11-06-2006, 07:21 PM | #81 (permalink) | |
Easy Rider
Location: Moscow on the Ohio
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I live out in the country and about once a month I stop in to a local village tavern for a beer or two. This is a small place with about 12 stools and is usually frequented by a few old retired WWII and Vietnam vets. The times I have been there, the owner bartender and the guys were all smoking. I can't imagine why we would want to pass a law making them all go outside. |
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11-06-2006, 07:36 PM | #82 (permalink) | ||||||||||
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Paying taxes does not give you carte blanche to do what you want. Otherwise I could run a whorehouse out of my home because I pay property taxes. Quote:
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11-06-2006, 08:47 PM | #83 (permalink) |
Tilted
Location: Washington
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No one is forcing non smokers to go into these bars and restaurants. It's your choice to go into them if you don't like the smoke then stay out. I don't go into gay bars because of what's going on in them. Who am I to complain about what gay people do in a gay bar?
It takes 10s of thousands of cigarettes to signifcantly harm your health (in an adult). Please stop whining about having to breathe in two seconds of smoke at some random place that you chose to go to. Breathing in emmisions from vehicles will kill you too if you suck on the exuast pipe.Those emmisions are in the air all around you. They are smogging up the air every where. When you are at the mall you are breathing in emmisions from cars from all over. It is very unhealthy for you. I don't see you whiney hypocondriacs aren't complaining about that. I'm a non smoker but not an anti smoker (yay for labels.) Please stop WHINING like little children about smoking. Let's strip people of their rights because you don't like that they practice their formerly free right of personal choice (smoking) where you choose to be. GOOD PLAN
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I'm sitting at my desk right now waiting for you to reply to the above message. |
11-06-2006, 09:00 PM | #84 (permalink) | ||||||||||
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BTW us "whiny hypochondriacs" (that's how you spell those two words BTW) are not whiny, nor are we hypochondriacs. I strongly suspect you don't know what hypochondriac means. Quote:
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There is not nor was there ever a "right of personal choice." If there were, suicide would not be illegal. And even the Personal Choice party, which claims that there should be a right to personal choice, qualifies it with "as long as it doesn't hurt other people" so even under their umbrella smoking around nonsmokers would be out. |
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11-06-2006, 09:17 PM | #85 (permalink) | |||
Junkie
Location: In the land of ice and snow.
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I'm sorry, the market had its say, and it amounted to a clear rejection of smoke-free drinking establishments. Quote:
One nice thing about smoking bans is that they essentially become a nonissue if no one around cares about enforcing it or complaining to whatever regulatory agency oversees its enforcement. |
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11-06-2006, 09:53 PM | #86 (permalink) | |||||||||
Tilted
Location: Washington
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[QUOTE=shakran]No one is forcing smokers to go into these bars and restaurants instead of staying outside to finish their cigarette first.
The bar it self is a smoking establishment. You don't have to go there. It has nothing to do with the smokers inside. Quote:
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It's fine if you don't smoke as long as you don't go around smokers you should be fine. Quote:
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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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11-06-2006, 10:07 PM | #87 (permalink) |
Lennonite Priest
Location: Mansfield, Ohio USA
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2 things and then I am done with this thread because I have spoken my piece:
1) As much as non-smokers cry about the smoker, I believe I pointed out compromise to which the non smoker still bitched and moaned..... society is based on compromises, you lose compromise you lose freedoms. Whic takes me to #2...... it amazes me how some on here in other threads talk about how big and powerful government is and how we are losing rights, yet they are begging and demanding rights be taken away. They offer no compromise, they want things their way and fuck everyone who doesn't agree..... like I said, it's the same with censorship, gun control, religion etc. Some lady in Michigan starts writing letters saying Howard Stern is vile and they fine him off the free airwaves..... even though she never heard him. A mother demands that Tom Sawyer and other books be banned from the school library because she doesn't want her son subjected to it.... even though he doesn't even know what section of the library the book is in. Loss of freedoms is just that loss of freedoms..... it's wrong you know it is wrong and you will cry about it when they come and take a freedom away from you.... Freedom is compromise.... again, compromise was offered, separate rooms, ventilations and yet, people demand for all or nothing..... fuck everyone else, we know better, we are the majority..... we know what's best..... but what happens when the smoking issue is dead and buried and these people filled with hate and control and demands for what's best for the people decide to come after something you enjoy, do, a way you live your life and endlessly attack you, to the point where no one dares speak out? Trust me the day will come. All the fucking problems in this country and people worry more about smoking than anything else........ no wonder our country is falling apart.
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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?" |
11-06-2006, 10:16 PM | #88 (permalink) | |
Crazy
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Again I want to know why the police are allowed to search people for possession of cigarettes. Why in the hell is that ok? Why are there restrictions saying that I can not smoke in my CAR in the parking lot of a business. I want to reiterate here, I do not believe that my smoking gives me the right to force non smokers to breathe my cancer causing second hand smoke. I just don't believe that when there are already laws in place to protect you from that second hand smoke in public places, what I do IN MY OWN CAR is any of your damn business. I can promise you this, if it's happening in redneck acres (as I affectionately refer to my home town); it’s coming to yours soon. I have one truly horrible allergy. It makes me very sick to be around people wearing cologne or perfume. Even slightly scented deodorants can get me on a bad day. These scents are triggers for my migraines. They are very horrible. If you have never had migraines before you cannot possibly understand. I have done some looking into this. There is NOTHING that can be done for a perfume allergy of this sort. There is some limited help for skin allergies but not for inhaled allergies. And I am not alone here . There is no need for people to wear perfume. NONE. No one is even so much as addicted to it. They just chose to go around smelling like lemons and making me and others like me sick. 72% of asthmatics list perfumes as a trigger . So what are you going to do when we decide that we're sick of you making us sick with your smelly, stinking perfumes? There is a serious health problem associated with you getting all smelly. I don't know that you like to wear perfumes, but many many people do. How will you feel when its you we decide has to shower and remove your stinking smells before you come into public places because it makes so many people sick? You're right, smoking is not a right. There is no constitutional guarantee of the right to smoke. Nor is there a guarantee of the right to drive a car, get a library membership, or wear make-up. We just get to do these things because we live in a "free" society, where, for the most part, we get to make our own minds about whether or not to participate in legal activities. You think that no one’s rights are being denied here. You think that there is a little more needless hysteria because of what is being said by those of us that are not as supportive of anti smoking laws as you are. You think you are safe from these laws because you don't smoke. When you give away another persons right to choose what he or she will do, you open the door for your rights to choose what legal activities you will participate in to be whittled away. There is no government conspiracy to take away or limit our rights. I believe that. I also believe that the only people that can take our rights from us are US. And we will; one good idea at a time. |
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11-06-2006, 10:27 PM | #89 (permalink) |
Tilted
Location: Washington
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I agree with you pan. The seat belt law is just the start of eventual required blue overalls and the 2 minutes of hate. I was trying to express that through my comments on this topic.
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I'm sitting at my desk right now waiting for you to reply to the above message. |
11-06-2006, 11:09 PM | #90 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: In the land of ice and snow.
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Pan, how can you possibly go on about compromise when you can't even stand to be forced to smoke outside? That, sir, is compromise. It may not be the kind of compromise you wanted, but it is the kind of compromise that the majority of people wanted.
And as for nonsmokers becoming emotional, well, you're the only person in this thread to write whole paragraphs in upper case letters. It is clear to me that you are quite emotional on this given subject, more emotional than any of the nonsmokers. All your talk of censorship is irrelevant; the right to express yourself is not the same as the right to smoke cigarettes in bars and restaurants, and frankly, you have to be delusional not to see that. I mean shit, how self important do you have to be to think that you being mildly inconvenienced in the practice of 1 habit is an obvious precursor to broad, government sanctioned repression? If you think the ability to smoke in a bar is related to the ability to speak without fear of persecution you need to start sprinkling a little "reality" dust on those cigarettes of yours. |
11-07-2006, 12:11 AM | #91 (permalink) |
Tilted
Location: Washington
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If you were refering to me as the emotional one. I don't see my all caps
paragraph. Compromise was reached when the owner of any establishment could say "you can't smoke in here" even if they wanted to extend that out onto their property that would be fine like say 25'. It's not that smokers can't go outside. There wasn't a big hoopla about this until the legislature of a few states forced establishment owners to not allow smoking. The goverment forcing the owners of the business to not allow smoking is the problem. The public does NOT have to go into these places. That is the goverment making a choice for you.
