I just can't stand the hypocrisy of the smoking ban. If second hand smoke is to dangerous for the bar, then how come its ok for people to drive home drunk
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The reasoning about banning vs. not banning smoking has always been about money, and I will NEVER say that's a good thing to consider. Money shouldn't be a factor... either it's bad for people or it isn't.
As for our chubby friend with the fatty foods? The fat guy eating that food needs to be educated about what those foods are doing to him (better food education would do a world of good in this country... I took a 16-week nutrition class at college and my whole viewpoint has changed, as have my eating habits). If he knew exactly how his body worked with foods and still wanted to have those foods, then fine, but a lot of people don't know how that stuff works. Ignoring the food education thing, his food choices don't directly affect my health. Can it affect my premiums? Probably. His fatty sandwich doesn't fill my body with his food's fat, though, which is my argument about second-hand smoke.
The examples you mentioned are not something one generally comes into contact with everyday, and they're definitely not things you don't get legal control over if someone tries to force them on you. As for the specific things you mentioned, the ONLY thing I've done on that list in the past three years is 4th of July celebrations. Once a year is a risk I'm willing to take, but that's the whole point! I'm CHOOSING to go to that fireworks display. If I chose not to attend those celebrations due to health reasons (or any reason at all, really), I'm within my rights to do so. If someone comes to my house and fires them off on my lawn, I can call the cops, both for the trespassing and any damage to my property. Point is, if someone fired off fireworks on the property of someone else, they'd A) be in deep legal trouble, and B) be a class-A douchebag for doing it in the first place.
The only thing on that list that I can see being a valid comparison is the lawn mower, and considering there's not really a good alternative for that, I'm not gonna pick a fight about it. Smoking is different - nicotine is what causes the addiction, electric cigarettes provide nicotine. Case solved.
You're right, everything can hurt you. But moderation is key. Aside from that, every person has the right to decide what's worth the risk and what's not. When I can't go anywhere without running into someone blowing smoke into the air I'm breathing, my ability to dictate what risks I'm willing to take is being challenged, and legally, I can't do anything about it. That pisses me off and I don't think I'm being discriminatory to those who smoke for not wanting to be around that stuff. I'm not an asshole for wanting to go through my day without coming into contact with it, and I'm not going to accept the prejudice line when I'm trying to keep that out of body and can't do so without seriously changing the way I live my life. If smokers wanna pay for my education at a smoke-free college, then fine, but they don't, and I'm stuck with what I've got.
As for our chubby friend with the fatty foods? The fat guy eating that food needs to be educated about what those foods are doing to him (better food education would do a world of good in this country... I took a 16-week nutrition class at college and my whole viewpoint has changed, as have my eating habits). If he knew exactly how his body worked with foods and still wanted to have those foods, then fine, but a lot of people don't know how that stuff works. Ignoring the food education thing, his food choices don't directly affect my health. Can it affect my premiums? Probably. His fatty sandwich doesn't fill my body with his food's fat, though, which is my argument about second-hand smoke.
The examples you mentioned are not something one generally comes into contact with everyday, and they're definitely not things you don't get legal control over if someone tries to force them on you. As for the specific things you mentioned, the ONLY thing I've done on that list in the past three years is 4th of July celebrations. Once a year is a risk I'm willing to take, but that's the whole point! I'm CHOOSING to go to that fireworks display. If I chose not to attend those celebrations due to health reasons (or any reason at all, really), I'm within my rights to do so. If someone comes to my house and fires them off on my lawn, I can call the cops, both for the trespassing and any damage to my property. Point is, if someone fired off fireworks on the property of someone else, they'd A) be in deep legal trouble, and B) be a class-A douchebag for doing it in the first place.
The only thing on that list that I can see being a valid comparison is the lawn mower, and considering there's not really a good alternative for that, I'm not gonna pick a fight about it. Smoking is different - nicotine is what causes the addiction, electric cigarettes provide nicotine. Case solved.
You're right, everything can hurt you. But moderation is key. Aside from that, every person has the right to decide what's worth the risk and what's not. When I can't go anywhere without running into someone blowing smoke into the air I'm breathing, my ability to dictate what risks I'm willing to take is being challenged, and legally, I can't do anything about it. That pisses me off and I don't think I'm being discriminatory to those who smoke for not wanting to be around that stuff. I'm not an asshole for wanting to go through my day without coming into contact with it, and I'm not going to accept the prejudice line when I'm trying to keep that out of body and can't do so without seriously changing the way I live my life. If smokers wanna pay for my education at a smoke-free college, then fine, but they don't, and I'm stuck with what I've got.
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