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Thread: Complete Cigar Ban!

  1. Default Complete Cigar Ban!

    While it seems that most posters on this forum are American, I thought I'd share a recent piece of legislation in Newfoundland, Canada. As of July 1st, 2005, ALL public places are completely smoke free. This includes outdoor patio's, and other completely outdoor establishments. I am a law student and as per my interpretation of the legislation it may even include Golf Courses!!! (Oh the humanity! ) Although such a piece of legislatin is unlikely to be saved by the federal charter, I think it is going too far. Does anyone have any opinion on this complete smoking ban? (I am expecially interested in the opinion of the American's on here.) (Oh yeah, and any cigar bars are officially closed!)
    "I Smoke in Moderation.... Just One Cigar at a Time." Mark Twain

  2. #2
    Amanda Guest

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    Smoking bans in general are wrong at multiple levels. I get furious when I hear about them and wring my hands about the wholesale health-and-wellness police state that big brother is clobbering us over the head with. From what I hear, there are places in the US where even outdoor smoking is being banned. It's enough to make me weep for my country, not just as a smoker, but as someone who values freedom.

    I always used to think that the nanny-staters would pistol-whip the smokers into submission and then move onto food and beverages, slapping the double cheeseburgers out of the mouths of fast-food patrons and sin taxing alcohol and coffee right into the black market. It was at this point I thought the people would say enough is enough and revolt...when it was more than just us smokers getting slapped around. Now I doubt the tide will ever change. The more hyperbolic rhetoric the public has thrust upon them about the need for Oreo prohibitions and "double latte sin taxes", the more they accept the idea that "something HAS TO BE DONE!!!!!" Public opinion polls are already showing a major shift in favor of "Twinkie taxes" and other anti-obesity measures. I suspect that with a couple more years of breathless warnings about obesity epidemics, obese people will be joining us smokers as the pariahs of society.

    Sorry for the rant, but this kind of news really makes my blood boil..lol.

  3. #3
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    Oh the big time nanny states like Connecticut where I live are on the leading edge of this bullshit. They banned smoking in bars ans restaurants two years ago.

    This year, the legislature tried to pass a "School Nutrition" bill where they would among other things, remove all vending machines from all schools. The Republicans voted against it and dubbed it the "No Child Left With a Big Behind" bill. The Democrats passed it and fortunately the Republican Governor vetoed it.

    I thought things were bad here in the states until I saw Island Epicurean's post about Canada.

    Just another reason why I don't think very highly of the socialist country of Canada
    TBSCigars - "On Holiday"
    Grammar - It's the difference between knowing your crap and knowing you're crap.

  4. #4
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    I like Amanda, use to think that people would stand up and put a stop to this freedom-limiting madness, but when a notoriously conservative state like TX is embracing smoking bans (Austin) I tend to lose hope. More and more it seems that the outcries of smokers are overlooked.

    The attack on obese people has gotten to me as well. If the attack on them by the private sector (double ticketing on airplanes etc..) wasn't enough, now they are being attacked by BS legislation! It seems even with a "conservative" legislature and president the liberals are still imposing their whacked out views on our society. And now the Canadians are heading the same route.

    Very sorry to hear it Island, hopefully one day all this crap legislation will be overturned. If not, I see a whole new prohibition era starting complete with speakeasies (I hear it's already started in CA).

    Raisins: + 12 1/2
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  5. #5
    Amanda Guest

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    Personal freedoms are under assault from both the red and the blue. There are fewer and fewer good guys in this battle. I agree with grand cru that a new prohibition era is on the way throughout the Western world as the nanny state flexes its muscle. There's already a significant black market for cigarettes in the U.S. with tax rates varying so greatly from state to state. From what I understand, terrorist cells have discovered the black market sales of cigarettes across state lines are a fast and relatively benign way to raise alot of cash to finance terrorist operations. Tragically, the only thing that may make the nanny-staters realize the error of their ways is a major terrorist attack definitively financed through the black market sale of cigarettes.

  6. #6

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    Quote Originally Posted by grand cru no 2
    when a notoriously conservative state like TX is embracing smoking bans (Austin) I tend to lose hope.
    austin is one of those little bastions of liberalism in texas... kinda like the montrose area of houston... they dont represent the whole state...

    now when lubbock starts coming down on the smokers... then i'll really start to worry...
    -=JStrider=-
    ~a woman is only a woman, but a good cigar is a smoke. -- Rudyard Kipling

    ~Clatto Verata Nicto

  7. #7
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    Default Well.....

