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Re: smoking and the pub
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Re: smoking and the pub
What can we do? Kids will smoke. Even if everyone who bought cigs had to prove without doubt their age, they could still get older friends to do it. When I was younger my friends and I sometimes asked strangers to buy alcohol or cigs for us - how dangerous is that?
The only way I can imagine would work would be making smoking illegal. Then you would have the problem of black market cigarettes appearing, and having dodgy substances in them but at least it would reduce the numbers of kids who start smoking. |
Re: smoking and the pub
why make it illegal - we need the taxes. it's a way of the poorer in society funding the better off!
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Re: smoking and the pub
Leaving aside staff for one moment, which I am aware is an issue, does anybody actually have the evidence or is aware of how much damage a non-smoker actually does to themselves by say going into a pub a few times a week. I mean what are the actual facts here. Have any actual comparative studies been undertaken? Is the effect different/worse than living in a built up area? I would bet that the vast majority of any passive smoking effects are caused by living in a smoky environment rather than visiting a pub a few times a week. These are the issues are they not?
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Re: smoking and the pub
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I have to say it does seem to be mainly the smokers who are against the ban. Which says enough to me. |
Re: smoking and the pub
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I'm a smoker, but I actually find myself supporting the idea of a complete ban on smoking in public places. |
Re: smoking and the pub
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Also I thought the discussion was concerned with smoking in public places rather than smoking per se. What therefore has the amount of people smoking kills as opposed to giving up got to do with it? As said before many non-smokers die everyday too. Quote:
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There is no denying that smoking is a killer, but I am simply attempting to look at what the facts are about this particular ban and see what the effects are. As I suggetsed earlier and will do so again, leaving aside staff for one moment, which I am aware is an issue, does anybody actually have the evidence or is aware of how much damage a non-smoker actually does to themselves by ,say, going into a pub a few times a week. I mean what are the actual facts here. Have any actual comparative studies been undertaken? Is the effect different/worse than living in a built up area? I would bet that the vast majority of any passive smoking effects are caused by living in a smoky environment rather than visiting a pub a few times a week. These are the issues are they not? If this ban, as I suspect, will have minimal difference on illness caused by passive smoking should we not be focusing on these issues. Many children are exposed to smoking from a very early age and then are more likely to become smokers themselves. So already they may have had many years exposure. What we need to be doing is fostering a culture where children are less exposed to smoking and therefore are less likely to take up the habit. Not something this ban will address. By doing this over time a more non-smoking culture will evolve creating smoke free areas by their own accord. Once these questions have been answered then surely the debate would be based on facts rather than conjecture. This I believe is a much healthier and constructive way to proceed for both smokers and non-smokers alike. ;) |
Re: smoking and the pub
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But whilst having a smoke on Friday night is not illegal, then I will take advantage of the fact. Because although I don't fully support it, I am a realist and it will only be a matter of time before a total ban comes into force. When it does it wont really bother me too much either. But until that day comes.......... |
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Re: smoking and the pub
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I see you nicely avoided these points: Quote:
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Re: smoking and the pub
Who is going to administer the ban ? If it is, as a previous post suggested, the police, then I will be asking my MP why are these resources being used in this way. At the moment it is impossible to report your car being stolen without you having to attend a police station and in the Metropolitan Police area calls on the 999 system are stacked until a unit can respond, sometimes until the following day.
Will the accused be allowed their day in court or will the ubiqitous ASBO be used ? What evidence will be gathered and who will gather it, if it is that required for criminal cases the lawyers will have lots of work and the court system will become even more overburdened. The Poll Tax riots showed that pushed far enough the populace will vote with actions demanding that priority be given to matters of greater importance than lighting up a cigarette in a pub. Let the government not lose sight of the 20% of the population who are smokers who could, if pushed could ensure that at the next election they became Her Majestys Opposition instead of Her Majestys Government. |
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The research you point to of course demonstrates harmful effects of passive smoking (although hardly from an independent source. I could have pointed you to the Forest website challenging this research but again, that is not impartial). The main point of my contention is the usefulness of this particular ban and what is it hoping to achieve. How long do people have to be exposed before any ill effects for example? Without the kind of evidence that I am calling for how can the Government justifiably ban smoking in public places? |
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Besides as we have said before, it isn't just for health reasons that the ban would be a good thing. The smell of cigarette smoke is appalling. It hurts your eyes and makes your clothes smell. I came home at the weekend after a night out and felt as though I had been smoking myself. |
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