^ that is your opinion.if a group of people can't buy their way out of a situation, they'll apply political capital with whatever voice they can muster.
2/26/2008 3:08:29 PM
I think this issue boils down to basic principles, as in:Do you think property owners have a right to use their property as they see fit?
2/26/2008 3:29:51 PM
2/26/2008 3:52:19 PM
they need to ban babies from restaurants. Nothing is worst than taking a girl out to eat, going out with my homies, or having a family dinner and the people next to us have a screeching baby. Hire a fucking babysitter. If I can not smoke at the bar b.c its polluting your lungs then I do not want to forced to accept your noise pollution from your brat
2/26/2008 3:52:44 PM
2/26/2008 4:02:51 PM
2/26/2008 4:44:20 PM
also no waitress has ever gotten lung cancer from working in a barlots of coal miners have gotten all types of respiratory diseaseswhereas no bartender or waitress has ever gotten lung cancer from simply working in a baralso nobody is forcing them to work thereand nobody forced them to have kids either
2/26/2008 4:50:09 PM
^I can't argue with ignorance.
2/26/2008 4:54:21 PM
2/26/2008 4:56:20 PM
^You can make more money serving than you can in fast food.What's your damage here? Why can't you acknowledge what a dick move it is to walk up into someone's workplace and blow smoke in they face?
2/26/2008 5:17:56 PM
^get two jobs then....point is, nobody is forced to work somewhere if they really don't want to. if they weigh thier options and choose to work at a bar, so be it, but its still their choice.
2/26/2008 5:26:36 PM
2/26/2008 5:27:40 PM
2/26/2008 5:31:50 PM
according to bridget, waiting tables is the only job some people can getmaybe they shouldve studied a little harder in school so they could get a better job than waiting tablesbut its not their fault they didnt study in school, they probably couldnt study harder cause they had to raise a kid...and of course its not their fault for having a kid eitherjwb, find me one single instance of a nonsmoker getting lung cancer from simply working in a bar or restaurant...not a coal mine...not a factory...and not someone with bad asthma who had an asthma attack...i'm talking about show me one single instance where the DANGEROUS air in a bar or restaurant has caused some type of respiratory disease cause i dont buy iti've smoked for years and don't have any significant health problems (yet)but the person merely exposed to the smoke that i'm literally inhaling and absorbing into my tissues is getting sick? its like that bs chance would say, where if he was at a stop light with his windows down and smelled a whiff of cigarette, his throat would tighten up...course the deadly chemicals in all the auto exhaust at a red light were no big deal...just the cigarettes]
2/26/2008 5:53:21 PM
^^^^A lot of servers are already waiting tables as their second job. It's the ideal second job because you can pick up shifts around your full-time job. I assumed you guys would want to encourage that kind of motivation.[Edited on February 26, 2008 at 5:57 PM. Reason : sss]
2/26/2008 5:57:22 PM
i'd encourage them to get a better first job that would make the amount of money as their current 1st job + waiting tables...i'd then encourage them to spend that time that they currently spend waiting tables, spending some time with the kids they're trying to raiseand the only reason i'm slightly changing the subject is you keep acting like people are FORCED to work in bars and restaurants, which THEY ARE NOT]
2/26/2008 6:02:32 PM
2/26/2008 6:04:12 PM
^The divorced math teacher who pays out half his income to his wife and children and waits tables at night to get by...yeah, he really needs to reevaluate his life.He's the one with the problem, not the people who insist on smoking up his workplace.
2/26/2008 6:04:57 PM
let him take it up with his bossif patrons want to go to a bar or restaurant that allows smoking, and they want to smoke a few cigarettes over the course of the night, they are allowed to do thatno amount of playing to our sympathies on TWW is going to change that simple fact of business and free enterprisebesides there are bars and restaurants that are no smoking all over the place...why must they insist on getting a job at a place that still allows smoking?and didnt you mention something about coal miners WANTING dangerous/unhealthy work? While I completely disagree with that reason, your logic was because, in a simple sense, risk = rewardwell maybe the smoke risk is why a waitress can pull in $250 in a night and not pay taxes on it...sounds pretty nice to me]
2/26/2008 6:07:32 PM
^What I said about coal mining is documented. They repeatedly come out against extreme safety measures on their jobs. That is not the case in the service industry.And this isn't me appealing to TWW's sympathies; you can ignore the class issues I mentioned. This is about occupational and public health, and the right of employees to reasonably healthy working environments. The precedent is there, and no amount of ignorance or free market rhetoric is going to stop the bans.
