Posted on 03/11/2006 8:35:31 AM PST by SheLion
A statewide indoor smoking ban that exempts casinos is unfair and should never have been signed into law.
When they approved an indoor smoking ban for New Jersey in January, lawmakers all but admitted a double standard was being set by allowing Atlantic City's casinos to continue allowing smoking.
Now, a coalition of bars, restaurants and bowling alleys is rightly challenging the New Jersey Smoke-Free Air Act, set to go into effect April 15, asking a federal court to strike it down as unconstitutional. Hopefully, their challenge will lead to the law being scrapped.
It was shockingly hypocritical for state lawmakers, asserting they wanted to protect the health of workers across the state, to pass a smoking ban that left thousands of workers unprotected for no apparent reason other than politics. The Atlantic City casinos had pushed to not be barred from allowing smoking in the gambling halls.
"It (the casino industry) employs 50,000 people, has billions in public and private investment and just as importantly provides hundreds of millions of dollars to the state annually," Assembly Speaker Joe Roberts, D-Camden, said just after the bill was signed by former Gov. Richard J. Codey. "The view was that we have to look carefully at any industry that is that important and that fragile, given the competition all over the nation."
That flawed logic completely ignores the millions of dollars generated and thousands of people employed by bars, restaurants, bowling alleys and other businesses in the state. Apparently, the owners of these establishments don't deserve the right to make a choice that might affect their businesses -- a choice casino owners will continue to have.
"It's pathetic that these restaurant and bar owners have the gall to try and keep poisoning the bodies of their workers and customers," state Sen. John Adler, D-Cherry Hill, said in reacting to the federal lawsuit, filed Tuesday in federal court in Trenton.
What's pathetic is that Adler, a key proponent of the smoking ban, either doesn't see or is completely ignoring the double standard of this law and the unfairness of it.
There's absolutely nothing right or fair about giving casinos a choice that other New Jersey businesses won't have. It was unbelievable that so many lawmakers got behind the spineless measure.
Robert Gluck, a lawyer for the groups that filed the suit, said they'd be happy if the ban was extended to every business in the state's hospitality industry, including casinos.
That would be more fair, but it would still have the government going too far. Plain and simple, the decision should be made by individual businesses, not the government.
If New Jersey lawmakers, who bring in millions for the state by heavily taxing tobacco, aren't going to make smoking illegal, they shouldn't play nanny and unfairly tell certain business owners not to allow it.
The federal court should strike down this ban, and New Jersey lawmakers should give up their misguided quest to make health decisions for adults. Any New Jerseyan who is truly bothered by cigarette smoke in a bar or restaurant can decide for himself or herself not to go to the establishment or work there.
Like this:
MOST DEFINATELY! I feel like I am being Choked, livinig NY state...and it is certainly not from smoke!
Fine with me!
Are you easily swayed or just believe something is HARMFUL to you just because you hate it?
Second hand smoke is NOT the killer the anti's made YOU believe it is. I am tired of these forking lies you spit around this forum!
DON'T LET THE HEADLINES FOOL YOU
Court throws out challenge to EPA findings on secondhand smoke - (December 2002) - The ruling was based on the highly technical grounds that since the EPA didn't actually enact any new regulations (it merely declared ETS to be a carcinogen without actually adopting any new rules), the court had no jurisdiction to rule in the matter. This court ruling on the EPA report is NOT a stamp of approval for that report. Judge Osteen's criticisms of the EPA report are still completely valid and is accompanied by other experts.
Oak Ridge Labs, TN & SECOND HAND SMOKE
Statistics and Data Sciences Group Projects
I think any anti who tries to dismiss the findings of the U.S. Department of Energy labs at Oak Ridge, should be confronted with the question: "Are you saying that DOE researchers committed scientific fraud and that their findings on ETS exposure are untrue?"
I DEFINATELY agree with you!
"Simplicity is illusive....government has no right to interfere with private business not allow smoking in ALL places."
what if 2nd hand smoke were shown to be harmful, would that change your opinion?
Recently, I went into a Dollar type store...you could smell the man made material right away...after looking around for about 10 minuits, I had a sore throat.......and it is a PUBLIC store.....certainly irritant chemicals.
I personally do not know of any social clubhouses. Besides the one cigar bar...where they actually serve food, the only place that you can smoke is at the casinos...and thank heaven you can eat too.
RESEARCHERS BLAST CALIFORNIA EPA REPORT: SECONDHAND SMOKE FINDINGS BIASED, FLAWED
01/30/2006-The American Cancer Society stated unequivocally, in a written comment, that it did not agree with Cal-EPA's conclusion that secondhand smoke was a cause of breast cancer, and that published evidence did not support the requisite criteria for causation.
You would never make it in northern Maine where we heat with big wood furnaces every winter. It's a dirty heat but a good heat. But if you ever had to live with the second hand smoke from wood heat, you would fall over in a faint!