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I'm sitting at my desk right now waiting for you to reply to the above message. |
11-07-2006, 02:43 AM | #92 (permalink) | |
Banned
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Was it "the government making a choice for us" when they forced all asbestos to be removed and replaced in buildings, when it was found out to be so harmful? I guess business owners should have been given the right to choose to replace it or not- after all, we all can choose to go there or not, right? Is it the government making a choice for us by insisting that all restuarants pass minimum food storage and preparation safety requirements? After all, we can choose to eat at whatever restaurant we want. Phooey on public health, I don't want the government telling private businesses how to run their shops! Oh, certainly it's the government pushing us around by requiring frequent and thorough inspections of airplanes! After all, we can choose the airlines whose planes we wish to board- why should the government step in and demand things are safe and not endangering the health and lives of its citizens? Those assholes. I can keep going. The main point is that despite what you believe to be the big, bad government putting you down, they are simply removing YOUR unhealthy habit from the lungs of those people in the public with whom you happen to coexist. If I breathe in your smoke, I am being forced to sacrifice my personal health because of your personal decisions. Do whatever you want to your own lungs, but anyone who insists they have a "right" to smoke in public places, polluting the lungs of those around them, is being ridiculous. This is honestly a truly asinine conversation. I can't believe people are actually trying to tell us that it's their right to fuck up other people's lungs because of their personal addiction. Un-freakin'-believable. |
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11-07-2006, 04:44 AM | #93 (permalink) | ||||||||||
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However since cigarettes, unlike perfumes, universally harm everyone who comes in contact with their smoke, that IS a public health issue. Quote:
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11-07-2006, 05:22 AM | #94 (permalink) | |||||
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
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And on the other hand, I'm fine with the government mandating HUGE can't-miss-em signs indicating the prescence of asbestos/smoke/trans fat. People should certainly have the opportunity to understand fully the cost of setting foot in a particular building. You let those allergic to peanut butter know that "this may contain peanuts", you don't mandate the removal of the peanuts. Quote:
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I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. |
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11-07-2006, 05:39 AM | #95 (permalink) | |
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11-07-2006, 05:46 AM | #96 (permalink) | |
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
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They. DO. have. a. choice. They. can. leave. They shouldn't have to? They don't have to. It's up to them whether they value the job enough to assume its costs. They DON'T have a right to that job and they DON'T have a right to modify it to their liking. "then go smoke in your own property" That's actually exactly what I'm arguing for. The owners decide whether smoke is allowed on their own property.
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I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. |
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11-07-2006, 06:07 AM | #97 (permalink) | ||
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I didn't pull a stupid and decide to start smoking. it's YOUR habit, YOUR addiction, and if YOU make idiotic choices despite knowing the risks, that's your lookout. Don't drag ME down with you. Quote:
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11-07-2006, 07:59 AM | #98 (permalink) |
Lennonite Priest
Location: Mansfield, Ohio USA
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FoolThemAll you can't win you know. They have already decided what is "in the public's best interest" and demand government do something.
They refuse to see that they are taking away rights, they refuse to even debate civilly, they want it all. So when the smoking is a dead issue and these power hungry hate filled people decide they need to control something else.... they know exactly how to get the rights taken away. Oh yeah and by the way Shakran I guess you must have missed the part where I stated it is getting to the point I have to smoke in my car. Good you say? Yeah, except then I have my son, so he has to walk to the car with me, and if he stands outside by himself while I smoke, I get into trouble, if I put him in the car while I smoke it's child endangering...... so exactly where am I to smoke? Waiting........ 3.....2.....1...... your answer will prove beyond doubt this debate is solely about power over others and not, not smoking...... unless of course you change the hardline stance you have had this whole thread, in which case.....
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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?" |
11-07-2006, 08:23 AM | #99 (permalink) | ||||||
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11-07-2006, 08:54 AM | #101 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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shakran:
clearly if you can avoid all cigarette smoke you will never die. clearly if you avoid all contaminants, you will never die or age. time will not happen in the same way for you, if you can eliminate contaminants. i assume your interior space is free of contaminants--empty, white, pure, filtered air, filtered light, all food taste-tested--and so outside should be as well--it is your god given right to move smoothly through contaminant free spaces. this right has unlimited extension. your god-given right to move through contaminant free spaces is absolute. it overrides all others because it is yours. and what is yours is most important. now the rest of us, we all know this inwardly, but we are Evil and because we are Evil we do things to fuck with you. that is why smokers smoke: to fuck with you, to tamper with your absolute right to move in all directions through a contaminant free space. why? because we resent your absolute centrality in the universe. we are petty foul lesser beings who resent your absolute right to move in all directions at any time through an absolutely pure space. we are closer to mud. we are half-formed beings who still bear unpleasant traces of the material world. we are not yet fully spirit, not yet fully realized beings. not yet pure form which has a god given right to move in all directions through contaminant-free space. we are ourselves contamination.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
11-07-2006, 09:05 AM | #102 (permalink) | |||
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11-07-2006, 09:21 AM | #103 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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read through your posts, shakran.
