smoking ban-property rights
as if it isnt bad enough there already is one for my city
i got this email today January 9, 2012 Keep Private Property Rights in Indiana. Fight the Statewide Smoking Ban! Dear Indiana C4L Member, The government does not have the right to invade private property and force its will on the private businesses of our great state. The smoking ban is not about people's health. It's about who decides what you can and cannot do on your own private property! If you do not fight for your rights TODAY, the government will not stop here. The nanny state will continue to expand and invade all of your private property, including your home and your car. Click here to sign our petition. Not only is this an extreme violation of your private property rights, it is extremely damaging to the economy because it drives some people to stay home instead of go out. The people who wanted the ban have not increased their traffic to these businesses to make up for lost business and revenue. As a result, many smoking places around the state are going out of business where bans have been instituted. Just ask Fort Wayne. You've heard the argument: the business owners' property rights and smokers' personal liberty are small sacrifices for the greater good of society. Wrong. Liberty lost is never good for society. In the words of John Stuart Mill: "[T]he danger which threatens human nature is not excess but deficiency of personal impulses and preferences.” A truly free society allows diversity of choice, as well as diversity of lifestyle and opinion. The greatest threat to health, liberty, and happiness is a government that knows no bounds. There can be no denying that the smoking ban is a step in the direction of tyranny. Not only that, but the ban diverts law enforcement resources away from serious crimes, like rape, robbery, and murder. This isn't about smoking. This is about liberty, individual sovereignty, and the tyranny of the majority. Together, we must stand up for our liberty. Click this link to sign the petition today! For Liberty, Deb Wells Indiana Interim State Coordinator Campaign for Liberty P.S. Now is the time to stand up for your private property rights. Sign and forward this to all of your friends to do the same. P.P.S. To get involved in this issue, contact Melissa Burger directly at Mline73@aol.com. |
This is wrong and distorted on many levels.
Have you researched the proposed legislation at all? I'm not saying it is good legislation, but rather saying that the people involved in sending you that email are slimy, lying bastards. |
no i havent yet blaen
you are right i should yet i dont imagine them saying there is a proposed ban when there isnt one and of course any ban would be a bad ban |
Originally Posted by jared8783
(Post 817478)
no i havent yet blaen
you are right i should yet i dont imagine them saying there is a proposed ban when there isnt one and of course any ban would be a bad ban What I am saying is that the people involved are distorting, twisting, and IMO flat out lying about what is going on. That's where my problem with that email stems from. As for the actual law: I don't think it's a particularly good law. There are several solid arguments against it. But what they are talking about has little to do with the actual law and the reasoning behind it. Instead, they are fear mongering and giving half truths to try to drum up support. |
Can somebody sum this stuff up please? What are you two talking about?
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making it illegal to smoke in public places that are privately owned
for example resturaunts taking away the property rights away from the property owner |
Originally Posted by samnavy
(Post 817577)
Can somebody sum this stuff up please? What are you two talking about?
Basically, the proposed law is an argument that individual rights trump property rights, while trying to blatantly ignore that people have the option of entering said property. It's a bad law, but the email in the OP is just....disgustingly twisting what it is. |
blaen, Campaign for Liberty is the organization that Ron Paul started using his 2008 pres'n run donations. I doubt that they are "slimy lying bastards", wrt to this email.
A quick google search yielded multiple hits that suggest it's VERY real: https://www.google.com/search?client...hannel=suggest |
Originally Posted by JasonC SBB
(Post 817591)
blaen, Campaign for Liberty is the organization that Ron Paul started using his 2008 pres'n run donations. I doubt that they are "slimy lying bastards", wrt to this email.
A quick google search yielded multiple hits that suggest it's VERY real: https://www.google.com/search?client...hannel=suggest If you do not fight for your rights TODAY, the government will not stop here. The nanny state will continue to expand and invade all of your private property, including your home and your car. My argument has nothing to do with the law. I've said I agree it isn't a good law. |
We started the smoking ban thing here in Tennessee a few years ago and I LOVE it. I can now go sit at the bar at a resturant and not go home smelling like a took a nap in an ashtray. In Tennessee if you want to allow smoking you can...you just have to make the place 21 and up and or sell memberships.