I bet you sit up wind at a camp fire, don't you.
What do you do when you are behind a big stinky truck on the interstate and its 85 degrees out and the traffic comes to a stop? Do you pull out a mask? I'm not being snarky, I just can't believe that "stuff" in life gets to some people so bad today. We didn't grow up this way.
I'm just trying to figure out why the human race has weakened so badly.
If tobacco and second hand smoke were that damn harmful, the government would have pulled it from the market YEARS ago! heh!
I've lived a lot of years on this earth, started smoking at age 16. Grew up with smoke AND with second hand smoke. Sure hasn't hurt me YET! My gawd! How did the gene pool weaken so badly???
For some reason...some people are so "ANTI" that they become Crazed and obsessed. As someone said earlier...people should respect each other and make reasonable changes, and to be adult about it.
I have come to the age that I can spend more money on entertainment....but unfortunately I now spend it at the restaurant at the Indian Casino intead of our local restaurant and tavern businesses. (cannot even rollerblade in one of our state parks...you may just hurt yourself...aughhh!)
I can't STAND Phillip Morris! If anyone thinks that Big Tobacco sold us out, Phillip Morris is even worse.
They put these fancy stop smoking ads on TV and how they will help people quit, but have you noticed they are still producing cigarettes? Talking out of both sides of their mouths. I hate that corporation. Bunch of idiots.
Let me tell you something: like I said, I started smoking at age 16 (peer pressure).
Later in my mid 20's, I gave birth to a beautiful baby girl. 21.5 inches long and 8lb 12 oz! Perfect health.
My hubby and I both smoked and our daughter never had any of the above sicknesses. The only thing she ever had was German measles. And you sure can't get German measles from smoking!
She joined with me in taking a good dose of vitamin c every day and she never even caught a cold.
"Our disagreement comes from whether this is the nanny state telling us how to live or whether it is reasonable protection from people who would harm others."
That last part of your sentence is the definition of a nanny state. Can you not decide what is harmful to yourself and avoid it? The way you put it, the smokers are out to harm you on purpose. They are not stalking you, catching you, and forcing their smoke into your lungs by mouth to mouth contact. If you think smoking is harmful to you, then you simply avoid going to an establishment that allows smoking. The market will decide what is best, the shop keepers and store owners will go the way of the dollar, they are not stupid people.
"I'm pretty we are all in full agreement that it would be "reasonable protection" if we talking about one restaurant patron spraying anthrax into the air and the government intervening."
That is a horrible analogy. First off, anthrax is illegal for anyone to have, cigararettes are a legal product.
"Hopefully we all agree that it would be an unconstitutional nanny state that would "protect" us in pubic from political viewpoints we don't like or expressions of religious belief or bad perfume."
That is the same as smoking, which you want the government to protect you from. If you don't like a political viewpoint, religious belief, you don't associate with those who hold that belief. If someone has bad perfume, you avoid them. It's the same as avoiding an establish that has chosen to allow smoking.
"The question is "where in the middle is cigarette smoke." its nothing like anthrax but its not protected free speech either. I view it a a patron choosing to spray irritant and possibly cancer causing chemicals into the air. That strikes me as ok at home but not OK in a restaurant."
Why is not protected? It is a legal product sold in the United States. You said earlier in the post that bad perfume is something the government should not protect us from, but what if someone is allergic and dies from breathing it? And "possibly cancer causing chemicals" is a bad argument. Cars can possibly run you over on the road, should we ban them from being used as well?
So your argument is that if one person doesn't get sick from cigarettes then it's safe for everybody?
Check this out from the American Council on Science and Health
http://www.acsh.org/publications/pubID.346/pub_detail.asp
>>In this report the American Council on Science and Health (ACSH) evaluates the large body of evidence that exists regarding the health effects of ETS. ACSH's analysis yields the following conclusions:
* Irritation of the eyes, nose, and respiratory tract is the most common and firmly established adverse health effect associated with exposure to ETS.
* Exposed infants and children, in particular, are at increased risk of respiratory infections, middle-ear effusion (fluid inside the eardrum), and the exacerbation of asthma and other respiratory symptoms.
* Exposed adults are at increased risk for respiratory ailments; ETS may aggravate the symptoms of preexisting asthma and emphysema.
* Extensive epidemiological evidence indicates that ETS exposure is a weak risk factor in the development of lung cancer in nonsmokers regularly exposed to ETS in the workplace and/or at home.
* Epidemiological evidence also suggests that ETS is a weak risk factor for heart disease in nonsmoking spouses of smokers and in nonsmokers regularly exposed to ETS in the workplace and/or at home.
* Other reported links between ETS and chronic disease (breast cancer, cervical cancer, and leukemia, for example) have not been scientifically established and are not addressed in this report. <<
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.