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Will you be smoking a piece of electrical cable?
Look here: http://www.electriccigaretteshop.co.uk/
Steve.
Will you be smoking a piece of electrical cable?
Lets not forget, the smoking ban wasn't introduced for the good of our health. It was brought in to save the massive insurance claims by - 'injured in the workplace'.
Then of course the fascist busybodies couldn't contain their dictators rights and have now continued their quest for another absurd intrusion into others personal lives.
This smoking ban directive was also supposed to be Europe wide. But in Spain a smoker can choose between smoking or non smoking bars/restaurants - the busiest ones are always the smoking ones - Full of non smokers too.
Whereas the UK bars have seen trade plummet and many have closed despite the pledges from non smokers to fill the pubs with their half pints of lemonade shandies trade which didn't materialise.
b****r all to do with health. If it was a genuine 'the nation's health issue', petrol and diesel motor vehicles would also have been banned.
The reason the smoking ban for pubs was brought in was not to protect the health of the visiting general public who can decide for themselves if they go into a smokey pub or not but to protect pub employees who didn't have the option.

Don't worry, no offence taken here.
Of course, you are right, childhood obesity is a huge issue, however I don't hold with the argument that because something is a bigger issue (whether it is or not) means that smaller issues can't be tackled. Banning smoking in cars with children is relatively straightforward, encouraging kids (and their parents) to do more and eat less is far more complicated.
As I said in my first post, I really don't see the problem with this suggested law. Anyone who smokes in the car with kids in should have a long hard looka t themselves.
I also don't agree with the 'thin edge of the wedge' victimisation argument either. Banning smoking in the workplace has made the work place a far safer and more comfortable place to be in. I've no doubt that some employers have made it hard to smoke than it necessarily has to be, but then I have my sympathies with them, smokers have been having paid breaks to satisfy their habit for long enough. I used to joke that I'd be getting a doctors note stating that I'm a habitual masterbater just so I can go and knock one off **** couple of hours on work time. (The joke doesn't work now I work form home, but then I don't need the doctor's note either)
From my point of view, whenever I hear smokers whinging about 'their right to smoke' all I can think of is other people's rights not to be smoked upon. I've no problem with people smoking at home, but I would love to see a total ban on smoking in public.
The reason the smoking ban for pubs was brought in was not to protect the health of the visiting general public who can decide for themselves if they go into a smokey pub or not but to protect pub employees who didn't have the option.
Or more likely it was instigated by the pubs' insurance companies who didn't want to pay out on claims made by pub employees against their employers who have a duty of care towards their staff.
Steve.

[/U]No personal offense but this is the line that the health fascists peddle,for all those who call for full bans in public remember that the tax on tobacco pulls in 3 times the cost of the NHS so we more than pay our way whilst subsidizing health care for non smokers.I dont want to impose my habit on others but why I should not be allowed to smoke in the open air I dont really know
The ban was not a speciifc smoking ban in pubs, it was a general ban in all places of work.

It still makes me laugh but its so true.Best thing that ever happenedOh and BTW if I get sunburn from being forced outside does anyone think I could sue my employer?...
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Wear sun cream.

........
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Is that classed as PPE? If it is they have to provide it FOC![]()
And your source for this data is?
It was a figure I had heard on a news programme but I was wrong,however the following attachments show that the tobacco tax brings in £3 billion more that the cost of treating smoking related diseases on the NHS
http://www.the-tma.org.uk/tobacco-tax-revenue.aspx
http://info.cancerresearchuk.org/news/archive/newsarchive/2009/june/19211181
As a non smoker I can't agree with this, and not for any other reason than your car is your personal space. Having a law preventing you from smoking in it is akin to a law which says you can't do XYZ in your own space - be it a car or home.

But the point is it can affect other people negatively. Since i'm for the ban smoking in the car completely, that effect is the danger to people around them caused by not having two hands on the wheel and waving their hand in front of their face while trying to see where the car is going.
You say it is like you cant do XYZ in your own space but that is just like building a bomb in your own space....illegal since it is probably ok if you know what you are doing but any cock-ups and the neighbours are going to have a bad day.....
The effect it has on kids in the car is a little more difficult to argue because they are probably breathing in smoke at home, so hey, why not in the car as well.
(not that some parents don't step outside for a fag, but if you smoke in the car with kids then you probably smoke around them at home)
A complete ban now that is scary but of course its for public safety, strangely the cretin who nearly sideswiped me on the A2 last week wasn't smoking maybe he was distracted by something more politically correct
But if you take that reasoning then surely all other things in the car should also be disallowed in vehicles for example car stereo's, window winders etc. Any control where you have to remove your hand from the steering wheel.
What about changing gear? What if he was changing gear on the A2 when that cretin sideswiped him?
Do you see my point? Either ban it for a proper reason, or not at all.
If it's because of the health implications, then why not ban it altogether?
Whilst I wouldn't now smoke in a confined space with my kids (I ashamedly did when I was much younger, usually only when I had my window open and making sure the smoke went straight out.......but still), I think the very thought of the government restricting what we can do in our own private space, something that they allow in other places is too far IMO.
SO IMO either ban it properly, or not at all.
PS. No, I no longer smoke![]()
but I don't want the government telling me I can't smoke, I am against almost all forms of regulation (apart from ya know the biggies that are there for our safety) I can make my own dammed decisions and I don't want to be told what I can and can't do
That's fine, I have no problem with your choice to smoke, but you can do it in the privacy of your own home. You can pollute your own space.
but I don't want the government telling me I can't smoke, I am against almost all forms of regulation (apart from ya know the biggies that are there for our safety) I can make my own dammed decisions and I don't want to be told what I can and can't do
You know what it reminds me of? People that get their children's ears pierced as soon as they're born. How does a baby who can't yet communicate tell you that they want their ears pierced?
*sigh*
You know what it reminds me of? People that get their children's ears pierced as soon as they're born. How does a baby who can't yet communicate tell you that they want their ears pierced?
*sigh*
and actually yes I do want the right to choose if I am going to harm my children, cos I'd rather I had it than someone else.
You know what it reminds me of? People that get their children's ears pierced as soon as they're born. How does a baby who can't yet communicate tell you that they want their ears pierced?
*sigh*
Same reaction many people get when they see kids in a pub sitting watching adults swill beer all day. Ok, no physical harm, just the mindset that says getting p**sed in front of kids must be ok cause they haven't banned it yet.
From media stories, the cost of treating the anti social side of drinking to excess is the biggest burden on the NHS.
At least smokers and ear piercers don't usually go round wrecking the joint and picking fights with others.
I don't think ear piercers have killed anyone though.
No, smokers are just killing over 11,000 nonsmokers a year instead.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4309613.stm
QUOTE]
If you're gonna use outdated quotes - here's another
"These are guesstimates, statistical projections that bear no relation to reality what so ever," he said.
"We keep asking the BMA for hard evidence of the health impact of passive smoking, and they simply cannot provide it.
"It is fraudulent to call for a total ban on smoking in all public places based on statistical projections, and not hard evidence."
No, smokers are just killing over 11,000 nonsmokers a year instead.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4309613.stm
I don't think ear piercers have killed anyone though.