Whether smoking bans save any lives is debatable, but they definitely kill people.
[Thanks to Bill Vogt for the link.]
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Whether smoking bans save any lives is debatable, but they definitely kill people.
[Thanks to Bill Vogt for the link.]
| September 16, 2003, 1:04am | #
No, didn't think of it myself. The question is, why didn't YOU think of it?thoreau | September 16, 2003, 1:22am | #
An idiot leaned out a window way too far and fell.Patrick | September 16, 2003, 1:25am | #
Two words: Natural Selection| September 16, 2003, 1:30am | #
Anon @ 12:37 and I assume 1:04:Larry | September 16, 2003, 1:39am | #
As someone who hates cigarette smoke, I still think the law has gone too far. Smoking in one's home (which a dormitory is) should be up to the occupants. Maybe one dorm on campus should be set up as completely smoke-free for anti-smoking zealots, but other than that smoking inside a private room should be allowed if the occupants want to do it.Marlboro Stunt Man | September 16, 2003, 1:52am | #
Everyone assumes he fell by himself. I have seen non-smokers get irate enough to start up a fist fight over someone smoking, especially in an area that banned smoking. Maybe someone got fed up with this inconsiderate, lazy jackass and pushed his ass out. Its the perfect crime without witnesses and the fact the smoker took the screen out to lean out and toke. Where was his roommate, or does KU have the luxury of single occupancy dorm rooms?7.62 | September 16, 2003, 2:19am | #
Anon @ 1:30Mark A. | September 16, 2003, 2:21am | #
My, my, thoreau, aren't we a little touchy today?! :-)thoreau | September 16, 2003, 2:37am | #
Mark A.-Mark A. | September 16, 2003, 2:57am | #
That said, those Darwin Awards sure are funny in a dark, morbid sort of way........bennett | September 16, 2003, 3:00am | #
First off, Is it just me or was Jacob's comment rather "tounge-in-cheek" to begin with. Chill out, people.| September 16, 2003, 3:36am | #
The anti-smoking "Citizen" trying to "activate his personal responsibility" by battery (not to mention violation of property rights) is essentially advocating coercion. The logical advance of that position is escalated violence which ends in death. The death does not have to be by firearm, but it is the logical conclusion nonetheless.matt | September 16, 2003, 4:02am | #
The owner of the property (dorm room) in this case wasn't the kid smoking but the university. Since it technically owns the property the occupants living there have to follow whatever rules the university has (like an apartment lease), whether he likes them or not.Nick Yulico | September 16, 2003, 4:23am | #
It is quite sad that this kid had to die. However, it's very clear that he should have ignored the ban in the first place.Citizen | September 16, 2003, 4:23am | #
It's not a double standard. You can smoke in your own home. An on-campus dorm room at a public university is not your own home. What you cannot do is smoke on an airplane, in an office, in a restaurant (although I'm willing to concede that owners ought to have the right to do with their dining establishments as they wish), in a school, in a courthouse, or any other public arena in which your disgusting, toxic, cancerous, nauseous fumes can cause burning eyes, running noses, coughing fits, bad smelling clothes and hair on innocent others. The execution of whatever personal right smokers had, ended when these and similar symptoms made contact with others| September 16, 2003, 5:00am | #
I think as a society it is appropriate to stigmatize people like citizen, and therefore citizen as much as possible. Philosophically, I’m fine with people like citizen legally thinking what they want on their own, but hopefully, the rest of us, can make citizen so frowned upon that it’ll be an antiquated textbook example of self-righteous blowhard in an intro psychology textbook somewhere down the line.Larry | September 16, 2003, 5:42am | #
Actually, a dormatory is just like a home with all the associated expectations of privacy and the like. It is a double standard to allow smoking in homes but not dorm rooms. I can't really tell from the story and I am not that familiar with KU, but if this is a state-owned building then it really is no business of the government if people are using legal substances in their own homes.matt | September 16, 2003, 6:20am | #
Larry,Phil | September 16, 2003, 6:58am | #
