaries do when they're thinking about something else. smoking. no radical threat to the common weal should be without it. buy yours now and make capitalism tremble.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 11-08-2006 at 05:52 PM.. |
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11-08-2006, 09:45 PM | #145 (permalink) |
Banned
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Those arguing in this thread for the right of the business owner to have the say in whether or not they will allow smoking, are making public health take a back seat to the right of the business owner. That's simply a laughable suggestion. I'm kind of surprised this "conversation" has gone on for 4 pages now... talking "at" each other, indeed.
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11-09-2006, 06:26 AM | #146 (permalink) |
Crazy
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Billege, you are right. I started responding to this thread because the original question is one that I have been known to fuss about with my family for years. Then I became side tracked with other matters. Why is it ok to belittle and put down smokers with such ferocity? Smoking bans don't directly affect me, with only a few exceptions, since I have never smoked indoors anyways, but it does affect me when people are rude, hateful, condescending, and just down right mean to me just because I smoke.
For example, my son's teacher said, "When you walk in here, you smell like cigarette smoke and it's disgusting." Now I know I've been around people that stink. I've been around people that I just really wanted to introduce to Ivory soap and offer them the usage of my water hose for an hour to let them rinse some of the stink off. Do I actually do that? no, it would be very rude. So why is it not considered rude to say something like that to a smoker? Not only is that considered ok, when done to a smoker, but even commendable by some people, because she is speaking out against this horrible activity. How can incivility to anyone be considered acceptable? And what is it about smokers that makes it ok? as for the rest of the arguments, that truly now I can admit don't resemble much of an actual debate, the fact is that the majority of people favor curtailing the rights of smokers little by little. It ALWAYS begins with logical, justifiable, bans. Then it leads to "you can't smoke in your own car in the parking lot of publicly accessible places." I do have one problem with smoking in hospitals. One of the businesses around here that I cannot smoke in my own damn car in the parking lot is the hospital.
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~~^~<@Xera @>~^~~ "A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing." ~Erno Philips
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11-09-2006, 07:09 AM | #148 (permalink) | |
Lennonite Priest
Location: Mansfield, Ohio USA
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Again, it is all a moot point because here in Ohio they have gone wayyyyy too far in that any business with just 1 employee cannot have smoking. So if I own a tobacco store and since I can't work it all the time, I have to hire someone, I can't allow anyone to smoke in there. As I stated above, if I want to open a private smoking club, I can't because I hire 1 employee, smoking becomes illegal in my business. When you can't even allow private smoking clubs...... you have severe power and control issues. It ain't about public health, it ain't about "not liking..." IT'S 1000% ALL ABOUT POWER AND CONTROL OVER SOMEONE ELSE.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?" |
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11-09-2006, 07:15 AM | #149 (permalink) | |
Kick Ass Kunoichi
Location: Oregon
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And for the record, smokers do stink. That is one of the reasons I insisted on my boyfriend quitting when we first started dating. The smell would get on his clothes, in his hair, and on his hands in addition to his mouth, and it just made me feel sick. Even now I have friends that smoke, and when I get a whiff of that smell on them, it makes my stomach turn. The fact of the matter is--if smokers want to smoke in public places, they're going to have to put up with me throwing up in, on, or around them. Is that okay?
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If I am not better, at least I am different. --Jean-Jacques Rousseau |
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11-09-2006, 06:20 PM | #150 (permalink) | |
Upright
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But, I don't say anything, because it would be rude. |
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11-09-2006, 10:26 PM | #151 (permalink) | |
Kick Ass Kunoichi
Location: Oregon
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Really.
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If I am not better, at least I am different. --Jean-Jacques Rousseau |
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11-10-2006, 07:21 AM | #152 (permalink) | |||||||||||||||||
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
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There's probably not much more either of us can say, shakran, but a few more things:
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Can you provide me with a single example wherein the worker was physically unable to leave the job? Quote:
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I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. Last edited by FoolThemAll; 11-10-2006 at 07:32 AM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
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11-10-2006, 08:28 AM | #153 (permalink) |
see the links to my music?
Location: Beautiful British Columbia
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wow...........after reading all this.........i need a smoke.
but!!!!! i am going to go outside in my yard and smoke,because i don't want my house smelling of smoke nor do i want my kids to have to inhale that shit. as for bars and restaurants.........no problem going out to smoke......i'd rather not be in a big 'ol smokey room either. it's not much but.........that's all i have to add. carry on folks and good luck in the discussion. |
11-10-2006, 09:31 AM | #154 (permalink) | |
Easy Rider
Location: Moscow on the Ohio
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11-10-2006, 10:26 AM | #155 (permalink) | |
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
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I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. |
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11-10-2006, 11:02 AM | #156 (permalink) |
Pleasure Burn
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All this shit about unhealthy air and causing harm to innocent bystanders, and no one gives two half-shits about the billions of oil powered engines which spew CO2 into the air which makes me and millions of other people sick and cancerous. Why isn't there a fervor against car users who made my dear old granddad develop a tumor on his spine? Who made little Sophie stay home from school when she came down with a fever? Who made me gag and nauseated after walking three blocks to the Quik-stop?
Oh, it's because it's the American way of life. We built this country on oil, right. We also built this country on tobacco. This is hypocrisy! WHY is it we concentrate so heavily on smoking, which in reality affects a very miniscule fraction of public health compared to gasoline and diesel? WHY aren't we enacting laws requiring billions of tax money to be spent researching alternative fuels and converting existing engines? WHY??? |
11-10-2006, 11:40 AM | #157 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: In the land of ice and snow.
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For instance, it's really easy to claim that ban-haters don't like bans because it's inconvenient for them to go outside to smoke and all the trumped up excuses they come up with for hating bans is just a rationalization to make them feel better. I don't know how many of my fellow smokers immediately become libertarians when the topic of smoking bans comes up. Really, though, the whole "smoking banners are just control freaks" position requires a certain amount of willful ignorance, and that's fine. This isn't a discussion about something that might happen, it's a bitchfest about something that already did happen. I understand the need to vent, the need to villify the other guy, even the complete lack of ability to empathize with the other guy's position because when it comes to this particular subject that's really the only recourse you have. Frankly it's all irrelevant. I can go to a bar whenever i want and not be subjected to smoke and that's great. It also means that i have to go outside to smoke and that's fine. Call me a control freak if you want, but as far as i'm concerned it's a win-win situation. |
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11-10-2006, 12:14 PM | #158 (permalink) | |
Easy Rider
Location: Moscow on the Ohio
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Also, you can go outside to smoke now, but if the majority has their way you may eventually have to go to the next city, county or state. |
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11-10-2006, 12:17 PM | #159 (permalink) | |
Free Mars!
Location: I dunno, there's white people around me saying "eh" all the time
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Looking out the window, that's an act of war. Staring at my shoes, that's an act of war. Committing an act of war? Oh you better believe that's an act of war |
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11-10-2006, 12:23 PM | #160 (permalink) | ||
Junkie
Location: In the land of ice and snow.
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rant, smoker |
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