
Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
Tell him to put on an Australian accent.. 

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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
"Let them eat cake."Coito ergo sum wrote:I reject the proposition that the choice is "working in a smoky bar or not working at all." They can work somewhere else.
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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
My beef with the smoking ban is that now, I'm threatened with choking and emphysema everytime I pass in front of a bar. Now that they can't light up inside, smokers take all the seats at the outside tables, which means honest folk can't find any, and they make the atmosphere unbreathable for passerbys who rarely have the option to cross the street.
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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
Interesting thread. I don't think there are any cigar bars in canaduh, you can't smoke anything anywhere really. Hotels, bars, restaurants, cabs, even some streets are non-smoking. I agree it is hypocritical considering the fact that driving is more than encouraged on a daily basis and car exhaust is as bad if not worse for humans than cigarette smoke. (kind of like advertising and encouraging drinking constantly yet putting people in jail for "drug" use) I think the reason they won't allow a smoking bar is that it would take business away from other bars. I remember a few years back when smoking was still allowed in areas of buildings. At my work there was a smoking room next to the cafeteria. There would be wall to wall people in this small room and a big empty cafeteria. The same with this food court in a mall, huge food court...empty, with a little smoking corner jam packed full of people. A smoking bar would be packed around here, no doubt, other bar owners would most likely switch to smoking.
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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
It's interesting how things have changed here over the years. When i first started in the restaurant trade, back in the seventies, we had two separate restaurants (within the sane building), one smoking; one not. At first, the smoking one was by far the fullest, but things gradually shifted over a period of perhaps 10 years, and nowadays, even before the ban was introduced in 2007, non-smoking ones were far more popular. Pubs/bars, especially those that don't serve food, have been slower to follow suit, but the trend was still there even before '07.sandinista wrote:Interesting thread. I don't think there are any cigar bars in canaduh, you can't smoke anything anywhere really. Hotels, bars, restaurants, cabs, even some streets are non-smoking. I agree it is hypocritical considering the fact that driving is more than encouraged on a daily basis and car exhaust is as bad if not worse for humans than cigarette smoke. (kind of like advertising and encouraging drinking constantly yet putting people in jail for "drug" use) I think the reason they won't allow a smoking bar is that it would take business away from other bars. I remember a few years back when smoking was still allowed in areas of buildings. At my work there was a smoking room next to the cafeteria. There would be wall to wall people in this small room and a big empty cafeteria. The same with this food court in a mall, huge food court...empty, with a little smoking corner jam packed full of people. A smoking bar would be packed around here, no doubt, other bar owners would most likely switch to smoking.
In the 70's, roughly 60% of adults (in the UK) smoked; now it's down to around 20%.

