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Re: smoking and the pub
Um, yeah, ok then :dig: :dig:
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Re: smoking and the pub
One for each side:
I have every sympathy with the American who was so horrified by what he had read of the effects of smoking that he gave up reading. -- Henry G. Strauss Isn't having a smoking section in a restaurant like having a peeing section in a swimming pool? |
Re: smoking and the pub
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In the context of the discussion we're having, why on earth would I choose to suddenly state that bar work is for people who do badly at school? It would be entirely off topic as well as untrue. Actually there are a great many people in a great many jobs who for one reason or another can't simply walk away even if they wanted to. Sometimes this is due to lack of training, sometimes its family circumstances (your current employer might be very accommodating when your personal circumstances change, but just try getting the same consideration from a new one). There - now I've said in three paragraphs what I thought was clear in one sentence. Do context, and my own posting history, count for nothing? |
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Nobody is forcing anyone into a smoky public house if they want a night out even if there are no non-smoking public houses in the area. There are other places that are non-smoking where you can have a very good night out. Theatre, cinema, restaurant, etc. etc. I think what you were really trying to say is that there is nowhere to go for a good night out that serves alcohol. If smoking was banned in all public houses then the smoking fraternity (which could be a majority of patrons) would have nowhere to go for a good night out in a place that serves alcohol and allows smoking. If there is a lack of no-smoking public houses in an area it is most likely because the majority of pub goers want to enjoy a smoke whilst there. You can't tell me that every pub owner is more concerned with tradition and fear of losing custom by becoming non-smoking. If the vast majority of people are non-smokers and most of these only go to smoking allowed pubs because there is no alternative the there is huge potential to reap the massive rewards that opening a no-smoking pub would bring. Smoking and passive smoking are bad for the health. I don't think that anyone in this thread is saying otherwise. There are beneficial factors for some people in smoking, not everything is negative. The statistics on deaths caused by smoking and passive smoking however have to be subject to analysis. There is a huge difference between saying a person died of a smoking related illness and that smoking killed them. A smoker may die from lung cancer for instance but it may not have been smoking that caused the cancer to develop but the death would more than likely be classed as being caused by smoking. Many of the deaths from illnesses that could be smoking related are in the over 65 year old age bracket. These are people who probably started smoking in their teens when filter tipped cigarettes were very rare indeed. Will we see a reduction in deaths in this age bracket in future years due to smokers being introduced to the habit with filter tipped cigarettes? Logic says that we will see a reduction because of this fact and the other fact that less people are now smoking. The non-smokers will point to the reduction as being evidence that a smoking ban in public places has caused the reduction. |
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Shall we see if thread can continue meandering along until Christmas? Quote:
Guns, Knives, smoking, drinking, jokes about religion and it goes on...... Banning something, especially in a supposedly "free" country such as ours is the easy way out, the unimaginative way out, the way out for none thinkers, a way out for people who don't want to really solve issues, a way out for people who can't see past the end of their nose. Ban smoking - job done, what's next? Unruly kids - ban them, we're cooking today - what next? Drinking on trains - ban it, next? and so it goes |
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Avoid areas where those activities occur. I can't stand certain types of music, rather than calling for it to be banned, I do the sensible thing of simply avoiding it. I don't like watching certain types of TV programs, but rather than wanting those programs banned, I do the sensible thing of not watching them. It's not hard you know. |
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It's not complicated you know. Quote:
What if I don't want to go to a restaurant or to the cinema? I want to go to a pub. Need my health be compromised by my indulgence in this great British tradition? Or could you perhaps do me, and all of the other non-smokers, and the staff in the pub a small favour, and step outside for a wee minute to smoke your fag? :blah: I have said it all once and no doubt I will say it all again... |
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