A rigorous statistical examination has found that smoking bans increase drunken-driving fatalities. One might expect that a ban on smoking in bars would deter some people from showing up, thereby reducing the number of people driving home drunk. But jurisdictions with smoking bans often border jurisdictions without bans, and some bars may skirt the ban, so that smokers can bypass the ban with extra driving. There is also a large overlap between the smoker and alcoholic populations, which would exacerbate the danger from extra driving. The authors estimate that smoking bans increase fatal drunken-driving accidents by about 13%, or about 2.5 such accidents per year for a typical county. Assuming a smoking ban is still worth it, the results suggest the need for a more aggressive approach to drunken driving - or a nationwide smoking ban.http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2008/02/10/uncommon_knowledge/?page=1
2/25/2008 1:08:17 PM
I forget where I first read about this, but it's a wonderful example of the unintended consequences of government social policy.
2/25/2008 1:32:23 PM
^ am i detecting a return from leftist la-la land back to pragmatic libertarianism?
2/25/2008 1:41:49 PM
smoking IS healthier than fascism
2/25/2008 1:44:42 PM
theDuke, I've always been a passionate centrist. Though for about 6 years it's been hard to tell the difference between centrists and nut-bar socialists because we've all been saying the same thing--"Bush Sucks".
2/25/2008 2:00:09 PM
this is the stupidest reason to be against a ban. It would be valid if smoking bans in general were strictly municipality based, but the majority of bans are put in place on the State level.
2/25/2008 2:59:32 PM
I think city ordinance smoke bans espicially for places like the bar is ABSOLUTELY fucking retarted. You should expect cigarette smoke if you are at the bar. If you are offended, irritated, or if cigarette smoke makes your pussy dry up then DON't GO. This is not like an airplane, restaurant, or a movie theater and someone lights up. People go to a bar to relax drink, smoke, and hit on girls. This is not a family environment or a place where people have to go for other motives.A bar is a private establishment and should be able to decide on its own rather or not to allow smoking. In a capitalistic society if enough people are that against smoking yet still want to go to a bar the opportunity and economic pressure is present for someone to open a "smoke-free" bar.[Edited on February 25, 2008 at 3:03 PM. Reason : a]
2/25/2008 3:01:46 PM
make the smoking ban national. problem solved.[Edited on February 25, 2008 at 3:04 PM. Reason : oops...i didnt read the last sentence of the original post.]
2/25/2008 3:02:30 PM
2/25/2008 3:08:10 PM
0.2 should require mandatory jail time.
2/25/2008 4:15:18 PM
2/25/2008 4:16:26 PM
No, we have a better solution for drunk drivers: we incapacitate them. http://www.reason.com/news/show/124985.html
2/25/2008 4:16:27 PM
2/25/2008 5:18:02 PM
fo realthat jager is T3H DEVIL!!
2/25/2008 5:57:02 PM
Way to let bar owners decide what to do with their own property
2/25/2008 6:49:53 PM
you people are ridiculous.because of a public health law (public smoking ban), the same people who make poor decisions to ruin their health in the first place, while polluting other people's environments, now are more inclined to make more poor decisions by driving drunk in search of another seedy bar that ignores the law and permits smoking.therefore the public health law is at fault because it's forcing drunk smokers to tool around town in their '79 El Dorados looking for a place to stage their 12:45 am lessons in applied civil disobedience.then to further underscore your argument, make vague points about the "right" to down Jaeger shots and shoot firearms now see, this is why you libertarians will never get more than 5% of the vote.
2/25/2008 8:02:08 PM
the sad thing is, response to bad legislation is usually more restrictive versions of the bad legislation. that's why there are so many stupid regulations in this country that don't solve the problems they were supposed to solve. American freedom has been an empty slogan for a long time and it is getting emptier.
2/25/2008 8:40:16 PM
This is completely irrelevant to statewide bans.
2/25/2008 9:21:33 PM
Because no one lives near the border, right? How far is it from Charlotte to South Carolina? Like a thousand miles or something?
2/25/2008 9:33:05 PM
2/25/2008 10:19:25 PM
Let's get rid of all the laws. They can all be 6 degrees of Kevin Baconed back to some terrible unintended consequence.
2/25/2008 10:37:27 PM
2/25/2008 10:43:06 PM
2/25/2008 11:41:31 PM
2/25/2008 11:46:15 PM
^ Of the solutions though, which do you think this thread was created to support? Enhancing the laws, or ditching the laws? And when placed in the context of the statements of this thread, would it not seem like certain people were implicitly supporting drunk driving as a means to bypass a law?
2/25/2008 11:49:14 PM
Moron, to the best of my knowledge no one here would ever suggest "driving drunk" as a rational response to a law, much less a smoking ban. And as the individual which created this thread, ditching the law makes since because it is not doing what it was supposed to do: protect public health. Americans as they are today make this law more harmful then helpful, so repeal it. Keeping it on the books out of spite, as JoeSchmoe has suggested, is irrational and needlessly kills innocent people. That said, enhancing the DUI laws is always a good idea, regardless of what is happening on the smoking-ban front. Like I mentioned above, "requiring a device that keeps a car from being operated by someone who's been drinking" to be installed on all vehicled owned by drunk drivers is a great idea in my book. It will still be a great idea even if all smoking bans are either lifted or made universal. [Edited on February 26, 2008 at 12:05 AM. Reason : .,.]
