this post was submitted on 31 Aug 2024
98 points (95.4% liked)
Health - Resources and discussion for everything health-related
2323 readers
293 users here now
Health: physical and mental, individual and public.
Discussions, issues, resources, news, everything.
See the pinned post for a long list of other communities dedicated to health or specific diagnoses. The list is continuously updated.
Nothing here shall be taken as medical or any other kind of professional advice.
Commercial advertising is considered spam and not allowed. If you're not sure, contact mods to ask beforehand.
Linked videos without original description context by OP to initiate healthy, constructive discussions will be removed.
Regular rules of lemmy.world apply. Be civil.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
It does not, purposely so.
Perhaps you mean unalienable rights (which was in the declaration of independence iirc), but yes afaik it was supposed to apply to all people equally.
Who's we and when was this decided ?
That is logically incorrect (reduce one persons liberty points by 10, add 5 liberty points each to 2 people and liberty equilibrium is maintained) but i think i know what you are getting at.
Assuming everyone's idea of the ultimate goal is "liberty for all" is also a stretch.
That's an entirely different conversation though.
The smokers zones were a result of the original crackdown on smoking in public places, the government decided and it sounds like you followed along.
That this new change goes further than you are personally comfortable with doesn't make the previous change any less a governmental decree.
Let's assume however that you do have some universal right to smoke in the smokers section:
Is this the only universal right that exists ?
Do other people not have a right to not be forcibly exposed to known carcinogens ?
To pre-empt the "but they don't have to be near the smokers" argument, yes, they do.
A pub garden isn't magically warded to keep the smoke out of the air of non-smokers.
Thats the one same difference
We society and depends on how u look at history and ur interpretation of the purpose of government itself
Thats what i think it should be but yeah definatly a different conversation.
Original crackdown which i though was fair. Restricting you to a section of the place ur already at not restricting your ability to drink a beer and socialise symulationiously while also allowing people to not be exposed to carsinagens throught the entire premises. Net increase of liberty.
What do u think?
U cant just proclaim something to be true. You dont have to go to the pub and expose yourself to the risks associated alcohol, drunk idiots, dumb cunts, covid riddled mouse breathers, adverse political opinions, suspiciously sticky floors etc.
Whats the level of acceptable risk i would imagine that smoke distributes in accordance with the inverse square law so perhaps simply requiring a little extra "buffer space" would reduce said risk within acceptable tolerances.
Look i see where ya coming from but i definatly feel this is the slightly thicker than last time end of the wedge that the nany state is never gonna stop hammering.
Not really, one has religious connotations the other doesn't.
My interpretation is different, but not any less subjective than yours, so fair enough.
I think that your argument implies that your right to smoke in the smokers section is greater than someone else's right to not have to ingest second hand smoke from you smoking in the smokers section.
That's fair and i worded my argument somewhat poorly, I'll clarify what i meant in the next sections.
This is true for all.
In the context of the original statement, what i meant to say was the argument “but they don’t have to be near the smokers” holds about as much weight as people saying "well they can just smoke when they get home", technically yes but we are talking about situations where both parties are in attendance.
That is also my understanding, but that assumes a completely neutral space with no directional blowing, no obstacles etc, also a lot of smoking areas aren't exactly as "outside" as they could be.
I'm not arguing the level of acceptable risk either way , i have no idea and i'd imagine its heavily subjective.
Oh absolutely, even if it wasn't bullshit posturing and political grandstanding it's a far cry from the most effective thing they could be doing to alleviate the "huge burden" on the NHS.
Hey did we just have a productive disscussion with differing opinions without devolving into a shouting match. You wouldnt see this on the internet anywhere but lemmy.
And yeah it is all just bullshit posturing and political grandstanding.
From what ive heard the nhs has devolved into a complete clusterfuck and everyone is too scared to touch it in fear of backlash. Not sure whats worse that or how us aussies are going getting more simmillar to the american system by the day.