So in today's America you can smoke a joint or smoke a pole but you can't smoke tobacco.
So in today's America you can smoke a joint or smoke a pole but you can't smoke tobacco.
To me, this issue might be tied more to insurance premiums than modifying behavior. Companies I have worked for past & present make the claim of "smoke free" to help keep insurance cost down.
I'm curious to see how the University will address the use of e-cigarettes on campus, as they are not tobacco products and it is vapor not smoke.
The way I see it, that non-smoker can decide for himself whether he wants to sit on a bench with a smoker or move to the next one.
I know smoking rules aren't always enforced but that's not the fault of smokers who follow the rules. We shouldn't blame the rule followers and we certainly shouldn't make rules that punish them. The ironic thing is because the rule breakers already break the current rules, this policy will ONLY HURT those smokers who have been following the rules all these years.
Reb, at the end of the day, smoking is inherently rude.
Was it my responsibility to wind my way down Jefferson last week during Festivale to avoid smokers? Nevermind cigarettes tend to be at eye level of a 4 or 5 year-old.
Should I not go to Cajun Walk on the chance I'll be standing somewhere when a smoker walks up and stands next to me?
If I'm sitting at a park bench and somebody sits down next to me and lights up, is it my responsibility to move?
I don't have a problem with designated smoking areas.
But the smokers on Jefferson Street last week, were just as much a pain in the butt as those little knuckleheads with their skateboards or the hipsters and their pedicabs.
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