Jetronic wrote:
Ling said "If I went into a pub where people were smoking, I would complain. If it wasn't resolved, I would report them. So, I know you are just making all that rubbish up. Most people are really pleased with these new laws."
Well it isn't just my local, there are many others - you need to get out abit.
I don't smoke, have never smoked and don't particularly want to breath in other peoples smoke. However, I freely walk into the pub and can freely leave (just like foreigners who come to this country). How dare this nanny state pass a law for us anti-smokers believing we are so feeble minded we can't make a decision to leave a smoking environment.
Whilst I am an anti-smoker, I respect smokers who defy the ban. They are saying enough is enough and sticking two fingers up to the legislators. What next? A law banning the wearing of under-pants for more than a month for hygene reasons?
So, you respect smokers who defy the ban. Who else do you respect? People who break laws that you, personally, don't like I guess.
What a hell of a situation, if everyone took your attitude that it is OK to decide WHICH laws will be complied with and which not. There are case where extreme public disagreement can pressure for bad laws to change, but this is not the case here with speeding/cameras
or smoking. In fact the public support turned what was going to be a weaker smoking law into a stronger one! The time for protest is before laws are passed, mainly. If you lose, then you lose. This is not unjust, just because you don't like the laws.
I will add that this is a million miles away from people who protest against the Government in Zimbabwe or stand up in Tibet for what they believe in. We are discussing minor laws here in a country where full legal recourse is available, not massive human rights issues in some dictatorship. There is a big difference, I hope all agree, just in case this degenerates into those kind of arguments. These speeding/smoking/foxhunting laws are not some socially unjust law like compulsory abortion in China where compliance (rightly) is a social nightmare. I think we would all agree with this massive difference, I am not suggesting anyone here compares this stuff.
The reason I don't believe your rubbish about the smoking is that many people prefer the non-smoke atmosphere and will stand up for their right. To break this law, the landlords will have a big risk. I can say I have never been in a pub (or restaurant or ANY situation) where the law is being defied. The compliance is tremendous and the legislation has caused a big change in people's attitudes.
There are still people who refuse to wear crash helmets on bikes, refuse to wear seatbelts, refuse to obey laws like speeding and smoking, but these are very small minority and when the vast majority of people accept them, there is massive social pressure on these single-issue idiots to change.
People do become obsessed with their own issue, which is pointless when there is no real popular support for it. I imagine quite a few people would
say they would like speeding convictions to be annulled and cameras removed, just as many people want parking fees to be abolished and road tax removed. But in the real world, it won't happen. So why spend your life fighting against what has become a good part of society? Patently the general arguments on this board get ignored, and the movement has lost a load of previous momentum. People who speed get punished. Easy. After a few endorsements, I guess they should slow down a bit.
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