Dusty Chalk Wrote:
druucifer Wrote:
there's a world of difference between the contention that "second hand smoke causes cancer" and "second hand smoke can harm your health." ...if it's so evident that me smoking outdoors harms your health, why not try citing some evidence to that effect?
Because I don't feel a need to. I did a google search on second-hand smoke, and every single one of the links that I clicked on sided with it being a health-hazard, rather than not. I suspect you had to do some digging to find links that said it was less so than initially realized.
For example,
this one states unequivocally that it is a known risk factor for cancer.
This Canadian story states at least one professional opinion that the dangers of outdoor second-hand smoke are underestimated.
once again, when you repeatedly mischaracterize my position as being "second hand smoke doesn't hurt you" its easy to win. several of those links are quoting sources that the studies i linked to specifically indict for poor methodology (i.e. the 1992 epa meta-analysis). and google isn't exactly a sound scientific basis--by that standard we could justify laws banning sasquatch in public areas.
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I did. And your reaction only reinforces my opinion that you read what you want to read. "Little research" defends neither of our positions, it does not reinforce yours. I went on to find (google) what little research I could find, and found quite a bit.
as my civil procedure professor is fond of saying, the burden of production is on the moving party. or, put less legally, you're the one thats arguing for changing the status quo and banning outdoor smoking, so the burden of proof is on you to prove that outdoor second hand smoke is so detrimental to health that we should ban it. even though i doubt it, you might very well be right, and if there was some solid scientific research to back your assertions up, you would win over lots of smokers like me--people who enjoy smoking, don't want to hurt other people, but are disturbed by how far the anti-smoking crusade is going, and don't want to see erosion of our right to enter flavor country infringed by bad science and hysteria.
incidentally, i did find a
debate about this issue that has raised a whole lot of the same arguments expressed in this thread, where somebody actually goes to the trouble to make a scientific argument for banning outdoor smoking. the guy arguing your side of the issue makes a plausible theory for banning outdoor smoking, but, much like you, lacks a lot of data to back his assertions up. the pro-outdoor smoking guy makes what i believe to be a very good point:
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A minority of people in tobacco control do not like to even see people smoking. Australian non-smokers rights activist Brian McBride wrote recently to some of his colleagues about outdoor smoking: "We must be prepared to fight the aesthetics and personal standards argument as well as the health argument, and that is what I intend to do. We should not underestimate the public awareness value of having smokers found guilty of negligent actions in all situations indoors or outdoors. The more cases we run the better."
I would argue that the two need to be kept thoroughly apart. Mixing "aesthetics" arguments with health arguments risks infecting tobacco control with the accusation that it is fundamentally the providence of people with capricious authoritarian proclivities, caring little for the scientific bedrock on which public health ought to stand.