there is a hysteria about contamination running through them. look for yourself: read them as if they had been put up by someone else, and you'll see. i am not going anywhere near the issue of reading comprehension. but i sometimes marvel at the powers of projection and displacement. there is satire, but i dont think you understand it. which is funny, given that the central target in what i posted was narcissism. roland barthes called that kind of thing "deaf and blind criticism"---the argument is as yours is: "i dont get it therefore you are an idiot" there is a strange loop in this, and i am not sure you want to go into it. but whatever. i have other things to do. carry on.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
11-07-2006, 09:33 AM | #104 (permalink) | |||||
Junkie
Location: In the land of ice and snow.
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As long as we're talking about made-up rights, let me be the first to claim that every person has the right to spend an evening at a bar without smelling like smoke; smokers want to take away that right; smokers just want to exert power over others; this is the beginning of the end of all freedom everywhere. See how ridiculous that is? Quote:
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For instance you have the "These laws violate my rights" argument, which completely ignores the fact that unless you make up your own definition of the word right you actually have no right to smoke. No, it's not like censorship because the constitution actually mentions something about freedom of speech; it doesn't mention tobacco products. There's also the "business owners should be able to do whatever they want" argument, which is also ridiculous. Has anyone heard of regulatory agencies? The government? They're the people who tell businesses what they can't do and they've been doing it for a long time. It's nothing new, and to claim that this instance of regulation is somehow more heinous or "wrong" than every other instance smacks of inconsistency. There's the "if you don't like smoke why don't you go somewhere else" argument to which it is way too easy to respond "if you don't like smoking bans why don't you move to somewhere where they don't have them". Both statements are really nothing more than a fancy way of saying "Fuck you". Really, though, it's not that simple. Like i said above, there weren't any smoke-free bars in my city before the ban, i couldn't simply "go somewhere else" unless that somewhere else was to the liquor store and then home. This never seems to get addressed when i bring it up, though. |
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11-07-2006, 10:20 AM | #105 (permalink) | |
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11-07-2006, 10:40 AM | #106 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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like i said, you dont want to walk into the strange loop, the one that shows you cannot process irony when it is directed at you, the one that functions to demonstrate the narcissism that is being mocked. the more you write, the tighter you pull you bring down the mockery around you.
it is like one of those finger traps. let it go. ---- seriously, i am a smoker and i have already repeated a couple times that smoking bans are not to me a big deal--fine, whatever--but i tend to accept the logic of worker health protection as the driver for them and think the generalization to a question of general "public health" to be shaky at best. i dont find the liberal (in the js mill sense) discourse of rights to be relevant or interesting in this context. consequently, i dont find arguments based on that premise to be either interesting or relevant. all that the premise does is provide a pretext to formalize what we already know about from the debate itself--that there is a differend (the space defined by the ways in which parties on the opposite side of a debate talk by each other)---what is worse for both positions is that they end up like those mutually exclusive but formally correct arguments over scarce resources in hobbes...they make the issue undecidable. and with that, people resort to bluster. straw men. bullshit, in short. so it is a stupid avenue to take in this kind of context. again, the argument that i find compelling in support of smoking bans is that of worker health, and that pertains to the folk who work restos or pubs. as for the anxieties about contamination that use this questions as a pretext to be expressed--i think they're funny and more than a little pathetic.
