Why can't we totally ban smoking?

  • Thread starter Thread starter I_am_learning
  • Start date Start date
Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the complexities and contradictions surrounding the potential for a total ban on smoking. Participants explore the implications of smoking regulations, the role of government, personal choice, and the societal impact of smoking and its alternatives.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants express confusion over why politicians do not implement a total ban on cigarettes despite known health hazards, questioning whether financial motives, such as tax revenue, play a role.
  • Others argue that individuals should have the freedom to make their own choices regarding smoking, emphasizing personal responsibility and the importance of informed consent.
  • There are inquiries about the inconsistency of banning smoking while allowing other substances, like alcohol, to remain legal.
  • Some participants raise concerns about the potential for a black market in cigarettes if a total ban were enacted, drawing parallels to the ongoing issues with illegal drug trafficking.
  • Discussions include the societal integration of tobacco and alcohol, suggesting that their historical presence complicates the rationale for banning them now.
  • Participants highlight the distinction between personal choice and the impact of smoking on non-smokers, particularly regarding second-hand smoke in public spaces.
  • There are reflections on the broader implications of lifestyle choices and their effects on public health, including comparisons to other health-related behaviors.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views, with no clear consensus on whether a total ban on smoking should be implemented. Some support personal freedom while others emphasize public health concerns, indicating ongoing disagreement about the balance between individual rights and societal responsibilities.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include varying definitions of personal choice and public health, as well as differing opinions on the effectiveness of current smoking regulations. The discussion reflects a complex interplay of social, economic, and health-related factors without resolving these complexities.

I_am_learning
Messages
681
Reaction score
16
Whats all the fuss about, Compulsory mentioning of smoking hazard in cigrate Boxes, No smoking zones, Taxes on Cigrates, Ban on advertisement, etc etc to make smoking harder.
When we all know that smoking is hazardous, what stops politicians from making a total ban on big Cirgrate companies? I simply can't understand this two way behavioral.
Are we really greedy of the taxes they pay?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Who are we to determine what people should do? The best we can do is give the proper warnings etc and let people determine for themselves what they should or should not do. If they want to smoke, then they would just have to face the consequences.
 
Why are other drugs banned then?
 
I_am_learning said:
Whats all the fuss about, Compulsory mentioning of smoking hazard in cigrate Boxes, No smoking zones, Taxes on Cigrates, Ban on advertisement, etc etc to make smoking harder.
When we all know that smoking is hazardous, what stops politicians from making a total ban on big Cirgrate companies? I simply can't understand this two way behavioral.
Are we really greedy of the taxes they pay?
Well, it is a lot of tax money. But to ban smoking and not ban alcohol would be sort of inconsistent -- not that our system of laws is a paragon of consistency.

A more interesting question for me concerns why politicians started with this anti-cigarette crusade in the first place. It's not like they don't have more important things to attend to.
 
I_am_learning said:
Why are other drugs banned then?
Ignorance?

Politicians can totally ban smoking, but would that put cigarettes more or less totally in the control of the criminal underworld? Then droopy-drawered gangstas can have something else to sell on the streets besides marijuana, cocaine and dope?
 
If alcohol was discovered today it would be banned and classified as a class A drug (UK system). Tobacco too, the reason they are not banned is because they are too ingrained in society.

The reason why they should not be banned is because it is not the job of government to tell people what they can and can't do when that decision affects no one but themselves. Smoking bans for public places address the danger of second hand smoke, not smoking on the individual.
 
Brandon_R said:
Who are we to determine what people should do? The best we can do is give the proper warnings etc and let people determine for themselves what they should or should not do. If they want to smoke, then they would just have to face the consequences.
I agree. This is America after all.

I'm 64 years old and grew up in a world full of smoke. People smoked everywhere. My mom and dad both smoked. Our living room had its own weather system. Now you can't even smoke in bars or outside at a ball game, and they're talking about banning smoking totally, including in a person's own home. It's ridiculous, especially in light of the financial/economic problems that politicians at all levels of government have wrought.
 
I_am_learning said:
Whats all the fuss about, Compulsory mentioning of smoking hazard in cigrate Boxes, No smoking zones, Taxes on Cigrates, Ban on advertisement, etc etc to make smoking harder.
When we all know that smoking is hazardous, what stops politicians from making a total ban on big Cirgrate companies? I simply can't understand this two way behavioral.
Are we really greedy of the taxes they pay?

Beyond issues of liberty and personal choice, it would merely create a new black market and all of the crime that goes along with it. In fact, even the taxes on cigarettes have created a black market.

SEATTLE -- The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said police raided multiple locations in Seattle and Western Washington Wednesday to stop illegal trafficking in contraband cigarettes.

...The imported cigarettes do not bear valid State of Washington tax stamps.

Since the cigarettes are not legally imported or manufactured in the U.S., federal taxes that would normally be due on them are not paid. As a result, they are sold for much less than legal cigarettes cost, the ATF said
.
http://www.kirotv.com/news/28538135/detail.html

We've been "fighting a war on drugs" since the Reagan administration and we can all see how well that has worked. Now we are trying to recreate the same mess with cigarettes.

I wonder which cost more; the failure to collect taxes on Vietnamese cigarettes, or the money spent trying to catch them.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
ThomasT said:
Now you can't even smoke in bars or outside at a ball game, and they're talking about banning smoking totally, including in a person's own home. It's ridiculous, especially in light of the financial/economic problems that politicians at all levels of government have wrought.

Why should a non-smoker have to breathe in someone's stale, second-hand smoke in a bar, or have to sit next to someone smoking at a baseball game? Do what you like in your own home, but not in public places.
 
  • #10
ThomasT said:
I agree. This is America after all.

I'm 64 years old and grew up in a world full of smoke. People smoked everywhere. My mom and dad both smoked. Our living room had its own weather system. Now you can't even smoke in bars or outside at a ball game, and they're talking about banning smoking totally, including in a person's own home. It's ridiculous, especially in light of the financial/economic problems that politicians at all levels of government have wrought.

Point of order; there are many other countries than the US that have similar issues and this site has an international membership.

There is a big difference between making a choice that affects you and making a choice that affects others. If you smoke around people that don't want to smoke you are putting them at risk, their risk wins over your choice.
 
  • #11
ryan_m_b said:
There is a big difference between making a choice that affects you and making a choice that affects others. If you smoke around people that don't want to smoke you are putting them at risk, their risk wins over your choice.

As much as I agree with you it is more complicated than that. When a person gets addicted to nicotine and smoking, they becomes a liability to the health care system. But that goes to lifestyle choice and is also true of fat and salt intake, alcohol intake, exercise, the amount of sleep that one gets, where one chooses to live, and on and on. In fact stress is likely more harmful than smoking, so by the nanny-State logic, we should regulate stress as well.
 
  • #12
cristo said:
Why should a non-smoker have to breathe in someone's stale, second-hand smoke in a bar, or have to sit next to someone smoking at a baseball game? Do what you like in your own home, but not in public places.
Well, they shouldn't have to. That's why, in the olden days when public smoking was the norm, I would always ask people near to me if they would be bothered if I smoked. And if they said yes, then I would blow it directly into their face. Actually that only happened a couple of times ... in bars when I was drunk.

Seriously though, has anybody actually ever died from breathing second hand smoke in a bar? I just don't get the ban on bar smoking. Yes it's smelly and disgusting, but that was always an integral part of the bar scene. (At least the sleazy ones. And the sleazier the better as far as I was concerned.) Now everything's so clean and healthy. There seems to be some sort of ordinance or law for just about everything, and I don't like that.

By the way, I'm 64, have been smoking for more than half a century, play tennis more or less competitively a couple times a day, and actually am quite conscientious about where and when I smoke.
 
  • #13
My street is filled with smokers and walking past them everyday, I have developed sort of an instinctive action of blocking my nose with the base of my tongue. Heck the local carcinogen concentration is going to kill me someday...
 
  • #14
Ivan Seeking said:
As much as I agree with you it is more complicated than that. When a person gets addicted to nicotine and smoking, they becomes a liability to the health care system. But that goes to lifestyle choice and is also true of fat and salt intake, alcohol intake, exercise, the amount of sleep that one gets, where one chooses to live, and on and on. In fact stress is likely more harmful than smoking, so by the nanny-State logic, we should regulate stress as well.

I agree with the health care thing however the duty on such things could be channelled into dealing with that (easier if you have an NHS) or result in an increase in your insurance payments.
 
  • #15
I_am_learning said:
Whats all the fuss about, Compulsory mentioning of smoking hazard in cigrate Boxes, No smoking zones, Taxes on Cigrates, Ban on advertisement, etc etc to make smoking harder.
When we all know that smoking is hazardous, what stops politicians from making a total ban on big Cirgrate companies? I simply can't understand this two way behavioral.
Are we really greedy of the taxes they pay?
Do you really want to hurt me?
Do you really want to make me cry?I WANT MY CIGARETTES!
 
  • #16
Actually, one interesting thing I read was that smokers SAVE our healthcare system money. Of course it costs because of the cancers they get, but they die off so early that it actually balances out and goes the other way. (I can't find the source, so there's a good chance I might be blowing smoke)

So if you want to save the healthcare system some money, pick up a pack of smokes.
 
  • #17
blade123 said:
Actually, one interesting thing I read was that smokers SAVE our healthcare system money. Of course it costs because of the cancers they get, but they die off so early that it actually balances out and goes the other way. (I can't find the source, so there's a good chance I might be blowing smoke)

So if you want to save the healthcare system some money, pick up a pack of smokes.

That is completely illogical. I wouldn't want to kill people in order to save money. If simply wanted to save money, why would I have a healthcare system in the first place?
 
