Dianechef 3 Posted December 9, 2006 I am all for this law. I had a dear friend die from Lung Cancer. He never smoked a cigarette in his entire life. But, he worked in an office that was filled with smokers who freely smoked around him. Second hand smoke is bad!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ser123 0 Posted December 9, 2006 I just moved from Ohio, where you couldn't smoke in bars or restaurants. I miss it so much! I am in Virginia now and Big Tobacco is pretty entrenched here so I don't think that the laws will get here anytime soon. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Carlene 12 Posted December 9, 2006 I just moved from Ohio, where you couldn't smoke in bars or restaurants. I miss it so much! I am in Virginia now and Big Tobacco is pretty entrenched here so I don't think that the laws will get here anytime soon. I was amazed a few years ago to see people in Kentucky walking thru the grocery store, puffing away. Tobacco is to Kentucky what coal is to West Virginia, though. It pays the bills. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
green 6 Posted December 9, 2006 Ah, the virtuous anti-smoking Nazis strike again! While I think that it is fair to ban smoking from indoor work spaces, taking the battle onto the open street is a bit too much. What about breathing in the exhaust fumes from all those SUVs, etc? Are these not much more deleterious to one's health? And on the environment? These attacks on the smoker have turned into a witch hunt. There are much bigger problems that are being ignored. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
anonemouse 1 Posted December 9, 2006 I was amazed a few years ago to see people in Kentucky walking thru the grocery store, puffing away. Tobacco is to Kentucky what coal is to West Virginia, though. It pays the bills.It is getting better, though. I live and go to school in Kentucky. Several counties have gone non-smoking. My county isn't, other than the university, but I am hoping it won't be long before it is. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Boo Boo Kitty 3 Posted December 11, 2006 Ah, the virtuous anti-smoking Nazis strike again! While I think that it is fair to ban smoking from indoor work spaces, taking the battle onto the open street is a bit too much. What about breathing in the exhaust fumes from all those SUVs, etc? Are these not much more deleterious to one's health? And on the environment? These attacks on the smoker have turned into a witch hunt. There are much bigger problems that are being ignored. Oh please! A witch hunt hardly! Americans need cigarettes! 1. The tobacco industry is beyond huge 2. Lawyers need the work 3. Hospitals make billions a year treating cancer paitents and other effects from smoking And I would rather inhale fumes from SUV's than these: CIGARETTE INGREDIENTSThere are over 4,000 chemicals in cigarette smoke, some of which are included on the list below. Children are especially susceptible to these poisons. For them, exposure to secondhand smoke can cause middle ear effusion, decreased lung function, lower respiratory tract infections and increase the intensity of asthma conditions. Acetone Nail Polish Remover Hydrogen Cyanide Gas Chamber PoisonAcetic Acid VinegarMethane Swamp GasAmmonia Floor/Toilet CleanerMethanol Rocket FuelArsenic PoisonNaphthalene MothballsButane Cigarette Lighter FluidNicotine Insecticide/ Addictive DrugCadmium Rechargable BatteryNitrobenzene Gasoline AdditiveCarbon Monoxide Car ExhaustNitrous Oxide Phenols DisinfectantDDT/ Dieldrin InsecticidesStearic Acid Candle WaxEthanol AlcoholToluene Industrial SolventFormaldehyde Preservative - Body Tissue & FabricVinyl Chloride Makes PVC2Hexamine Barbecue Lighter Cancer Causing Agents MetalsNitrosamines Crysenes Cadmium Benzo(a)pyrene Polonium 210 Nickel P.A.H.s Dibenz Acidine B-Napthylamine Urethane N.Nitrosonornicotine Toluidine Aluminium Zinc Magnesium Mercury Gold Silicon Silver Titanium Lead Copper Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skyeblu79 0 Posted December 11, 2006 I have no problem with this law. Tobacco is huge here, so I doubt this will affect NC anytime soon. I think people have the right to smoke, but I don't like accomodating my life around it. An example, when I went to visit my mother while she was in the hospital I would have to hold my breathe just to walk in the entrance. Of course you still end up smelling like smoke. I do feel though, that it is my choice to go places were smoking is allowed. Ex: casinos, bingo, bars, etc. I don't have to go those places. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ser123 0 Posted December 11, 2006 SO TRUE Jack SO TRUE!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
skyeblu79 0 Posted December 11, 2006 ....smoking is optional.... .....breathing ain't..... Your right. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Wheetsin 714 Posted December 11, 2006 Some part of me cringes every time I see "nazi" used so freely, to describe what - people with opinions? Activitsts? It has not been very many years ago that the very opposite was true....there was no way for NON smokers to escape the tyranny imposed upon themI'm 30 and this has happened in my lifetime. My mother used to be a big-wig with the American Cancer Society. Every now and then I would go in to work with her. I remember very clearly the hallway from the front door to the offices... walking down it. It was lined with acrylic-bound cross sections of diseased lungs. (Gee, wonder why I never smoked?) This was early - mid 80s, and people smoked in the office there. Love that big slice o' greasy irony. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dotofoz 0 Posted December 13, 2006 I live in OH and voted yes on 4, no on 5 or whatever it was to outlaw the smoking and am thrilled! It will be nice to go to a restaurant w/my son and not be sitting in the 'no smoking section' getting someone's second hand cancer stick exhaust. Remember, a no smoking section in a room is like a no peeing section in a pool! My husband smokes (outside only), I buy him cigarettes, but he also knows I will NOT take care of him when he gets a smoking related disease. The sad part is that I really don't care, and he knows it. Just don't' do it around me, our son, or our animals. :clap2: Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Bullwinkle 1 Posted December 13, 2006 ...he also knows I will NOT take care of him when he gets a smoking related disease... Wow. Really? You buy his cigarettes -- contributing to his addiction -- but you won't take care of him if (and when) he gets sick? Wow. That's just cold. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Terrilen 0 Posted December 14, 2006 Florida has been smoke free for awhile now, you can finaly call it the Sunshine State again because you can see the sun again now that the smoke has cleared! ha! There is a loop hole in our law. You can still go to The Hard Rock Seminole Indian Reservation Casino in Tampa and puff all you want! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dotofoz 0 Posted December 14, 2006 Wow. Really? You buy his cigarettes -- contributing to his addiction -- but you won't take care of him if (and when) he gets sick? Wow. That's just cold. The truth hurts. What can I say. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ladyleo868 0 Posted January 2, 2007 I am from Ohio and I voted to ban smoking. My husband is an ex-smoker and he voted to ban it also. I have never been so happy in my life as I am now when we go into a restaurant and they don't ask if we want smoking or non?! My husband notices how his son smells awful and his clothes when he is with us because his mother smokes so much. He never noticed before. I WAS TRULY HAPPY THE DAY THIS LAW PASSED, I CAN ONLY BE HAPPIER WHEN I GET BANDED!!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites