Not analagous. Asthma is far more common, and increasingly so because of environmental conditions.If you had tintinus, which can cause days of pain from exposure to loud noises, would you demand that restaurants and taverns be forced to play their music at a whisper?
Not analagous. Asthma is far more common, and increasingly so because of environmental conditions.If you had tintinus, which can cause days of pain from exposure to loud noises, would you demand that restaurants and taverns be forced to play their music at a whisper?
Non smoking areas are all I'm asking for, and areas that are truly smoke free.
As for the tintinus: What ReFlex said, as well as asking whether or not this is a chronic, degenerative disease? (Asthma will probably kill me. I already know that. The type I have will get worse with age.) Oh, and tintinus is a discomfort level. DISCOMFORT and NOT BREATHING are seperate items. Tintinus seems less deadly.
Washington state also has the most restrictive liquor laws in the Union.
I agree that the division of smoking and non- should be better, but I also don't think that the government has the right to impose unfunded mandates upon business; they do, but I don't agree with it.
If you're allergic to dogs, don't go to an establishment that allows pets. Especially pet stores.
Can you be noised to death with tintinus?It doesn’t matter what is more common. What matters is that tintinus is a very real illness that can cause very real pain, for days, for someone exposed to loud noises. If you’re going to legislate against SHS because some people have allergies, you should legislatate against noise for tintinus sufferers.
Stats? Cites? Evidence?Side note, which might make an interesting different thread: Back when smoke was everywhere, and buildings weren’t nearly as clean as they are now, asthma was far, far more rare. Now that things are squeaky clean, and smokers aren’t even allowed to smoke in a bar in most places, asthma is very common, but only in developed nations, where things have been sanitized.
Then make a case that loud music is more dangerous than SHS is for asthmatics. I'd like to see it.I don’t have a problem with that, although I don’t think using Big Brother is the best way to go about it. A private business that is open to the public is not a “public place.” The owner should be able to cater to their clientele however they want to. I have left many venues because the music was too loud for me, and found another place more suited to my place. I didn’t look down my nose at those who were there enjoying it, nor demand that Big Brother pass laws about the volume, I dealt with it as an adult and found a place that would cater to my tastes. That’s the way adults behave. (And I can make a far better case for loud music being harmful to health than anyone can make about the dangers of SHS.)
I have said I am very happy with the "smoke eaters". I've been in bars whose filtration and ventilation were good enough that I barely noticed any smoke, unless I happened to pass by a smoker. I've also been in bars where the only ventilation happened when someone walked in or out of the door. Then again, I suppose you weren't limiting it to my specific case. Well, >I< am anti-smoking, and I endorse the use of filters. The newer ones are very, very good. Fair enough?There are air filter units which will make the air inside an establishment, even one full of smokers, cleaner than the air outside. The anti-smoker movement refuses to even discuss them, other than to lie about how well they work. Business that want to cater to the few people who really are sensitive to smoke (as opposed to the multitudes who claim to be sensitive to it) would be able to install such filters, (they cost about three grand, so are affordable) and everyone would be happy. Except for the small, very well funded, very loud anti-smoker crowd.
For some, I suppose you might be right. But please don't paint us all with the same brush. I think I'm fairly moderate about my views. Smoke away...just not in my face. (I have had someone blow smoke in my face...once....I had to leave quickly before the cops showed up. That I will not tolerate.)Their real goal is to eliminate smoking entirely, and any ends justify their means.
Yes, but could it be FATAL?It can make the sufferer unable to function, often for days. In other words, it makes people ill, so the analogy isn’t flawed.
I feel that non-smokers are the minority in my area as well.(BTW, It seems to me I am in a minority. I seem to see more smokers than non. Confirmation bias? Or am I right? This is the basis of this question.)
I don't think you meant it this way, but I'd also have a problem with the majority dictating where the minority could go.tkingdoll said:So, why should the minority dictate where the majority can go?
kevin:
Do you have stats on smokers vs non-smokers in the US?
Nevermind the rest of that sentenceKreteks were originally created by Haji Jamahri, a resident of Kudus, Java, Indonesia, in the early 1880's for medicinal purposes as a way to deliver the eugenol in the cloves to the lungs, as it was thought to help asthma. It cured his chest pains and he started to market his invention to the village...
Err. Yeah, it really does. Some people are seven and a half feet tall. Most doors are too small for them to go through without ducking. They represent such a small fraction of people, however, that it isn't seen as practical to make all doorways eight feet high. It absolutely matters how common they are.It doesn’t matter what is more common.
I don't see any source saying that tinnitus causes pain. Rather, it's hearing damage caused by loud noise that leads to a usually subjective ringing sound. Unforunate, but it is acquired, much more than is the case with asthma.What matters is that tintinus is a very real illness that can cause very real pain, for days, for someone exposed to loud noises.
As clarcst mentioned, you'd have a tough time showing that asthma is more common now that things are "cleaner".Side note, which might make an interesting different thread: Back when smoke was everywhere, and buildings weren’t nearly as clean as they are now, asthma was far, far more rare. Now that things are squeaky clean, and smokers aren’t even allowed to smoke in a bar in most places, asthma is very common, but only in developed nations, where things have been sanitized.
"Big Brother" always tends to be an exaggeration by people who have not read 1984, and it is one here (an exaggeration).I don’t have a problem with that, although I don’t think using Big Brother is the best way to go about it.
I don't think you can show support for either of those clauses.Their real goal is to eliminate smoking entirely, and any ends justify their means.
You do know how many obscure conditions there are that aren't specifically catered to by businesses, right? You've just picked one. Asthma is a growing health problem that genuinely needs to be addressed. Wikipedia cites this study for a figure as high as 1 in 4 urban children.It can make the sufferer unable to function, often for days. In other words, it makes people ill, so the analogy isn’t flawed.
Here's numbers for the UK. Not sure of the source, it's from their national statistics department.
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/CCI/nugget.asp?ID=866&Pos=6&ColRank=2&Rank=1000
They consider adults 16 and above. 25% of their adults smoke. They had a majority of males smoking in '74.
It's very, very hard to prove causation in these sort of cases and often by that time it's often too late.