Should smoking be banned in public?

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Should smoking be banned in public?

I'm a non-smoker and I think it should be banned
27
71%
I'm a non-smoker and I think it shouldn't be banned
6
16%
I'm a smoker and I think it should be banned
0
No votes
I'm a smoker and I think it shouldn't be banned
1
3%
I'm a ex-smoker and I think it should be banned
3
8%
I'm a ex-smoker and I think it shouldn't be banned
1
3%
 
Total votes : 38

Re: Should smoking be banned in public?

Postby Steven_M » 15. July 2008, 21:51

Timsky wrote:I think smoking in Australia will be completly out-lawed within 10 years. Alcohol as well...unfortunately!


How can the manly men Aussies possibly allow outlawing drinking, no way :P

Isn't that true, aren't you Aussies all cowboy hat wearing crocodile wrestlers with great tans? I'll bet your wrestling a croc right now, aren't you Tim? :P
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Re: Should smoking be banned in public?

Postby Timsky » 16. July 2008, 00:55

Yes, i ride a Kangaroo to my crocodile farm with a massive knife threating beat-nik American's with pathetic weapons.

Drinking is on the downturn in Australia. Im actually glad it is too. I was bought up in a family that doesn't drink. And im thankful for it.

Dont get me wrong, i love a drink...even if i drink too much. But im responsible. But I think its disgusting when that's all people do to relate to each other. Just getting hammered.

And it makes me even more angry with drunk drivers. In Oct 2006, I had to spend the weekend with my best friend at the time who's friend, along with three others, were killed being driven by a driver under the influence. It was the hardest thing ive ever had to do.

It's stories like those, which is why the Australian government are taxing alco-pops at a higher price, and bombarding the citizens with anti drinking campaigns.
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Re: Should smoking be banned in public?

Postby Rejean » 18. November 2009, 17:09

Time to dig up an old thread for the hell of it....

Yeah here in New Brunswick (not sure about the rest of Canada) it's illegal to smoke in any public place, and if you smoke outside, you have to be 10 meters (~30 feet) from a door.
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Re: Should smoking be banned in public?

Postby plazma53 » 05. March 2010, 18:49

Arguably by allowing smoking in public places it is the freedom of non-smokers that is being restricted. We choose not to smoke but by going out into a public space this choice is effectively taken away. By smoking in public the smoker is forcing everyone in the vicinity to smoke too, perhaps there should be signs everywhere reading ‘public smoking area only’.

Maybe it is down to the renowned English sense of reserve but why is it always the non-smoker, the one who has committed no intrusion that has to quietly get up and move when someone next to them lights up? For years now non-smokers have had to endure the unpleasant inhaling of stale cigarette smoke or coming home smelling like the inside of a dirty ash tray and for those people that have to work under these conditions, in bars or restaurants, the situation is even more exacerbated, as they have no escape.

Perhaps most significantly is the detrimental affect that passive smoking can have on anyone’s health. Passive smoking has been linked to an endless list of serious health problems ranging from bronchitis and asthma to lung cancer and heart disease and even SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome). According to Cancer Research figures several hundred people each year in the UK die from lung cancer caused by passive smoking.

Quite apart from the enormous cost to the NHS, what is even more infuriating is that in the vast majority of cases, illnesses developed through passive smoking might have been avoided. International experience has shown that the best way to rapidly and successfully tackle health risks from second hand smoke is to take action on smoking in public places.

A ban would not only improve the lives of us non-smokers but would encourage those causing the problem to help themselves. Areas such as California where smoking in public places has been banned entirely suggest that smoke-free environments reduce both the number of smokers in the population at large and the number of cigarettes they get through.

Parts of America have managed to create an atmosphere where no smoking is the social norm and there seems no reason why Britain shouldn’t be able to achieve the same. Polls have shown that a ban would be supported by as much as 85% of the public so what’s holding us back?

Finally, many people would argue that if we ban smoking in public places where will it end and that having no smoking areas in bars and restaurants is enough. But I would just like to leave with you with an anonymous comment I found on the internet, ‘A smoking section in a bar or restaurant is like having a peeing allowed section in a public swimming pool—it spreads! Would you swim there?’.
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