  • #18
Lovely, another "why smoking is good for you and others" thread. :rolleyes:
 
  • #19
It is not illogical at all.
Many save money in insurance companies in order to get pensions.
Those who die before they were to receive their pensions represent a net benefit, while those who become, say, 90+ are losses.
 
  • #20
mishrashubham said:
That is completely illogical. I wouldn't want to kill people in order to save money. If simply wanted to save money, why would I have a healthcare system in the first place?

Not illogical at all. It's just the reality of the situation. You're not killing people to save money; they're dying before they become a burden to the system. It's their decision.
 
  • #21
arildno said:
It is not illogical at all.
Many save money in insurance companies in order to get pensions.
Those who die before they were to receive their pensions represent a net benefit, while those who become, say, 90+ are losses.
This is no small issue. I used to work for an insurance company and I planned out one of their pension plans. Unfortunately, the people didn't die fast enough.

A ban on cigarettes would not be cheap. I don't think we can afford it right now. I wish that instead of dreaming up new ways for the government to spend money, we were working on ways to do without some of what it spends now.
 
  • #22
Pengwuino said:
Not illogical at all. It's just the reality of the situation. You're not killing people to save money; they're dying before they become a burden to the system. It's their decision.
Who do you think is footing the outrageous bills for their healthcare in many cases, medicare/medicaid. If they die and are married or have children under age 18, their spouse and children get Social Security survivor's benefits, capped at $3,600 a month. People with cancer can be a huge drain on the system.

Let's not be silly, this is serious.
 
  • #23
What about forced smoking if you are to receive social welfare, Jimmy?
Wouldn't that take care of the debt problems?
 
  • #24
you jerks, tobacco addiction is a disease!

(i'm three months nicotine free! It was much harder then quitting crack and heroine).





((ok, that was a joke, I wasn't addicted to crack and heroine, but I've heard that cigarettes are the most difficult to quit, and I still have terrible, depressing urges to light up. It feels empty in my chest like I've been dumped by the love of my life whenever I realize I don't smoke anymore. Very strange addiction.))
 
  • #25
You guys may appreciate this paper:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2742626/

Nicotinic modulation of synaptic transmission and plasticity in cortico-limbic circuits
Huibert D. Mansvelder, Marjolijn Mertz, and Lorna W. Roleb
Semin Cell Dev Biol. 2009 June; 20(4): 432–440.
 
  • #26
I_am_learning said:
Whats all the fuss about, Compulsory mentioning of smoking hazard in cigrate Boxes, No smoking zones, Taxes on Cigrates, Ban on advertisement, etc etc to make smoking harder.
When we all know that smoking is hazardous, what stops politicians from making a total ban on big Cirgrate companies? I simply can't understand this two way behavioral.
Are we really greedy of the taxes they pay?
Why were slavery and racism such big deals? As usual when politicians or anyone else can't get something simple done its because the lights are on, but nobody's home. Tobacco and alcohol are both widespread historic traditions and big bucks and between the two change is difficult just as it was for slavery and racism.
 
  • #27
wuliheron said:
Why were slavery and racism such big deals? As usual when politicians or anyone else can't get something simple done its because the lights are on, but nobody's home. Tobacco and alcohol are both widespread historic traditions and big bucks and between the two change is difficult just as it was for slavery and racism.

In fact, the desire for alcohol may have led to civilization itself!

How Booze Gave Rise to Civilization

...Lastly, the alcohol explanation for the Neolithic Revolution also demonstrates why Prohibition in the United States only lasted 13 years. The logic was there: If alcoholics couldn’t resist alcohol, and the rest of us who aren’t alcoholics could, then as a society we should give up alcohol for the benefit of the alcoholics. If alcohol gave birth to society, though, then society could never fully turn its back on its mother.
http://blogs.howstuffworks.com/2010/02/02/how-booze-gave-rise-to-civilization/
 
  • #28
arildno said:
What about forced smoking if you are to receive social welfare, Jimmy?
Wouldn't that take care of the debt problems?
I was disatisfied with the number of things that were taken off the table during the recent debt limit extension debate. In particular, I was hoping to see a lot of spending reductions that were never discussed. For instance, the President's Council on Fitness, Sports, and Nutrition. Can't we ditch it along with thousands of other programs that are expensive, intrude on our freedoms and don't even work. Your idea of having the govt bump us off would indeed result in some long term cost savings. However, I can't agree to categorize it as 'smaller govt'.
 
  • #29
The smaller the nation, the smaller the government! :smile:
 
  • #30
Pythagorean said:
you jerks, tobacco addiction is a disease!

That is irrelevant to the nanny-staters.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 25 ·
Replies
25
Views
4K
  • · Replies 69 ·
3
Replies
69
Views
10K
  • · Replies 29 ·
Replies
29
Views
6K
  • · Replies 66 ·
3
Replies
66
Views
10K
  • · Replies 10 ·
Replies
10
Views
6K
Replies
56
Views
7K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
3K
  • · Replies 11 ·
Replies
11
Views
4K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
4K
  • · Replies 18 ·
Replies
18
Views
6K