Results 1 to 12 of 12

Thread: Place To Vent

  1. Angry Place To Vent

    I'm so glad I found this board, I need to vent. I have my own factory/sales office so I make a living off the cigar industry, so i have a certain respect/love for it. Lately i can't help but feel disrespected by certain laws and political pressur that our goverment is applying to the industry. Everything seems to be harder just because my business is a 'cigar business'. It took me 4 months just to find a credit card merchant company to work with me, I applied with over 30 different companies and they all rejected me because visa/mastercard have been pressured by lawmakers on working with tobacco. Even getting an account for shipping with UPS has been a pain, they require you to sign certain contracts and make the process more difficult. Advertising is a pain, google.com has been giving me a hard time and i still havent gotten them to work with me. I'm sorry...but i just really needed to vent. I feel like the cigar industry is being treated unfairly by our government.
    -Rick

  2. #2

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by DandScigars
    I'm so glad I found this board, I need to vent. I have my own factory/sales office so I make a living off the cigar industry, so i have a certain respect/love for it. Lately i can't help but feel disrespected by certain laws and political pressur that our goverment is applying to the industry. Everything seems to be harder just because my business is a 'cigar business'. It took me 4 months just to find a credit card merchant company to work with me, I applied with over 30 different companies and they all rejected me because visa/mastercard have been pressured by lawmakers on working with tobacco. Even getting an account for shipping with UPS has been a pain, they require you to sign certain contracts and make the process more difficult. Advertising is a pain, google.com has been giving me a hard time and i still havent gotten them to work with me. I'm sorry...but i just really needed to vent. I feel like the cigar industry is being treated unfairly by our government.
    -Rick
    Sucks man. I know its a cliché but I try to remember that anything that’s worth having is worth working for. I tend to believe that the things that are truly worth having are worth working hard for. I can imagine that laws are only going to get tighter and tighter. Sure those who don't like cigars and cigar smoke are going to be okay (not rallying for) with laws restricting smoking in public but wait until the government starts restricting things they hold dear (think.. caffeine, sugar, etc) and the $hit should really hit the fan then. Boston tea party all over again.

    The government is "instituted by men, for men" and I think that sometimes local governments forget this. They only have power because we give them power. (and no ladies.. I don't mean MEN, i just mean citizens).

    Hopefully I didn't "politicize" this too much that it should stay in this forum.

    Welcome to the club, Rick.

  3. #3
    Amanda Guest

    Default

    DandCigars, I can't imagine how awful it must be to be in the tobacco business in today's political climate. Of course, the irony is that if everybody quit smoking today, the government would go broke tomorrow. You have my best wishes in keeping your business alive and flourishing. I know that in Minnesota, they just doubled the tax rate on cigars this past month. Cigar shop owners they profiled on the news were pretty much preparing to shut their doors as a result of the assault on them.

    Crickett, I used to agree with you that the nanny state would be stopped in its tracks when it thrust its bootheel into the necks of coffee drinkers and fast-food eaters, among other groups. Recent statistical data has made me change my opinion. In just the last two years, the number of people suggesting a willingness to impose a "fat tax" on fatty foods as a way to "curb the obesity epidemic" has doubled. The nanny-staters seem to have it down to a science....invent a crisis, bombard the public with relentless horrific warnings about the dangers and costs to society that we're imposing on ourselves with our lifestyle, and then watch the sheep nod in agreement that we "have to do something." I hope you're right that there's an eventual backlash against the creeping nannyism hijacking our personal freedoms one by one, but I'm skeptical.

  4. #4

    Default

    I'm just an inch away from marching in the streets. This nanny state crap is going too far. Society has no say in what we do to ourselves. We should be able to debauch ourselves in any way we please, and they can go to hell if they don't like it.
    There's only two kinds of cigars, the kind you like and the kind you don't.

  5. #5

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by DandScigars
    I'm so glad I found this board, I need to vent. I have my own factory/sales office so I make a living off the cigar industry, so i have a certain respect/love for it. Lately i can't help but feel disrespected by certain laws and political pressur that our goverment is applying to the industry. Everything seems to be harder just because my business is a 'cigar business'. It took me 4 months just to find a credit card merchant company to work with me, I applied with over 30 different companies and they all rejected me because visa/mastercard have been pressured by lawmakers on working with tobacco. Even getting an account for shipping with UPS has been a pain, they require you to sign certain contracts and make the process more difficult. Advertising is a pain, google.com has been giving me a hard time and i still havent gotten them to work with me. I'm sorry...but i just really needed to vent. I feel like the cigar industry is being treated unfairly by our government.
    -Rick

    If you want to feel disrespected by the law try being a young responsible adult. For example i bought a car when i was 16. But in reality by father bought it, you cant sign a legal document, such as a car title, until your 18. I had to fight with Centex Homes at great length to get my house built when i was 19. My wife works for Michaels Arts and Crafts, which has a policy that you cant participate in a 401K program untill your 21. I was turned down a managment position because of my age, which i was told by the interviewer, when i went to the companies human resource department the reasons and minimum qualifications for the position changed. At the point i am right now i cant go to casinos and i cant drink and worst of all i cant buy tabacco over the internet. these are freedoms that i can join the military to fight for and even worse be told i am going to fight for, the draft, yet i cant exercise them. so in a nutshell i can die fighting for a beer that im not allowed to have in my own home which i pay taxes on which helps to support these liberties. if i cant exercise these liberties then i shouldnt have to pay for them.


    my opinion
    "Worrying is like a rocking chair, it gives you something to do, but it never gets you anywhere,.....write that down" -Van Wilder

  6. #6

    Default

    BTW, I didn't realize this thread was already in the politics forum :)

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Granger, Indiana
    Posts
    1,393

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Amanda
    DandCigars, I can't imagine how awful it must be to be in the tobacco business in today's political climate. Of course, the irony is that if everybody quit smoking today, the government would go broke tomorrow. You have my best wishes in keeping your business alive and flourishing. I know that in Minnesota, they just doubled the tax rate on cigars this past month. Cigar shop owners they profiled on the news were pretty much preparing to shut their doors as a result of the assault on them.

    Crickett, I used to agree with you that the nanny state would be stopped in its tracks when it thrust its bootheel into the necks of coffee drinkers and fast-food eaters, among other groups. Recent statistical data has made me change my opinion. In just the last two years, the number of people suggesting a willingness to impose a "fat tax" on fatty foods as a way to "curb the obesity epidemic" has doubled. The nanny-staters seem to have it down to a science....invent a crisis, bombard the public with relentless horrific warnings about the dangers and costs to society that we're imposing on ourselves with our lifestyle, and then watch the sheep nod in agreement that we "have to do something." I hope you're right that there's an eventual backlash against the creeping nannyism hijacking our personal freedoms one by one, but I'm skeptical.

    It never fails to amaze me how many people WANT the government to run their lives and how many people run to trade in their old bloodstained freedom card for a shiny new security one. Ignorance is the problem. Not enough education is given on how we won our liberty and why we needed to. Plenty is given on politically correct sex education, drug and alchohol abuse, smoking, sexual harassment, etc. For some reason, we are poorly educated on how to exercise our rights and responsibility as citizens. The apathy and ignorance of our general population towards our govermental doings is frankly, quite scary! If the majority of people won't run the government to their benefit, the minority agendas will.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia
    Posts
    6,816
    Blog Entries
    2

    Default

    The government is a function of the people who THE PEOPLE elect to pass the laws. THE PEOPLE should demand that their legislators not pass liberal legislation.

    Until the liberal do-gooders are voted out of office, expect more of this crap.
    TBSCigars - "On Holiday"
    Grammar - It's the difference between knowing your crap and knowing you're crap.

  9. #9

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by CoventryCat86
    The government is a function of the people who THE PEOPLE elect to pass the laws. THE PEOPLE should demand that their legislators not pass liberal legislation.

    Until the liberal do-gooders are voted out of office, expect more of this crap.

    And until the "tea-leave-reading" judges are rooted out of our courts, the courts will continue to impose their liberal views on society.
    There's only two kinds of cigars, the kind you like and the kind you don't.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Bloomfield, NJ
    Posts
    127

    Default

    Laws like the smoking bans which are popular these days aren't being passed by just liberals though. For example, the new york public smoking ban was introduced by republicans and governer Pataki is also republican.

  11. #11

    Default

    It is clear by the right to life discussion in anther thread that the conservatives can intrude into our personal lives as well. Our diminishing freedom does not seem to be a liberal nor a conservative issue but rather a case of apathy and ignorance as has been mentioned ealier.

    The only answer is to hold our elected officials (public servants?) acountable, be they Democrat or Republican, liberal or conservative (and even independent). Those in office seem to think we are beholden to them and they have forgotten that they work for us. Unfortunately we have made it easy by failing to speak up when our rights and fredoms are eroded away little by little.

    I hope that enough people wake up in time to turn the tide against the nanny state but I am unfortunately skeptical that things will change much despite government getting bigger and more influential in our lives.

    Just my .02

    Michael

  12. #12
    Amanda Guest

    Default

    The most recent state to pass stringent smoking restrictions was the bright-red state of Georgia, signed by conservative Republican Governor Sonny Purdue after breezing on through the conservative (and I believe Republican) Georgia Legislature. Meanwhile, conservative cities like Lincoln, Nebraska; Fayetteville, Arkansas; and in the heart of tobacco country, Lexington, Kentucky, have all passed smoking bans in the last couple years. Republican Governors across the country, most recently in Minnesota, have jacked up tobacco taxes to fill budget holes.

    Five years ago, the Republican Party was more likely to be on the right side of the smoking freedom issue. Those days are increasingly over, since the majority of voters in both parties have no interest in the rights and/or freedoms of smokers, and since we're not politically organized and thus wield virtually no lobbying power. The finally straw is likely to be passage of a Federal tobacco tax that could easily zip through the Republican House, the Republican Senate and the Republican President. Last year, the administration's Health and Human Services department gave the thumbs-up to a $2 per pack Federal tax on cigarettes.

    Smokers are the political path of least resistance for both parties. Unless we figure out some way to organize and lobby like every other protected interest group, we'll continue to be walked all over no matter which political party is in charge.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •