10/27/2007 10:05:16 PM
10/27/2007 10:19:37 PM
those are irrelevant, because the bar owner has the right to dictate this particular act. Now, the gubment is saying "nope, can't do what you want in your own place, cause we say so."
10/27/2007 10:22:32 PM
no, they're not irrelevant. The 'gubment' has, at sometime in the past, made laws and statutes concerning serving and drinking alcohol and other activities that may or may not go on inside privately owned establishments like bars. If the government now outlaws smoking in a bar/restaurant, then that law is no different any law already on the books concerning activity inside the bar. It's just that up until now, they have chosen not to make laws concerning smoking in particular, while the other laws are simply the status quo. Whether you agree with the law or not, it's still within the rights of the legislative branch to make such a statutes. I'm sure other people will not agree with it as well, and that's what we have the court system for. It sounds to me like you're saying that smoking is somehow inherently different than other activities - "the bar owner has the right to dictate this particular act". Now i'm asking, Why?[Edited on October 27, 2007 at 10:31 PM. Reason : .]
10/27/2007 10:30:23 PM
then I ask you, what about this particular act gives the government the right to remove the bar owner's right of deciding about it for himself?
10/27/2007 10:37:16 PM
I'm not making an argument either way. You are. I'm just asking rhetorical questions. If you want to go all Libertarian "stay out of my bedroom and give me back my tax money" or whatever, that's fine. I'm just saying, at least be consistent. If you feel so offended by a smoking ban, I would expect you to be the first in line to repeal all the alcohol, drugs, sex, food and health regulations that bars have to abide by too.
10/27/2007 11:06:15 PM
10/27/2007 11:15:49 PM
I'm sorry if I repeat anything, I haven't read the whole thread. However, I feel that people who complain about 2nd hand smoke should realize that it's only really going to affect you if you're around someone who smokes a lot. Studies have compared a persons lung that lived in a major city with a persons lung that lived with a smoke and they actually looked quite similar. So unless the city you live in has really clean air, second hand smoke isn't the biggest issue.Also, I highly doubt they will ban smoking in North Carolina. Tobacco is such a large industry here that IF they do ban smoking in North Carolina, it will be the last state to do so.Some cities here have gone smoke free, like Asheville. I was there this past summer, and granted for people who don't smoke it's very very nice. I smoke, but not often I have maybe 5 cigarettes a week, unless of course I'm drinking that weekend. However, there are times when I'm not smoking that I go somewhere that I prefer to not smell smoke while I'm eating, or if i'm sick. I appreciate that some places are smoke free.But it does suck that some bars are smoke free too, cause for me drinking and smoking go hand in hand.Anytime I went over to UNC's campus and I was smoking I always felt so much out of place, and people looked at me weird. It was also funny because people actually thought they were the first person that has ever told me that smoking was bad for me.UNC sucks.
10/27/2007 11:29:10 PM
10/27/2007 11:38:58 PM
10/27/2007 11:56:25 PM
what about the 9th admendment, you can't use your rights against other people.So if you say you have a right to smoke, however smoking is harmful to other people. You can't smoke around someone because you have no right to harm them. Gah I'm too tired to try to talk smart.^^I don't have a link, this is just something that I remember hearing way back. I'm probably wrong. But it at least sounds like something plausible.[Edited on October 28, 2007 at 12:29 AM. Reason : ]
10/28/2007 12:29:12 AM
besides the fact that smokers have disgusting breath, yellow teeth and are lazy at work. Not to mention they always stink of smoke. not to mention all the money wasted on cigarettes.