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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
Things have changed here as well, but I'll tell you, if a smoking pub opened up it would be a gold mine and every other pub in the city would be fucking pissed off.
Our struggle is not against actual corrupt individuals, but against those in power in general, against their authority, against the global order and the ideological mystification which sustains it.
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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
Back when I was young (let's say the 1970's), there was widespread assumption in Ireland that smokers had the right to smoke almost anywhere. This wasn't the product of any long term public dialogue, civil movements or legislation. It just "was". Not too many people really thought about it too much, or if they did, not too many of them did anything about it. Non-smoking areas were rare.
Times change, attitudes change. The idea that someone's rights to do as they please should not impinge on the basic rights of others is now pretty well entrenched. People aren't allowed to make excessive noise in the presence of others (exact amount depending on context), so why should smoking be treated any differently?
As for giving people "choice", the experience here in Ireland was that this never really happened by itself. Inertia is a powerful force (I know, I know), and also a great many people were reluctant to make their premises non-smoking because of the perceived risk of going out on a limb and suffering financially.
And all it takes is a small number of smokers in a given area to foul things up for a lot of other people. So that minority is quite capable of spreading out and taking us back to square one.
Times change, attitudes change. The idea that someone's rights to do as they please should not impinge on the basic rights of others is now pretty well entrenched. People aren't allowed to make excessive noise in the presence of others (exact amount depending on context), so why should smoking be treated any differently?
As for giving people "choice", the experience here in Ireland was that this never really happened by itself. Inertia is a powerful force (I know, I know), and also a great many people were reluctant to make their premises non-smoking because of the perceived risk of going out on a limb and suffering financially.
SNAP! And that is exactly why the Irish ban is a blanket one. If a small minority of premises allowed smoking, they would get a serious amount of business - from the smoking minority. But many other businesses might me tempted to follow suit, on the grounds they were somehow losing out. It's a quite common reaction.sandinista wrote:Things have changed here as well, but I'll tell you, if a smoking pub opened up it would be a gold mine and every other pub in the city would be fucking pissed off.
And all it takes is a small number of smokers in a given area to foul things up for a lot of other people. So that minority is quite capable of spreading out and taking us back to square one.
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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
But, bar jobs aren't the only jobs in that skill-set.Geoff wrote:Not altogether false, over here at least, it's not that easy to get any bar job (unless you're an attractive girl...my son's been looking for ages!)Coito ergo sum wrote:It wasn't an argument - it was identifying a fallacy in someone's argument - the fallacy of "false dilemma."rEvolutionist wrote:Convincing argument.I reject the proposition that the choice is "working in a smoky bar or not working at all." They can work somewhere else.
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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
Err...no. The acknowledgment that there are more options than "work in smoke" on the one hand and "be unemployed" on the other is just an acknowledgment of reality.Psychoserenity wrote:"Let them eat cake."Coito ergo sum wrote:I reject the proposition that the choice is "working in a smoky bar or not working at all." They can work somewhere else.
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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
noGod forbid that people actually be allowed to have what they want....sandinista wrote:Interesting thread. I don't think there are any cigar bars in canaduh, you can't smoke anything anywhere really. Hotels, bars, restaurants, cabs, even some streets are non-smoking. I agree it is hypocritical considering the fact that driving is more than encouraged on a daily basis and car exhaust is as bad if not worse for humans than cigarette smoke. (kind of like advertising and encouraging drinking constantly yet putting people in jail for "drug" use) I think the reason they won't allow a smoking bar is that it would take business away from other bars. I remember a few years back when smoking was still allowed in areas of buildings. At my work there was a smoking room next to the cafeteria. There would be wall to wall people in this small room and a big empty cafeteria. The same with this food court in a mall, huge food court...empty, with a little smoking corner jam packed full of people. A smoking bar would be packed around here, no doubt, other bar owners would most likely switch to smoking.
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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
I remember about 15 years ago, most bars allowed smoking and the idea that a law could be made to ban it seemed outlandish. In the town where I worked there was a bar or two that were smokeless and they did fine - stayed in business, anyway.Geoff wrote:It's interesting how things have changed here over the years. When i first started in the restaurant trade, back in the seventies, we had two separate restaurants (within the sane building), one smoking; one not. At first, the smoking one was by far the fullest, but things gradually shifted over a period of perhaps 10 years, and nowadays, even before the ban was introduced in 2007, non-smoking ones were far more popular. Pubs/bars, especially those that don't serve food, have been slower to follow suit, but the trend was still there even before '07.sandinista wrote:Interesting thread. I don't think there are any cigar bars in canaduh, you can't smoke anything anywhere really. Hotels, bars, restaurants, cabs, even some streets are non-smoking. I agree it is hypocritical considering the fact that driving is more than encouraged on a daily basis and car exhaust is as bad if not worse for humans than cigarette smoke. (kind of like advertising and encouraging drinking constantly yet putting people in jail for "drug" use) I think the reason they won't allow a smoking bar is that it would take business away from other bars. I remember a few years back when smoking was still allowed in areas of buildings. At my work there was a smoking room next to the cafeteria. There would be wall to wall people in this small room and a big empty cafeteria. The same with this food court in a mall, huge food court...empty, with a little smoking corner jam packed full of people. A smoking bar would be packed around here, no doubt, other bar owners would most likely switch to smoking.
In the 70's, roughly 60% of adults (in the UK) smoked; now it's down to around 20%.
With 60-80% of the population not smoking, I would imagine that bars and restaurants would cater to that. If, however, smokers want to congregate at a bar that caters to them, I have no idea in the world why that ought not be allowed.
I mean - heck - how about have a smoking license, like a liquor license, and at least permit SOME bars that want to be cigar or cigarette friendly to do so. Limit the quantity of bars, or make it only places that only allow people over the drinking age to enter. Something.
The Puritantical Prohibitionist mood in 'merka these days is just downright scary. It's like we're back in the 20's, being ruled by teetotallers....
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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
Well....if businesses that added smoking were, in fact, booming because they are smoking, wouldn't it be reasonable for another business to think that they could get a piece of that action too?klr wrote:SNAP! And that is exactly why the Irish ban is a blanket one. If a small minority of premises allowed smoking, they would get a serious amount of business - from the smoking minority. But many other businesses might me tempted to follow suit, on the grounds they were somehow losing out. It's a quite common reaction.sandinista wrote:Things have changed here as well, but I'll tell you, if a smoking pub opened up it would be a gold mine and every other pub in the city would be fucking pissed off.
Smokers are, of course, part of the "us."klr wrote:
And all it takes is a small number of smokers in a given area to foul things up for a lot of other people. So that minority is quite capable of spreading out and taking us back to square one.
Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
I would expect any employer of a roofer to make sure their employees are using decent safety equipement, are properly trained etc, with landscapers I would expect the employee to be given time for a break, given time off if they report being ill etc.Everyone makes choices in life. Roofers are forced to choose between working in high places rather than on the ground. Landscapers have to choose between working out in the impossible heat here in Florida or not.
Employee obviously has some responsbility for their safety as well but its definitely shared with the employer
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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
Well yeah, but as one of the smoking subset of "us", another aspect I haven't yet mentioned is that I welcome it partly because it's helped me to cut down. I can't produce figures, but anecdotally, I suspect a lot of people besides myself are smoking less simply because it's more inconvenient (not just in pubs, but on public transport, for example).Coito ergo sum wrote:Well....if businesses that added smoking were, in fact, booming because they are smoking, wouldn't it be reasonable for another business to think that they could get a piece of that action too?klr wrote:SNAP! And that is exactly why the Irish ban is a blanket one. If a small minority of premises allowed smoking, they would get a serious amount of business - from the smoking minority. But many other businesses might me tempted to follow suit, on the grounds they were somehow losing out. It's a quite common reaction.sandinista wrote:Things have changed here as well, but I'll tell you, if a smoking pub opened up it would be a gold mine and every other pub in the city would be fucking pissed off.
Smokers are, of course, part of the "us."klr wrote:
And all it takes is a small number of smokers in a given area to foul things up for a lot of other people. So that minority is quite capable of spreading out and taking us back to square one.
If the option of a smoking pub was there, I'd probably be tempted - I freely admit to having low willpower in that regard.