    I think banning smoking in open-air places is stupid. However, I can understand enclosed public places but I think that the word "public" has been broadened too much. To me, public suggests state owned or operated

    If a proprietor of a privately owned restaurant, bar or store decides that he/she wishes to allow smoking in his/her establishment that is a risk that he/she has the right to take. Some patrons may decide not to go there because of smoking while others it won't bother.

    But if it is a public place where one must go with no option, fine, ban smoking there. I have no problem with that. It's fair.

    I could take this a step further. I'd like to see the wearing of excessive amount of cologne and perfume banned in all places. Few things piss me off as much as some dork or dorkette occupying my personal space after they have bathed in cologne. It's absolutely repellant and it makes me want to vomit! Also, the Dunkin' Donuts down the street from my work has a woman behind the counter who wears a lot of cologne and when I get my coffee from her I can smell it on my styro coffee cup quite strongly for a long time. So every time I take a sip of coffee I have to smell her cologne!!! That does it! Where's the phone number for Senator Kennedy's office??!!! I'm taking action! I'LL SUE!!!!!!!

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by MMAB
    I think banning smoking in open-air places is stupid. However, I can understand enclosed public places but I think that the word "public" has been broadened too much. To me, public suggests state owned or operated

    If a proprietor of a privately owned restaurant, bar or store decides that he/she wishes to allow smoking in his/her establishment that is a risk that he/she has the right to take. Some patrons may decide not to go there because of smoking while others it won't bother.

    But if it is a public place where one must go with no option, fine, ban smoking there. I have no problem with that. It's fair.

    I could take this a step further. I'd like to see the wearing of excessive amount of cologne and perfume banned in all places. Few things piss me off as much as some dork or dorkette occupying my personal space after they have bathed in cologne. It's absolutely repellant and it makes me want to vomit! Also, the Dunkin' Donuts down the street from my work has a woman behind the counter who wears a lot of cologne and when I get my coffee from her I can smell it on my styro coffee cup quite strongly for a long time. So every time I take a sip of coffee I have to smell her cologne!!! That does it! Where's the phone number for Senator Kennedy's office??!!! I'm taking action! I'LL SUE!!!!!!!

    Raisins: + 12 1/2
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  9. #9

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    this doesnt make sense. i dont see why the polititans would ban smoking all over, dont many of them smoke cigars. that is the only reason i can think of to explain low tax on cigars and outragous tax on cigarettes. smoking was ban in the city i used to live in. made moving a hell of a lot easier.
    "Worrying is like a rocking chair, it gives you something to do, but it never gets you anywhere,.....write that down" -Van Wilder

  10. #10
    Amanda Guest

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    Lubbock is a college town. I'd be very surprised if they don't enact a smoking ban in the next couple years. College towns of either political persuasion have recently enacted bans, including the very conservative cities of Lincoln, Nebraska; Fayetteville, Arkansas; and even the heart of tobacco country, Lexington, Kentucky. Just this year, Georgia passed a partial smoking ban statewide, and Georgia is as red of a state as there is. I'm not sure on the smoking ban situations in America's alcohol-free "dry counties", most of which are rural and in the Deep South. If these places have not yet banned smoking in "public places" (which almost always refers to privately-owned businesses), I get the feeling that the same prohibitionary impulses that led them to ban alcohol will lead them to ban public smoking as well, probably sooner rather than later.

    If ever there was a time when one political party was better for smokers (or those who value the right to consume what we want to into our bodies) than the other, that time has all but passed. I expect my theory will be reinforced at the Federal level at some point in the next few years as nationwide restrictions on tobacco (and food) will be strengthened, and a large Federal tobacco tax already given by the Department of Health and Human Services will be enacted with the support of a Republican President, Republican Senate and Republican House of Representatives. Only time will tell if I'm right.

  11. #11
    SFG75 Guest

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    Looks like we're seeing quite the trend here. D.C. is now contemplating a comprehensive ban and the "doing it for health" reasons is definitely winning out over any notions of self-control and responsibility. I definitely can't wait for the pendulum to swing to the other side. Hopefully a lot of these laws will be changed to be made more practical in later years upon greater reflection by the voters and politicians at large. Rather than look for either party to help us out, it's up to ech cigar smoker invidiually to make their voices heard by running for local offices and writing letters to the editor. We can't blame the "hammer" of government if we refuse to become the citizens who want to use it. . .or stop it from being used.

  12. #12
    Iced T Guest

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    Quote Originally Posted by MMAB

    I could take this a step further. I'd like to see the wearing of excessive amount of cologne and perfume banned in all places.
    Too late. Where I live, it is generally against the rules to wear too much cologne anywhere. This is specific to doctor's offices and hospitals, but I have seen official "no cologne" warning signs at entrances to malls. They did this mostly for people who are allergic to cologne/perfume. Too much sets them off.