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Originally Posted by TNTUBA
(Post 817598)
We started the smoking ban thing here in Tennessee a few years ago and I LOVE it. I can now go sit at the bar at a resturant and not go home smelling like a took a nap in an ashtray. In Tennessee if you want to allow smoking you can...you just have to make the place 21 and up and or sell memberships.
Things such as bars, casinos, etc. are explicitly exempted from the law - i.e., places that only people who can legally smoke can visit. I stand by previous commentary that I think it's a bad law, but what is being claimed does not match up to what it is. |
Originally Posted by TNTUBA
(Post 817598)
We started the smoking ban thing here in Tennessee a few years ago and I LOVE it. I can now go sit at the bar at a resturant and not go home smelling like a took a nap in an ashtray. In Tennessee if you want to allow smoking you can...you just have to make the place 21 and up and or sell memberships.
but the fact of the matter is that the property is privately owned and the government has no place to tell the owner what he can and can't do what is being argued here is not your convenience but what gives one the right to tell the property owner how to run his business |
Originally Posted by blaen99
(Post 817600)
I stand by previous commentary that I think it's a bad law, but what is being claimed does not match up to what it is.
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Originally Posted by jared8783
(Post 817605)
it might be convenient for you to go to others peoples property and have everyone doing or not doing what you want them to do
but the fact of the matter is that the property is privately owned and the government has no place to tell the owner what he can and can't do what is being argued here is not your convenience but what gives one the right to tell the property owner how to run his business This is essentially a law that prioritizes individual rights over property rights. The problem is that the legislators stuck their fingers in their ears and screamed "LALALALALA!" when it came to the fact that said individuals do not have to go into said private business. It's not a good law, but because of the fingers-in-the-ears part, not because of prioritizing individuals rights over property rights. The above logic is used to ban smoking in all government buildings, and quite frankly I agree with a smoke ban when it comes to government buildings. But not when it comes to private property. Individual rights should not be prioritized over property rights in any situation that does not present a clear danger IMO. |
for example i am very careful about what i eat
it would be much easier for me if every resturaunt was required to offer 100% whole grains but what gives me the right to tell them what to serve their paying customers? if they do not have what i want it is my right to go somewhere else |
Wait... People still smoke? :rofl::rofl: noobz
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I have a few friends in the food services industry...and they have said exactly the opposite as the E-Mail. One friend is a GM at what we'll call a 4 star restaurant...Not an Applebees but not a Ruth's Chris either and she said the store sales actually went up significantly the year after the ban was instituted and this was in a down economy. Her opinion...NOT MINE...BUT HER'S was that smokers are typically of lower socioeconomic status and the cloud of smoke at the restaurant bar would keep non smokers with money to spend away. My opinion is these smoking bans wouldn't be going into place if they weren't a response to popular demand.
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Originally Posted by jared8783
(Post 817610)
for example i am very careful about what i eat
it would be much easier for me if every resturaunt was required to offer 100% whole grains but what gives me the right to tell them what to serve their paying customers? if they do not have what i want it is my right to go somewhere else However, you do have the right to not be in a private business with a clear danger to your health - for instance, poisonous food or air with carcinogens. That is the logic being used for the smoke ban, in that cigarette smoke is considered harmful by the federal government. However, the legislators are choosing to ignore the fact that you don't have to go into a smoking restaurant. |
What is so wrong with the business being able to choose though TNTUBA? If a business wants to allow smoking, and some customers do not like it, they can CHOOSE to leave. Just like a business should have the right to refuse service if they don't want you smoking on their property.
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while the ban may help or hurt some business (i have spoken with local bar employees after the ban that has been in place for some time now in my city and it does in fact hurt their business) that is not the point
the point is what gives me the right to tell you what you can do on your privately owned property? |
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