10/28/2007 4:23:01 PM
bar owners dont have the right to dictate whether or not their employees will be subjected to hazardous work environment -- condtions that degrade their health. you, as a smoker, don't have the right to pollute my environment, in any publicly accessible space, whether its a privately owned establishment or otherwise. Here's the fact: states and municipalities are increasingly going smoke-free. and theres nothing you can do about it. enjoy your smoky bars now, because they will soon be an anachronism.Don't believe me? Then consider this:who here remembers when you could smoke on buses?who here remembers when you could smoke on airplanes? who remembers when you could smoke in the doctors/dentists waiting lobby?who remembers when you could smoke in the middle of the shopping malls, in every fast food joint, in the libraries, in daycare centers, in hospitals, in court houses, in every commercial and government office building? I mean, there were ASHTRAYS built into the DESKS and CHAIRS in every public college campus. People used to smoke in class, during lectures!when i was a kid, the adults used to smoke in church, down in the basement, before and after services. Teachers and parents used to smoke in PUBLIC SCHOOLS in the teacher's break rooms and in the administrative offices.My HIGH SCHOOL had a designated smoking area behind the building for STUDENTS. we used to stop out there during the breaks between class periods to pull down a quick cigarette. some of you probably cant even believe this. and you know what?one day, in the not too distant future, YOU'RE going to tell kids how you used to smoke in Bars and Restaurants ... and they will look at you with wide eyes, and say "NO SHIT?? REALLY????"so you guys can bitch and moan about these new laws all you want. just remember, your day is coming and it wont be long.so enjoy it now while you can.[Edited on October 28, 2007 at 4:59 PM. Reason : ]
10/28/2007 4:41:55 PM
10/28/2007 4:43:29 PM
^ yeah, but im talking domestic flights. all carriers, all flights, all over the country. they had ashtrays built into the seat arms. they had "no smoking" lights that would be on during takeoff and landing. i remember short 30 minute flights that people would hate because it was too short to get up to cruising altitude where they could smoke. the stewardess' repertoire included the phrase:"the captain has turned the No Smoking light off. Please do not flush cigarette butts down the toilets. Use the ashtrays provided"or something like that. they stopped allowing smoking on domestic flights sometime around 1990 or so... i remember my last flight that i smoked on, i was flying to San Diego to go to boot camp.
10/28/2007 4:55:47 PM
^I didn't live in the US at the time so I had never taken a domestic flight in my life until I moved here. When I lived in the UAE, we drove every where. Even when we took a family vacation to Musket, Oman. So all my flying experiences were international.(by domestic I mean relative to the country I was in. I had been to the USA during that time but it wasn't what I would call a domestic flight for me )[Edited on October 28, 2007 at 4:58 PM. Reason : .]
10/28/2007 4:58:24 PM
10/28/2007 7:54:26 PM
^ yeah, good point. you know, since nobody is forced to work in any particular place, no other workspaces have employee health and safety standards. right?
10/28/2007 8:34:19 PM
well, given that smoking is not covered by OSHA standards, I'd have to say you are a fucktard, once again
10/28/2007 8:54:30 PM
^Hey now.Asides from the dangers and stressors inherent in a particular occupation, people have a right to a safe, unthreatening, and healthy working environment.If a server at Applebee's keeps getting groped by the night manager, and coroporate doesn't respond to his or her complaints, he or she can sue the fuck out of them.Why should the presence of smoke in the working environment be considered any different than the presence of sexual harrassment?
10/28/2007 10:01:13 PM
I dont smoke and I have a problem with UNC doing this. People should be allowed to do so esp outside. WTF. I imagine there will be some professors who will quit over this if they hold them to it.SPK, you arent serious? I guess if someone chooses to work in a bar, you can assume a couple of things. May work in smokey enviro, late hours, and serve alcohol. If you have a problem with those conditions, you may want to try something else. And to use your harrassement scenerio, you should form a group to protect strippers. Those poor girls with no other choices are FORCED to face both sexual harrasement and smoke for fins.I dont see anything wrong with people smoking outside or in a designated place at public places. I also dont see anything wrong with a bar that doesnt allow smoking, if thats what the OWNER wants and the market dictates. THe flipside is if an owner and market wants a smokers bar, let them have it. Just because I dont like it doesnt mean someone else shouldnt enjoy it, esp when I have the CHOICE to not go in there. These nanny state politics are ridiculous.[Edited on October 28, 2007 at 10:15 PM. Reason : .]
10/28/2007 10:14:21 PM
eyedrb, I think your stance on the issue is indicative of your lack of concern for people. It's very ugly.Take a single mom who works as an administrative assistant in a dentist's office or a teacher who pays loads of child support to his ex-wife and three children. These people are struggling to make ends meet. And your advice to them is, "Tough luck. Get another job." And so they get another job. They get the perfect job for people in their circumstances--waiting tables and tending bar. They can fit it in easily around their full-time jobs and make a decent amount of extra cash to get those ends met at the end of the month. But they have to put up with tons of dangerous, if not deadly, cigarette smoke.And your advice to them?Tough luck. Get another job.[Edited on October 28, 2007 at 10:23 PM. Reason : Not protecting the servers is classist and wrong.]
10/28/2007 10:21:57 PM
If it bothers them that much, hell ya.You telling me the only jobs at night require smoking?And back to your example. The person working at the dentist office should be worried more about NO2 exposure than cig smoke. Since NO2 is the leading cause of birth defects and miscarriages in dental offices. FYI. Maybe would should outlaw that. Let people have their dental work without pain relief. Or do away with cars and air conditioners. My point is where does it end?
10/28/2007 10:29:04 PM
10/28/2007 10:32:49 PM
^^it ends with things that don't benefit us in any way. Smoking has no benefit what so ever to a human being.
10/28/2007 10:44:26 PM
neither do videogames, tanning and nail salons, rims, etc...You better get going on the legislations.
10/28/2007 10:47:59 PM
^^^^It's a lot more than just them being "bothered" by the smoke. We're talking about physical illnesses and birth defects.^^^I doubt you're good-looking enough to call me "darling."And a manager is a manager, not a slave owner. It shouldn't be his or her right to subject his employees to a smoky work environment, just like it isn't his or her right to grab a titty whenever he feels like it.And stop acting like jobs are in endless supply.[Edited on October 28, 2007 at 10:51 PM. Reason : sss]
10/28/2007 10:51:09 PM
stop acting like people are helpless and have no choice.Face it. There are alot of jobs that pay well bc they are dangerous. If we apply your logic, then we would have stop those jobs too. Imagine a poor coal miner with kids, etc, and needs the money but is forced to work in a coal mine and expose himself to sulfur, coal, and the fear of a collapse. He isnt forced into that job any more than someone taking a job at applebees.
10/28/2007 10:55:56 PM
10/28/2007 10:59:04 PM
Singapore FTW!
10/28/2007 11:00:33 PM
10/28/2007 11:11:01 PM
10/28/2007 11:13:27 PM
dont worry Bridg.the "doctor" and his paleolithic buddies are on the losing side of this battle. they have no moral ground to stand on. they have no way out of the legislation that is pending all over the nation to send smokers outside next to the dumpsters.good riddance. heres the current list of states that have State-wide Bans on smoking in all enclosed public spaces, including bars, restaurants, and workplaces:WAORCAAZUTCONMMTMNILOHMDNJNYMACTRINHMEHI the following states have statewide bans for restaurants and workplacesNVIDARLAGATNFLVTmost every other state, except for North Carolina and a few others, have various local municipalities and/or counties that have instituted some various degree of bans on smoking. (Note the ban in Chapel Hill is only for the UNC campus, not for the town)California is considering laws against tenants smoking in apartment complexes. 82% of renters in California favor a smoking ban in apartment complexes.-- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_smoking_bans_in_the_United_Statessmokers are a dying breed. literally and figuratively. you're all putting up such a noble fight as you go down... but no one is fooled. you're all going to go down. one way or another.
10/29/2007 1:04:23 AM
^I'm not on your side, by the way.I'm interested in protecting people from second-hand smoke.But I'm by no means against smoking. And I'm certainly not a douchebag about it, which I totally think you are.
10/29/2007 1:29:06 AM
thank you, sweetheart.i got a big kick out of your last post. I LOLed, in fact.and i know youre not. you're a nasty smoker too, IIRC? but i appreciate your willingness to take responsiblity for it.and yes, i am a douchebag. My wife says its the #1 reason why I've never had any friends.
10/29/2007 1:50:16 AM
the government needs to fucking give out nicorette gum
10/29/2007 2:01:09 AM
^ I thought you quit smoking.
10/29/2007 5:27:16 AM
moral ground? WTF. I dont smoke. I also dont have a problem with banning it INSIDE public buildings. However, if a business wants to have a smoking section it is their right. It is also YOUR right to not enter that business. They have even started to ban smoking in ones own car. That is total BS.Bridget, the question Im trying to get you to see is where does it end. Why are you for protecting bartenders, but leaving alone alot of the examples I mentioned above. It is a slippery slope.