2/26/2008 6:36:16 PM
2/26/2008 7:26:19 PM
It should be the restaurant owner who decides whether or not smoking is allowed on their property.Therefore, it is not the fault of the smoking patrons if the employees are upset about smokers coming in. The employees were not ignorant of the smoking policy when hired. They simply thought that higher pay in a nonsmoking place was worth whatever detriment second-hand smoke caused them. The employees can leave anytime they like, they are not forced to work in a smoking environment.
2/26/2008 8:20:13 PM
i use to hate smoking bans but now that i quit smoking i kinda support themfunny how that works
2/26/2008 8:21:53 PM
this rigid Ayn Randian bullshit is why libertarians never get anywhere.
2/26/2008 8:33:21 PM
^^uh, having no principles isn't very funnygood job losing all of your TSB credibility
2/26/2008 8:45:20 PM
2/26/2008 8:48:34 PM
the principle isn't on "smoking in restaurants"it's on where your policy opinions come fromiow, it's in the fact that you changed your support for a policy simply to convenience your current habitsif you were principled,your support or opposition to a policy wouldn't be affected by your comfort, convenience, emotion or personal benefitexample:say affirmative action for women was ended, but was kept for racial minoritiesif some white girl that used to support affirmative action (in general) ends her support for it based on that, well....ya see?
2/26/2008 9:00:28 PM
I'm a smker and I support smoking bans.
2/26/2008 9:12:36 PM
2/26/2008 9:39:02 PM
if it looks like a duck, talks like a duck, and walk likes a duck...
2/26/2008 9:44:11 PM
2/26/2008 10:37:30 PM
^Yes, actually it is.
2/26/2008 11:36:47 PM
^^ you have a difficult time with reading comprehension?how is to "invite regulation" of a business establishment is equivalent to forcing a business to provide particular services? at the very least, businesses have to comply with regulatory laws and public health codes. and for the record, a business can NOT refuse service to "anyone", no matter what their decorative signage suggests.... if your neighborhood grocer doesnt like Jews, blacks or cripples, they still have to allow them in to patronize their business.[Edited on February 26, 2008 at 11:40 PM. Reason : ]
2/26/2008 11:38:58 PM
2/26/2008 11:40:59 PM
2/26/2008 11:43:15 PM
why do liberals scream about civil rights and the gov't acting like big brother (which i support) until the issue turns into guns or cigarettes. I am all about civil rights, fuck bush's FISA bill but then you want to tell private restaurant owners "no smoking". Fuck the gov't if i want to open Nathan's Smokey Cigarette Bar that is my entrepreneurial initiative. I should have to tell my patrons "no smoking" because some whiny hypochondriac anti-smoking hippy doesn't like cigarette smoke. If this is you props for not smoking but i am not making you visit my establishment.
2/26/2008 11:47:35 PM
I don't have a problem smoking lounges.
2/26/2008 11:56:16 PM
2/27/2008 12:16:48 AM
2/27/2008 12:25:03 AM
2/27/2008 12:31:56 AM
Just how elastic is our definition of "public health" now? Do we get to legally prescribe a few laps around the tracks for fatties? (Public health burden, after all). Forcible intervention for lifestyles deemed "risky" or otherwise unhealthy?There's a difference between making sure the conditions in a food service establishment are sanitary and whether folks are smoking there. If the choices individuals make now fall under the category of "public health" issues, just where do we draw the line?
2/27/2008 12:49:20 AM
You being a fat ass sitting at home doesn't affect anyone else physically. Somone who partakes in sky diving doesn't affect anyone. You smoking in a restaurant affects everyone who is in the restaurant. So yes, it is a public health issue.And no, I'm not being elastic with the definition.
2/27/2008 12:52:10 AM
That logic holds up for anywhere where someone's participation is involuntary. Civic buildings? Check. Airplanes? Check. Busses? Check.You choose to walk into a bar where smoke is present. This is an assumed risk, one which is present when you open the door. The same way you take an assumed risk when you bite into a triple-bacon cheeseburger.Thus, I return back to my question - just how elastic is your definition of public health? Which assumed risks get culled under this definition of public health, and which ones do we leave alone?
2/27/2008 12:57:24 AM
2/27/2008 1:02:57 AM
2/27/2008 1:22:24 AM
2/27/2008 1:28:53 AM
This rigid adherence to property rights does not find its history in any political thought. Rather it is the creation of a half-rate b author. I honestly believe the libertarian party has been over run by the Ayn Rand fruitbags who do not understand the political thought process that goes into forming coherent workable political ideologies.
2/27/2008 1:38:43 AM
2/27/2008 1:40:27 AM
2/27/2008 1:46:40 AM
2/27/2008 1:49:08 AM