Originally posted by: eskimospy
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Atomic Playboy
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Robor
Good for them. Indoor smoking should be banned.
What gives you the right to ban something that is legal to do? People do not have to go to places that allow smoking and there are plenty of places that are smoke free.
I should be allowed to urinate and defecate wherever I feel like. After all, it's legal for me to piss and shit in the comfort of my own home. Or sex! I should be able to fornicate wherever I damn well please. But nooooo, the MAN wants to suppress my rights to have a wild watersports scat orgy in my public park. It's disgusting!
The government sets time and place restrictions all the time. It's legal to sell alcohol, but not between 2:30am and 7:00am. It's legal to consume alcohol, but not on public property. It's legal to drive 65 on the freeway, but not through a residential neighborhood. Part of living together as a society is coming up with a set of rules that we can all agree to abide by, and these include rules that tell us when a certain behavior is acceptable or when it is not. It's always been that way, it always will be. Can you imagine if everything that was legal in any place was legal everywhere, any time? My God, it would be catastrophic. Although it would certainly help with the morality problem we have in this country (mainly that everyone is too damn concerned with morality to the point where breasts are taboo).
Not even close to the same thing. These strawmen have been tried before but still don't work.
Why are they not the same? All governmental laws (or nearly all) infringe upon liberty in some way. The entire basis for a law being able to do so is that they have to prove a benefit to society that exceeds the burden placed upon citizens to follow it. (at least in theory). This is why you can't drive your car 65 down a residential street.
Secondhand smoke has been proven to cause all sorts of problems, cancers, etc. in people who have nothing to do with the person smoking. The contention that people who don't want to inhale secondhand smoke simply should not visit bars or restaurants that allow smoking is not a realistic solution. So, to view smoking as some sort of assault on personal liberty is true in a sense, but it has plenty of company in other laws that I don't think you care much about.
I for one have to say that I looooooove the smoking ban in California. I hate that when I go home to Pennsylvania and go to the bar I come back covered in the stench of cigarettes, my hair, my clothes, everything. (then my pillow when I go to sleep... nasty) What's amazing is that even my friends who smoke love the smoking ban. It gives them all sorts of chances to meet new people outside in the smoking areas, etc. Now I think about the hysteria before the ban was passed about how people weren't going to go to the bar anymore and I laugh.