Monday, August 20, 2007

International jihad against tobacco

The international jihad against tobacco. - By William Saletan - Slate Magazine

A very interesting article. While I don't smoke, and most of my friends do not, some of my family does. And there are times when I really do feel kind of sorry for the segregation they have to cope with. While I support the ban on smoking in bars (and soon casino's) here in Colorado this article does bring up an interesting point. Which casues more actual harm and damage: secondhand smoke or drunk drivers and/or alcohol related violence? Both drinking and smoking are voluntary activities, both are addictive, and both can cause the user serious damage. So why do people accept the smoking prohibition but not alcohol prohibition?

1 comment:

  1. (This actually came from my Mom)

    As you probably know, both your father and I smoked heavily as teenagers.
    We were probably going through a pack a day each. Cost wasn't much of a
    problem back then; I remember going to some store on 8th Street where we
    bought a CARTON for $2.

    In our very first apartment, which was on North Nevada and is still there,
    we smoked all the time. I'm sure the place was clean when we moved in; in
    particular, the windows had been washed. When we moved out 9 months later,
    the windows had brown streaks on them from smoke condensing on the windows.
    Of course, I hadn't cleaned them for 9 months, so there was dust too, but
    they definitely had more smoke residue than anything else. Tarry, ugly
    brownish-yellow gummy stuff.

    When you smoke, you don't notice the smell. When you don't smoke, you do
    notice it. And smoking is just plain stinky! People who smoke have very
    bad breath (ever kissed anyone who smokes?). The smell is absorbed by
    clothes, hair, and any fabric. So if someone smokes in your house, or your
    car, it stinks up your house, or car. I think that is the number one reason
    why smoking is so objectionable. I always hated sitting near a smoking
    section when I ate in a restaurant that had a smoking section, back in the
    old days. It felt like trying to eat in, say, a skunk den or somethiing.
    The taste of food is mostly smell, you know, so smoke really does interfere
    with it.

    The reason people really ought to smoke outside, though, is because smoking
    is bad for your lungs. Why do you think I have a coughing problem? Both
    Grandmother and Grandfather Ruch died from smoking-related ailments.
    Granted, Grandmother had lived a long life. But Grandfather Ruch was only
    around 60 (Pete and I will be 69 on our next birthdays; James was born after
    our 60th).

    I'm certainly against alcohol, don't get me wrong. Pete may say that
    getting married too young was the reason our marriage failed (I don't know
    whether he does or not - just guessing), but I think that wasn't a mistake.
    The mistakes we both made were choosing to drink alcohol when we had
    problems we didn't know how to solve. I certainly don't recommend drinking.

    But the country tried making alcohol illegal and it didn't work. Making
    drugs illegal isn't working either. The best we can seem to do is to
    control when and where people can buy or consume alcohol, and try to keep it
    from the young. Smoking too.

    So anyway, I don't think we as a society condone either smoking or drinking;
    it's just that the immediate consumption of a cigarette affects the people
    surrounding the smoker, whereas the same is not true of an alcohol drink.

    ReplyDelete