Yes, for the sake of your ORIGINAL argument ("this new rule is a bad thing") it may be irrelevant. But at this point in our long and winding road together, I thought the sole bone of contention was about the relevance of my comparing the present situation to the enactment of laws about urinating/defecating in public.headnugg wrote:I don't care why urinating/defecating on the street is illegal or when it was made illegal. For the sake of MY argument, it is all irrelevant.
And my point is that there was a time in our history where urinating/defecating in public was legal, a certain segment of society decided that for the public health it shouldn't be, and took away people's god-given right to crap wherever they wanted. Perhaps we've reached the same point in the history of smoking. A certain segment of society has decided it's bad for the public health and are attempting to act accordingly. That's my point. At least as best as I remember.Because it IS illegal. Smoking on the street ISN't illegal. They're trying to make a RULE that you can't do it in Belmont.
Would you really call smoking a "basic" human right? In my mind that puts it on par with life, liberty, etc. Yeah, OK, smokers have a right to do what they want to their body. Basic. OK. Is the right to clean air MORE basic? Less basic? The same basic? Hmm.I'm saying they're taking away a basic human right,
See, this is where I don't understand why you don't see the relevance of my point, because my point is not about 20 years from now. It's about this exactly this time. This time of transition; or possible transition.In 20 years, Hoby, your argument might be relevant, because maybe by then, smoking on the street will be just as illegal as taking a piss on the sidewalk. But right now it's not.
See above.Now at this point, I don't even remember exactly what we were arguing about
Any more than they already do, you mean? Do you pay taxes, drink water from a town/city supply, live in a home that has been inspected for safety of wiring and construction, eat food that must meet certain standards in preparation and packaging, attend schools that have curricula that are approved by state and/or federal education departments, get treated or serviced by doctors or any of a myriad of other professionals that are licensed, work at a job where your employer must follow certain rules about how you're treated, etc, etc? It can get downright depressing and scary if you think about it, but so can the consequences of any of those mechanisms not being in place at least to some extent.......But again, as much as I hate smoking/smokers, it's complete Bullshit that any goverment organization should dictate your life to you.
Wait! Where do you live where you can do that now? I mean without getting at least a ticket if the cop is in a bad mood.Next thing they're going to say I can't smoke pot in the privacy of my own home or car! What's next I ask you?
Hope you're not too late.If we don't fight this now, we won't have the OPTION of fighting it in 50 years, when our goverment is dictating everything we can and can't do......The fight starts now!
Then my work here is done.OK, OK you're a fucking riot.....and I like you buddy! Yay!