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liberalhistorian

(20,906 posts)
10. What's truly evil is exposing people
Sat Dec 15, 2012, 01:40 PM
Dec 2012

to toxins from your bad habit that you CHOSE to engage in, when THEY don't have any choice in the matter. I remember the days before smoke-free offices and public places, and it's SOO much better now. No one forces people to smoke and expose others to that shit and even endanger others at times with it, including second-hand smoke. It IS NOT a "right". The right of people to breathe air free from cigarette toxins supercedes the "rights" of those who CHOOSE to engage in a deadly habit to expose them to it. Period.

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guns are, apparently, more addictive than cigarettes. - n/t lapfog_1 Dec 2012 #1
We had a National conversation about Four Loko alcohol and it was banned in like what, 3 weeks? JaneyVee Dec 2012 #2
Trivia: The first anti-smoking campaign was started by the Nazis. Jamastiene Dec 2012 #3
Perfect! NYC_SKP Dec 2012 #4
No wonder I felt an evil influence....it is interesting! nt fadedrose Dec 2012 #5
What's truly evil is exposing people liberalhistorian Dec 2012 #10
I don't think King James could have been a Nazi... JHB Dec 2012 #11
You want to pay $200 a month for my asthma meds? XemaSab Dec 2012 #6
I never smoked in the same room as kids or sick people fadedrose Dec 2012 #7
"it's good that there's not cigarette smoke everywhere you go. That's how it should be with guns." leeroysphitz Dec 2012 #14
There are fundamental differences between the two ProgressiveProfessor Dec 2012 #8
Bit of correction needed, but a germ of a maybe. dmallind Dec 2012 #9
They changed the collective conscience, which arthritisR_US Dec 2012 #12
why would you want a gun ban as toothless as most smoking bans? uncle ray Dec 2012 #13
If enough people got angry enough we could put cost prohibitive taxes on non-hunting weapons leeroysphitz Dec 2012 #15
the non-stop harping of non-smokers helped me quit Skittles Dec 2012 #16
The larger point is well-taken: what SEEMS politically "impossible" is actually possible alcibiades_mystery Dec 2012 #17
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