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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; 11-07-2006 at 10:43 AM.. |
11-07-2006, 11:12 AM | #107 (permalink) | |||||||
Lennonite Priest
Location: Mansfield, Ohio USA
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Your refusal to talk to me like a person with respect shows exactly the superior stutus you are taking. "We must control what others do, because they do not know how to do for themselves." Quote:
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Just as it is a business owners right to serve whom he wants how he wants. Of course when I say that your side had to take it to silly juvenile extremes like "masterbating in food..." which again shows your mentality of "we are superior.... we know better so fuckin shut up and conform or we'll keep villifying you and using more juvenile attacks on you." Quote:
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I have no problem smoking outside.... I do it at work and school. I am arguing the fact that restaurant, bars and other places that historically have allowed smoking be allowed to have the owners decide what they want to do. Quote:
As for censorship, nowhere does the Constitution say we have the right to have Tom Sawyer in our library, or Howard Stern on the radio or internet access..... show me in the Constitution where it truly gives us those rights. Quote:
By the way, this is a good debate until you have to use juvenile examples to try to prove your point.... then you lose and show how weak your position is.
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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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11-07-2006, 11:17 AM | #108 (permalink) | |
pigglet pigglet
Location: Locash
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dude, you smoke while you eat? holy shit, that's hardcore.
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You don't love me, you just love my piggy style |
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11-07-2006, 11:30 AM | #109 (permalink) |
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I'm a smoker and I'm all for smoking bans as long as it's a public health issue. If it's because I stink, or you're offended by the smell, or you think I don't know any better then you can bite my shiny, metal ass.
I'm even okay with them jumping on business owners about this. After all, we expect the government to protect the health of the average worker, right? I mean, there is a reasonable expectation of safety in the workplace, isn't there? I'm a smoker. I know the dangers that entails and I choose to do it anyway. I smoke in my home, in the parking lot outside and occasionally in the car. As long as I can continue to do such, I'm with the anti-smokers. I don't have a "right" to smoke, but I do have a reasonable expectation to be able to enjoy a perfectly legal something...whatever that something happens to be. If it'll make the anti-smokers happy and help curb the blistering hate from their eyes, then "Viva la revolution!"
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No signature. None. Seriously. Last edited by guthmund; 11-07-2006 at 12:04 PM.. |
11-07-2006, 02:18 PM | #110 (permalink) | ||||||
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
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What I am saying is that I don't understand the idea that people have a right to jobs. They don't, unless they're under contract. The government may act sometimes like there is such a right, but that hardly justifies the idea. Quote:
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What is the government's business is that the 'public place' isn't deceptive or significantly incomplete in portraying these things. The government's actual job should be enforcing honesty. Make the businesses explicitly and clearly advertize that they're not using alfredo sauce on the noodles. A business that offers such blatantly disgusting food isn't likely to attract very much of the public anyway. (Unless it's fast food, of course - we should probably ban that stuff as well.) But a fair amount of the population is willing to tolerate filthy filthy cigarette smoke in exchange for food or wages. The government has no business breaking up such a voluntary agreement.
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I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. |
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11-07-2006, 07:43 PM | #111 (permalink) | |
pigglet pigglet
Location: Locash
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i'm pretty sure that a private business falls under a number of different regulations than a private home, foolthemall. i guess you would disagree with those distinctions?
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You don't love me, you just love my piggy style |
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11-07-2006, 08:30 PM | #112 (permalink) | |||||||||
Junkie
Location: In the land of ice and snow.
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What i said wasn't meant to be an attack. Smoking bans exist in a lot of places, including, apparently, where you live. In that sense you have already lost. And my maturity has nothing to do with this, though it does make for a handy way to ignore what i was actually saying. Quote:
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11-07-2006, 08:33 PM | #113 (permalink) |
Crazy
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Personally there is exactly ONE good jazz club in Cleveland, it is a smoking establishment. If I wish to enjoy live jazz I have to put my health at risk (I'm asthmatic) because someone else can't control their vice long enough to go through an hour set without partaking. I'm a casual drinker who never has more than 2 drinks if I am driving (I'm 6'2 230lbs, so well below any limit) and I have never been an angry drunk, so my vice has never endangered others. I understand that some people have become addicted and are not able to stop, hell my brother had nodules in his lungs, quit from fear then started up again 9 months later! I would just rather that people keep their bad habits to themselves. If they are unwilling or unable to do so for themselves I am perfectly willing (and just did) vote to enforce my right not to be negatively impacted by their inconsideration.