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Re: Michigan bar owner fighting smoking ban.
That's my point. So they start to "compete" for smokers, to the general detriment of non-smokers.Coito ergo sum wrote:Well....if businesses that added smoking were, in fact, booming because they are smoking, wouldn't it be reasonable for another business to think that they could get a piece of that action too?klr wrote:SNAP! And that is exactly why the Irish ban is a blanket one. If a small minority of premises allowed smoking, they would get a serious amount of business - from the smoking minority. But many other businesses might me tempted to follow suit, on the grounds they were somehow losing out. It's a quite common reaction.sandinista wrote:Things have changed here as well, but I'll tell you, if a smoking pub opened up it would be a gold mine and every other pub in the city would be fucking pissed off.
Point taken, but Geoff's point above is also relevant: Smoking is fiercely addictive, and a goodly proportion of smokers welcome the fact that their opportunities for smoking are restricted.Coito ergo sum wrote:Smokers are, of course, part of the "us."klr wrote:
And all it takes is a small number of smokers in a given area to foul things up for a lot of other people. So that minority is quite capable of spreading out and taking us back to square one.
God has no place within these walls, just like facts have no place within organized religion. - Superintendent Chalmers
It's not up to us to choose which laws we want to obey. If it were, I'd kill everyone who looked at me cock-eyed! - Rex Banner
The Bluebird of Happiness long absent from his life, Ned is visited by the Chicken of Depression. - Gary Larson

It's not up to us to choose which laws we want to obey. If it were, I'd kill everyone who looked at me cock-eyed! - Rex Banner
The Bluebird of Happiness long absent from his life, Ned is visited by the Chicken of Depression. - Gary Larson



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