  13. #13
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    Default Wow.....

    and I live in Massachusetts which usually follows California in such unusual things!

    I applaud the beautiful state of California!

  14. Default

    Most public and private buildings in Newfoundland, Canada are completely scent free.
    "I Smoke in Moderation.... Just One Cigar at a Time." Mark Twain

  15. Default

    I have no problem with banning smoking in public indoor places. Every worker has a right to work in a smoke free environment. Second hand smoke is carcinogenic. Banning smoking in confined outdoor spaces is also alright by me. If I'm sitting on a patio eating dinner, I don't want to have cigarette smopke drifting into my face.

    Banning smoking anywhere in public is a step too far however. And if they try to ban smoking on a golf course they'll have to pry the Cohiba out of my cold dead fingers.

  16. #16
    Amanda Guest

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    Hambone, as someone who works in the hospitality industry, I demand to know why I don't deserve an alcohol-free work environment. Everybody else gets to enjoy a workplace with no presence of intoxicating alcohol. Why shouldn't I? And you wanna talk about the "second-hand" effects of a substance? When the customers I serve put enough drinks in them, unwanted come-ons of the verbal and ass-pinching variety ensue. Plus, I occasionally have to dodge physical altercations between drunks that immediately put me in harm's way. And we won't even mention the fact that I have to drive home on the roads with the people who became intoxicated by the alcoholic beverages served by me and other employees forced to serve alcohol to these customers. I, ask you, why a hospitality industry employee like myself shouldn't be able to enjoy an alcohol-free workplace just the same as an accountant or a seamstress?

    The answer is no...because I knew the nature of the hospitality industry when I started and accepted the risks. People who have an aversion to cigarette smoke or alcohol should not work in bars or in restaurants that serve alcohol....just the same as someone who is allergic to peanuts shouldn't take a job at the Jif factory. It's common sense. Considering the loss of tips I would take in if my restaurant banned smoking or drinking, I don't need or want the kind of "safe" workplace you say I should be entitled to. In the past few years, I've become amazed at just how many previously uncommitted people have drank the purple Kool-Aid offered by anti-smoking zealots and are attempting to save me from myself by banning "public smoking" in the privately-owned grill and bar where I work. I would like to convey the message to cease and desist in trying to shrink my paycheck in the name of rescuing me from smokers.

  17. #17
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    I'm a reasonable guy. I support non-smoking sections. As a matter of fact, I don't smoke in family restaurants at all. I support no smoking in public places where non-smokers may be forced to be. This would include government buildings, schools, malls, hospitals, cafeterias, and things of this nature. Banning smoking in places where it's completely optional for a person to be, such as bars and bar and grill restaurants, cigar bars/stores, outdoors, etc. is simply nothing but harassment. I mean come on! What non-smoker frequents a smoking lounge anyway? This is the kind of zero tolerance crap that is becoming so popular in legislation and general rulemaking these days. It simplifies enforcement, and relieves officials of the burden of making judgement calls they are paid to make in the first place. It's CYA, pure and simple. There's no chance of being sued for a bad decision if the rule is zero tolerance to begin with.

    It never ceases to amaze me how many people WANT the government to be completely responsible for their health and welfare, and how many freedoms they're willing to give up to get that security. Everyone values democracy over socialism or communism, but many seem too ignorant to understand the difference between them to begin with!

  18. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Iced T
    Too late. Where I live, it is generally against the rules to wear too much cologne anywhere. This is specific to doctor's offices and hospitals, but I have seen official "no cologne" warning signs at entrances to malls. They did this mostly for people who are allergic to cologne/perfume. Too much sets them off.
    If I saw this here in California in any of my local malls or shopping centers I woudl bathe in cologne and slather myself up with so much that you could tell I was coming from a mile away. Just try and enforce it biznatch! Just frigg'n ridiculous!
    Let us so live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry. - - Mark Twain

  19. #19
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    My hometown is about to have a public smoke ban too. However there is some light in this dark hour. I think that you need to declare whether your business is smoking or non smoking, so it's possible there may be a few bars around that will still allow me to light up a cigar.
    Life is beautiful, death is peaceful. It's the transition that's bothersome.
    -Isaac Asimov

  20. #20

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    many of our bars are suffering losses because they cannot have smoking
    "Worrying is like a rocking chair, it gives you something to do, but it never gets you anywhere,.....write that down" -Van Wilder

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