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11-07-2006, 11:06 PM | #114 (permalink) | |||||||
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Tell me why you feel you have the right, and are justified, in hurting everyone around you. |
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11-08-2006, 12:45 AM | #115 (permalink) | ||
Tilted
Location: Washington
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The establishment owner is not pumping smoke into the air. He simply allows his customers to smoke if they want to. They are not trying to hurt you like you try to make it seem. No one is running around with a cigarette blowing smoke in your face saying "I hope you get cancer". YOU go there YOU get the cancer maybe. You see there was no "they" in that sentence where YOU get cancer. Which is what you anti smokers are worried about isn't it? The YOU factor. Quote:
All of these anti smoking arguments are saying that it is ok to tell the "establishment owner" to not allow his customers to not do something that will hurt you if you choose to let it hurt you. Seems akin to big brother to me. No one is saying it's ok to hurt non smokers. It's not ok to hurt other people. By going into the bar people aren't hurting you, you are hurting your self. So choose to not go. It's not the owners fault you don't smoke. Just like me telling a gay bar owner that he needs to change his bar to straight only because I'm not gay makes no sense. He shouldn't be forced to cater to you or any specific group if he doesn't want to.
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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 01:57 AM.. |
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11-08-2006, 01:32 AM | #116 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: France
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This thread, and specifically the link posted above (whyquit.com) has actually encouraged me to stop smoking.
Not that I care about others that much, because I usually smoke away from public doorways, always outside, and never stand next to others when I smoke. I'm not a heavy smoker at all, and have started very recently, but it's really not doing anything good for me, and I'd rather not have to smell bad, be less athletic (bike rides are sooo much harder when you smoke). I just hope that I'll be able to "NEVER TAKE ANOTHER PUFF!" like the site says. As for why people hate smokers, there are lots of scenarios where I can understand it. Whenever I've been to a nice restaurant, with top quality food, I've always hated smelling smoke when the restaurant allowed it. It ruined it all, the wine, the taste of the food, and the pleasant atmosphere. Also, many smokers are inconsiderate. All my smoker friends would always put out their cigarettes on the floor, and leave the butts there, and it's not the greatest sight when you're walking around the street. I don't think cigarettes should be illegal, but I think smokers should be more courteous and considerate. The fact is, non-smokers do not bother other people with bad smell or endanger their lives, so I think smokers should try their best at doing the same. |
11-08-2006, 02:09 AM | #117 (permalink) | ||
Tilted
Location: Washington
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The law can't enforce courtesy. GL with the quittting. Smoking is definetly not something anyone should do. Quit now every puff just makes you more addicted!
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11-08-2006, 04:54 AM | #118 (permalink) | |||||
Tone.
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What makes you guys think that 25% of the people get to decide for the other 75%? More than 3/4s of us do not smoke, and therefore presumably would prefer you not smoke in buildings we are in. In short, you're in the minority. Quote:
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Hell I think we're being pretty nice about it. We're saying smoke outside, not inside. We're not trying to ban your drug (like most other addictive, harmful drugs are already). We're just telling you to take your drug away from us. Last edited by shakran; 11-08-2006 at 06:33 AM.. |
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11-08-2006, 06:14 AM | #119 (permalink) | |||||||||
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
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The right you're suggesting exists, in the absence of the right to a job, is both nonsensical and useless. Unless, of course, people have the right to a job once they have the job, is that it? Quote:
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I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. |
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11-08-2006, 06:39 AM | #120 (permalink) |
pigglet pigglet
Location: Locash
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foolthemall,
from my perspective, i think that while i find your position interesting, i just don't think its going to fly. it sounds like you're not on board with public nuissance laws, the enforcement of public safety codes and regulations, etc. while i can see where you're coming from, i just don't see your positions as pragmatic. in your society, is literacy required? is there an absolute, enforceable common language? are children always supervised? is the landowner / business owner responsible for people who don't understand the dangers they are walking into? can a sign be posted in a legally correct, but potentially misleading manner? as i understand, our society basically takes the position that the risk of having practical misunderstandings or accidental exposures to these materials / safety situation is such that if you're going to have a publicly accessible business / property, there are some safety considerations that you simply have to avoid. period. you can't put fugi sticks in your front yard at work, with a sign that says "what out for sharp shit laden sticks." i mean, someone could have avoided your booby trapped property. you put up a very clear sign. but they didnt' see it. they were preoccupied. they were on medication for the first time. they don't read. they step on sharp sticks of shit, and i'm thinking you're going to have a little legal problem.
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rant, smoker |
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