10/29/2007 8:47:21 AM
Let's try looking at the problem from a property rights viewpoint. Some questions follow.First, is one able to "own" the air inside his property? If so then he should be able to allow smoking, right? But what if second-hand smoke kills. Is the owner now committing murder by allowing smoke to be breathed in by his patrons? Are parents committing homocide by smoking around their children?Now what about outside? The courts have decided that everyone owns the airwaves, thus the gov't owns them and regulates radio and TV signals. If the air is "owned by the public", then the gov't owns the air and can decide what we put in it. If the gov't, in the form of the EPA, can go after big air polluters on behalf of the public...why would we be surprised that they now see fit to go after small independent air polluters such as smokers?One aspect of a right is that you can enjoy it without anyone else provide it for you. So do you have a right to breath clean air? Does the smoker have to stop smoking around you in order to provide you clean air? Or do you simply have the right to persue clean air by seeking it out on your own?[Edited on October 29, 2007 at 9:31 AM. Reason : .]
10/29/2007 9:30:34 AM
10/29/2007 9:43:21 AM
I support ban on smoking in public building with the exception of bars and restaurants. Due to the social nature of these places they should be able to decide to have partition of smoking/non-smoking, all smoking, or no smoking. If you do not like the smoky bar atmosphere find somewhere else. I also support apt complexes having the ability to designate apts as non-smoking. I also support the designation of "smoking areas" in a outdoor ventilated area that is conveniently accessible to people wishing to smoke. 100 FT from any building is NOT conveniently accessible. If the various buildings at UNC are like that of any other university than I am sure they all have multiple entrances/exits. One exit can be designated for smoking with the other(s) free from smokers for those bitchy people who really can not tolerate the whole 2 seconds that they may get a whiff of cigarette smoke.People will always find something to bitch about.
10/29/2007 9:43:52 AM
not to mention that almost everything in American grocery stores causes cancer in some people because of all the added shit. (for lack of a better word)But non cause deaths at the rate of smoking.
10/29/2007 9:45:01 AM
10/29/2007 10:08:15 AM
People complain about obesity with particular focus on McD's. Simple solution don't eat at fucking McDonalds; exercise, and eat healthy.People bitch about drivers on the cell phone. Sometimes especially when trying to get directions it is necessary to make a call. Their is a difference btw someone cruising on the highway on the cell phone; and someone swerving through traffic, trying to take turns, and being a hazard while on the cell phone. The later case would warrant a ticket of reckless driving if a police officer sees them.MADD bitches about drinkingEvangelical Christians complain about sexuality on TV; with parents going ape-shit b.c Janet Jackson's boob popped out during a half time show.the blind even bitch about hybrid cars and target not having a "blind friendly " website.BTW speaking of obesity i was disgusted at BaDa wings yesterday where two morbidly obese bitches were gluttonsly chowing down on chicken wings a big basket of fries and drinking beer. Their children were at the table next to them and sure enough they were fat too.[Edited on October 29, 2007 at 11:04 AM. Reason : a]
10/29/2007 11:02:45 AM
10/29/2007 11:50:44 AM
10/29/2007 12:06:08 PM
my point was that if you are that type of person to sit and let your health deteriorate from playing video games or whatever...then healthcare or no healthcare, you aren't going to do shit about it.healthcare is a right everyone should have. Its up to you if you want to use it or not.
10/29/2007 12:07:56 PM
^like say by smoking? Thats my point. Where does it end. You want to ban video games next?
10/29/2007 12:15:07 PM
why are you continuing to harp on the video game comparison?Video gaming is an activity that people generally do at home in private, by themselves or in small groups. There are no detrimental health effects to people near them. Smoking, though, it not a "self-contained" activity. Simply by being in the vicinity of a smoker, a non-smoker's health and comfort are directly impacted.
10/29/2007 12:23:13 PM
no, video games does not effect anyone but the person playing the video game.Smoking effects everyone in the area.^even when a heavy smoker is not smoking anyone near them has their comfort level effected because of the horrible stench thats associated with heavy smokers. Bad breath, the smell of cigarette smoke embedded in their pours/clothing[Edited on October 29, 2007 at 12:26 PM. Reason : asd]
10/29/2007 12:24:02 PM