2/26/2008 12:02:39 AM
2/26/2008 12:05:41 AM
Dr. Steve and Lonesnark, did you go to college? or did you just wind up hanging out on these boards because you like the crowd here.i ask, because certainly you aren't seriously suggesting that we need to stop inconveniencing drunks so they wont drive around wasted as much, and therefore kill less people?maybe we should start selling liquor by the shot at every corner 7-11 and Burger King. that way no one will ever have haul ass to the ABC store at 7:55 pm on a Saturday evening and run over some grandma in the crosswalk.tell me, how many other laws should we get rid of because they make life difficult for drunk drivers?
2/26/2008 1:15:54 AM
2/26/2008 1:39:54 AM
2/26/2008 2:28:24 AM
2/26/2008 7:11:42 AM
[Edited on February 26, 2008 at 9:15 AM. Reason : [dbl]]
2/26/2008 9:15:19 AM
Chaos, no one is that dense. JoeSchmoe is trolling.
What are you guys even arguing?This is such a massive non issue that I'm half tempted to hijack the thread and argue why the decline of pirates over the last 200 years has led directly to global warming.
2/26/2008 10:25:56 AM
HOW ABOUT IF YOU DO NOT LIKE CIGARETTE SMOKE THAN DO NOT GO TO THE FUCKING BAR. No one is making you take tequila shots next to the car smoking down like a factory. Go drink at home instead of whining like a pussy to the city council in an effort to go them to lockdown on a bar patrons right to smoke up.
2/26/2008 10:30:32 AM
Thats a retarded argument.Smoking is bad for you, but if you want to do it thats fine.However, when your "im doing this because im a huge tool and I think it makes me attractive to that skank hoe across the bar" antics start blowing that shit in my faceThen we have a problemAt which point I pool together other stonelife nigs like myself who believe the sameAnd legislate you to the fucking trash bin outside.Democracy in action.And if you don't like that, then you can piss off. And move to cuba.[Edited on February 26, 2008 at 10:34 AM. Reason : >.<]
2/26/2008 10:33:16 AM
2/26/2008 10:39:37 AM
^^ i do not even fucking smoke. however, people smoke at most bars so i make a conscious choice to be in the smoke if i want to go out. So i suck it up and take it as part of being at the bar; kinda like having that whiny screaming 2 yr old at the table next to me is part of going to a place like golden corral. This is completly forgetting that a bar is a private establishment so why should the government be able to tell them they people can not smoke at THEIR bar.
2/26/2008 10:44:47 AM
No, your initial argument in this thread only criticizes municipal smoking bans. You are saying smoking bans should be in place statewide or nowhere, and we agree with you.
2/26/2008 11:14:16 AM
This thread has gone on longer than I intended. My first post went ahead and gave out all the possible responses to this situation, since no one has given any new ones, other than JoeSchmoe and a few which said we should do nothing. So, SandSanta, how about those pirates?
2/26/2008 12:18:22 PM
Well clearly there's a linear relationship as there are less pirates today then there were before yet its actually .01 degrees hotter then 200 years ago.I mean, I was at the beach in miami and nobody tried to make me walk a plank so clearly..
2/26/2008 12:49:18 PM
2/26/2008 1:45:32 PM
Well, first we need create a system to judge the sum of the poor health effects of the deaths and other injuries of those in the fatal accidents. The deaths and injuries of the drunk drivers themselves will count zero in our sum.Then we should take a look at the good health effects of the no-smoking bars.Compare the two reliably (which is impossible) for a solid conclusion.And then I might give a shit about some pop economics.
2/26/2008 1:58:15 PM
2/26/2008 2:28:16 PM
^Because smokers are smokers. They like smoking in bars.But, when the ban was forced on them, they realized that it wasn't the worst thing in the world and that, in some ways, they appreciated the ban.Although it should be noted that those people who visited probably had smoking bars back where they were from, and their appreciation for the no-smoking bars may have been boosted by the novelty aspect and the knowledge that they could return to smoking bars once they got home.[Edited on February 26, 2008 at 2:39 PM. Reason : What heV said.]
2/26/2008 2:34:18 PM
because free markets are often scalar forces, not vectors. when it comes to "quality of life" and "being civil", it often takes a regulatory framework to make the initial investment. it takes laws to provide direction, and free markets to find the most efficient operational case within those laws.
2/26/2008 2:35:32 PM
2/26/2008 2:48:47 PM
^imo, it's about not subjecting the service class to undue health hazards.
2/26/2008 2:52:37 PM
The restaurant industry has pushed hard for a statewide ban. When one location acts on their own, they risk becoming "the place that smokers can't go." This is the same reason that bans can hurt business when enacted by a municipality. Unilateral disarmament does not work. When a ban is all-inclusive, it helps business.
2/26/2008 2:56:30 PM
^or coal miners to iron lung. If its that much a concern go do another job.
2/26/2008 2:57:41 PM