cathach wrote:As someone who spent years working with asthma in smoke-filled pubs and clubs, I'd have to say that unfortunately the 35% of people who smoked were always imposing their own taste on everyone else, due to the very nature of the product. I would think as someone who appreciates bespoke clothing surely you'd welcome the ban? No longer do you have to air suits for several days before putting them away nor do you run the ever present risk of having a very dear suit be singed by a careless ciggarette.
Its facetious also to suggest that such workers can simply go somewhere else to find work, especially when the situations are the same everywhere. I'm not entirely sure where you're going with this, do you want smoking again in buses, the
underground, cinemas and hospitals again? Are these fundamental affronts to your liberty?
As well as that persons who disagree with you politely on an online forum are not Tin-Hitlers, a Tin-Hitler is an individual who'll cosh you in daylight or lock you up for trying to protest outside the Houses of Parliament both of which I humbly submit are far greater threats to your liberty.
Well, it does seem strange for an asthmatic to work for years in smoke-filled rooms! I simply do not know how many people smoked in pubs and clubs - but enough of them to result in the closure of thousands of these places, after the smoking ban, together with the loss of thousands of jobs. I infer from your remark about choosing workplaces that you preferred to have a job and to suffer the smoke; maybe your job doesn't exist anymore. Smoking on 'buses was confined to the back of the upper deck and trains had smoking compartments (where one could often find a seat). I see no reason why there should not be smoking blocks in cinemas and theatres and smoking rooms in hospitals, pubs and clubs. I could not conceive of ever going to a smokeless Ronnie Scott's - it would be like watching a remake of Casablanca, starring a sober, smokeless Tom Cruise, instead of Humph. That's one film that I wouldn't watch.
I mentioned the smoking ban as an aside but Zeitgeist jumped on it to reignite the old debate, insisting that there is no real argument.
I couldn't care less whether my clothes smell of tobacco smoke and the odd burn is in the nature of things. I don't try to live in some cocoon.
The smoking ban is not just an affront to my liberty. In fact I more resent than that the assertion by Tin-Hitlers that they know what is best for us as they concoct spurious arguments to support their position and generate the attitude that it is unreasonable and even
impolite to disagree with them; all the while they insist, with unbelievable smugness, that they are right.
From the popularity of the 'This is a Pipe-smoking Zone' thread, it is fairly clear that some of us do still smoke and my daughter tells me that smoking amongst her age group (early 20s) is fashionable and she says that she believes that it is fashionable as a reaction to all the Tin-Hitlerism at work in British society.
I judge politeness substantively not just as a matter of form; so if someone tells me with a smile that
he knows better than I do for my own sake, I regard that as a grave discourtesy and I will always say so. Moreover, the Tin-Hitlers in government, organizing the suppression of protest and debate; imposing over-regulation on the law-abiding; sending troops around the world, trying to police it as though Britain were still an Imperial power, but unable to make immediate, decisive reaction to cope with rioting mobs at home, are just where the rot is in all this.
It is truly maddening to perceive the general, sheep-like acquiescence to Tin-Hitlerism.
NJS