The K M Links Game - December 2024 Week...
Quizzes & Puzzles13 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Loosehead. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Loosehead - I'm sorry for going off track. I know YOU understand the point about alcohol, but I felt others didn't. I suppose I shouldn't try to clarfiy things to others in your thread - fair point and I'm sorry. It's not about steering onto another subject though, it's about trying to point out that a huge fuss is being made about the wrong thing.
Buddy - I wasn't meaning to pick a fight with you (I'm not that stupid, belive me!), and I wasn't meaning to be petty. It's just that you've said it twice. I do feel that some of the arguements put forward by anti-smoker (sic) people are a little melodramatic and that is one of them. I believe there was a huge trend for smoking in Shakespearean times.. However, the point I was (badly) trying to make is that smoking increased in the UK after WWI when smokers had been given cigarettes in their ration packs, and couldn't kick the habit when they came home. I'm not trying to detract from the awful suffering that non-smokers go through when sitting in a smokey pub, I'm just saying that it's been going on for close to one century perhaps, but not more.
Loosehead and others , as a customer only (i.e., let's not make arguements about the staff here, unless you are someone who actually works in catering), if you are in a well ventilated smoke free room in a pub, what is your objection to there being an entirely separate room in the pub, separated from the room you're in by at least two doors? This is not a peeing area in a swimming pool, but an entirely different pool, where people are free to pee if they wish, but the water is not shared with the other, larger, pool. Objecting to this for reasons of ones own comfort makes as much sense to me as complaining about the guy next door having a cigarette in his own lounge if one lived in a detached house!!
there never will be smoking rooms in pubs - how on earth could you fit them into most places (except the massive spoons and yates etc), and even there do you really want to segregate your customers like that, socially and economically it would be difficult.
I'm a bit disappointed the smoking ban didn't go further but i'm sure it will get there without the need to legislate - now non-smokers have a choice i think pubs will quickly realise that more drinkers don't smoke than do, so hopefully non-smokers will just avoid the smoking pubs for awhile and prompt change...
JB, nothing wrong with the smoking rooms you describe. The problem is that they, in reality would not exist, what pub can install adouble door smoking room, presumably with an extraction system. No what you'd end up with at best is a room with a flapping door or at worst a smoking area in the corner somwhere infecting the whole place.
I mean just look at the latest argument, what is food? Crisps? Sandwiches? nuts? I just feel that the governement have created a monster, you'll have arguments up and down the country over what is and what is not exempt. Pubs will change into private clubs to get around it. As a lawyer yourself you know that the more complex a law to more difficult it is to define and enforce. The Irish have the perfect answer, the Scots, Welsh, Northern Irish are following, Italy have followed why must we make such a dogs dinner of what is a very simple proposition.
I agree that smoking is a nasty, unhealthy and anti-social habit. However, what I find amusing is the way people bleat about the smell/running eyes/health risks when they voluntarily go to venues that allow it!
(Bar staff excluded, but then I guess one could argue that they could seek other employment and - as already pointed out - no-one is trying to sort out their awful wages).
@ KittyGlitter: If your comment was aimed at my post, that not what I said. I just said that if you choose to go where people are smoking, then don't whinge about it. If there are non-smoking pubs (through management policy) in the town where I live, I'm sure there are such places all over the country.
Going to a place where you know there are going to be people smoking and then complaining about it is a bit like going to a nudist beach and complaining that there are people wandering around naked!
Freedom of choice is such a fickle thing even to those who fully support it. Put two teenage girls on a park bench, one sat with a pack of 20 B&H smoking her head off and the other with a razor blade cutting small marks into her arms, self harming.
Which do you help or does anyone try to stop? The girl slightly bleeding that will ultimately only be left with scars on her arms or the girl that is giving herself a terminal disease.
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