Boy, there sure are a lot of people around who imagine that they have a right to put things into other people's lungs against their will. Am I permitted to exact no rent, no charge from you for putting things in my lungs? Are my lungs yours to use? No, they are not. Why do you think they are?Steve | September 16, 2003, 6:59am | #
A dormroom is not a home. You are often randomly assigned a roommate. You have great restrictions on your lifestyle for all sorts of reasons. It is quite reasonable to expect that the room you are assigned by the college will not be shared with a chain-smoker.Bob | September 16, 2003, 9:40am | #
Well, as for the ban on smoking because of the unwanted side effects, why stop there? I'm not sure if you are aware of this, but tens of thousands of people die every year due to hideous things called automobiles- yes it's true! How can these vicious car dealers get away with such profane negligence? I say, let's take the good example of our social elite who know better, and rid ourselves of these killing machines altogether. Who's with me! Let us be reasonalbe, anti-car legislation is the only way to save the children.Smokey Robinson | September 16, 2003, 10:45am | #
If he had only been a mechanical engineering major; he might have figured out how to suck the smoke outside with fans. Note to teens in the dorm - use chewin' tobacckey in highrise non smoking dorms.| September 16, 2003, 10:55am | #
No matter. What are individual deaths if we can stop a horrible habit that the intelligencia do not like.Madog | September 16, 2003, 11:01am | #
Some people may die, but remember that it's all so future generations can look back at us with the same distain we have for old habits such as bear-baiting, opium dens, taking scalps and ears as trophies in battle, etc.WLC | September 16, 2003, 11:09am | #
A single death is a statistic, a million deaths is a tragedy.Mark A. | September 16, 2003, 11:14am | #
Looks a lot more like smoking killed him to me, though I don't take the notion seriously. That is, after all, the activity in which he was engaged when he fell.Brian | September 16, 2003, 11:28am | #
Oh please! The smoking ban didn't kill him. His own stupidity and laziness did. Whatever happened to the libertarian ideal of personal responsibility? Blaming the smoking ban for this is absurd. Jacob S. doesn't seem so eager to blame alcohol for the death of that other student menationed in the article who sleepwalked out his window while intoxicated. How about some consistency here?| September 16, 2003, 11:34am | #
Apparently, raising cigerette taxes is a safer way to reduce smoking than outright prohibition.Trent | September 16, 2003, 11:35am | #
Yes, but all the anti-smoking crowd wants to ignore personal responsibilty when compiling statistics about how smoking kills. So it would be intellectually consistent to ignore personal responsibility when a person dies when driven to smoke in a dangerous area by a smoking ban. Isn't that the point Jacob is trying to make?dhex | September 16, 2003, 11:58am | #
i just thought he was being cute.| September 16, 2003, 12:18pm | #
Trent, people would rather be logical only to the extent it supports their argument.Citizen | September 16, 2003, 12:26pm | #
But not you o wise anon @ 12:18, you're always logical in all things.| September 16, 2003, 12:37pm | #
Which then activates MY personal responsbility to put a bullet through your skull.Ira Weatheral | September 16, 2003, 12:43pm | #
Citizen:Bill Vogt | September 16, 2003, 12:46pm | #
The point is that prohibition often induces people to engage in activities more dangerous than the thing prohibited. OF couse, the prohibitionists don't give a damn because their real goal is not to save lives, but to run them.Citizen | September 16, 2003, 12:53pm | #
That's true about the warrent to enter and search, or it was at the Cal State U system, as well. But that doesn't mean that it is considered "your home" in the sense of ownership. *Generally* campus housing authorities have freedom to dictate policy on everything from furniture (no lofts, toaster ovens, microwaves) to guests (no over-night visitors for more than three nights in a row without paying fees, seriously) to decoration (no candles, no "offensive posters") to noise levels. It's not surprising, then, that they would and could prohibit smoking tobacco.WLC | September 17, 2003, 8:57am | #
Didn't all this start, more or less twelve years ago, over a stupid cartoon camel.| September 17, 2003, 10:06am | #
Stop dring a car Phil, so you don't put your exhaust into my lungs. In fact, you should probably stop using all manufactured products, since their by-products usually include pollution. Also, stop using electricity and heating your home.