Controversial question.
brittanyjeanxo
Posts: 1,831 Member
Well, I'm in the mood for some (hopefully) intelligent conversation to read and/or participate in, so I'm going to ask a somewhat controversial question.
Should the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) be allowed to regulate or ban the use of tobacco (mainly cigarettes) as an addictive drug?
Now before you answer, I'd be very interested to hear an argument from a NON-biased POV (facts only.) and then your argument from a biased position (what you think from a smoker's/non-smoker's POV.) Please remember that most people are adults here, and this is meant to be a DEBATE not an irrational argument.
From a non-biased stand point, I say they should be allowed to regulate it, but not ban it. I feel that even if it was banned, the demand would end up being even higher and it'd just get sold illegally, anyway. I think regulating it is a good idea simply because the additives in cigarettes are so harmful not only to those that smoke, but to those that are too close to the ones that do. As far as the types of regulations, I'd say there wouldn't really need to be a regulation put on some tobaccos used for hookah smoking or something of the like provided they were "natural" (i.e., only consist of tobacco and honey/molasses.)
From a biased stand point, I stand with my above argument.
Should the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) be allowed to regulate or ban the use of tobacco (mainly cigarettes) as an addictive drug?
Now before you answer, I'd be very interested to hear an argument from a NON-biased POV (facts only.) and then your argument from a biased position (what you think from a smoker's/non-smoker's POV.) Please remember that most people are adults here, and this is meant to be a DEBATE not an irrational argument.
From a non-biased stand point, I say they should be allowed to regulate it, but not ban it. I feel that even if it was banned, the demand would end up being even higher and it'd just get sold illegally, anyway. I think regulating it is a good idea simply because the additives in cigarettes are so harmful not only to those that smoke, but to those that are too close to the ones that do. As far as the types of regulations, I'd say there wouldn't really need to be a regulation put on some tobaccos used for hookah smoking or something of the like provided they were "natural" (i.e., only consist of tobacco and honey/molasses.)
From a biased stand point, I stand with my above argument.
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Replies
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this sounds like a college qu i just did. On non bi is that yes tobaco kills people so regulation makes sence, but bi is that people can make there own choices. If they wanna die via cancer its there choice.0
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It's already regulated. I will probably never be banned. To profitable.0
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No.
I hate smoke. I can't stand the smell of it. It makes me sick - literally - if I'm around it too long. However, if the FDA is going to regulate smoking or ban cigarettes, what's next? My addictive drug of choice is caffeine. God help the person who tries to control caffeine.
As much as I hate smoke, I don't read too many news reports in which an accident occured due to someone smoking. Will the FDA attempt to ban it? God help the person who tries to keep beer from me.
Smoking is an adult choice. Not a good one, but it's still a choice. Stupid to do around children and others, but so is sex abuse, verbal abuse, and physical abuse.
And, for what it's worth, I don't believe people who own their own business should be forced to not allow smoking. I can make the choice to go to a place where smoking is permitted or not. Personally, I'll chose to not go. But the owner knows his/her clientele more than I so if I'm lost as a customer, they must have plenty to replace me.0 -
I like the argument about regulation, but there are so many things that need to be "fixed" that I truly believe it is time for adults to be responsible and make their own decisions about products. Smokers and non-smokers both know most of the detrimental effects of smoking, yet some people continue to smoke, while others avoid it entirely. Just like those of us who are on this site have finally come to a realization that we ultimately control our own issues with weight, adults must make those decisions for themselves.
Despite the bad rap the American education has been getting from the media, we are a nation of well-educated individuals, suitable for making our own decisions. The more the government has to "parent" our decisions and activities, the more "child-like" our collective behavior becomes.
So, in the end, I think the government should step back and let Americans (in my case; I apologize for the generalization to any other nationalities joining in on this debate) be the educated adults that we are, let people make their own mistakes, and stay out of the issue entirely.
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My completely biased opinion? I hate tobacco. Nasty, nasty stuff. But it's my adult decision to avoid it.0 -
It's already regulated. I will probably never be banned. To profitable.
Obviously, regulated even more so :P And I somewhat agree about tobacco in general, but not about cigarettes.0 -
hmm im kinda on the fence about this would the world be a better place if it didnt exist probably but at the same time i think if your going to ban that then you would also have to look at banning alcohol for a start they both kill they are both addictive and the one thing that alcohol does that smoking doesnt is that it causes violence.
Personally I would feel like a hypercrite asking someone to not smoke considering i like to have a couple of drinks etc even though i really dislike smoking i guess we have to find a happy medium where people can choose to smoke but only away from others if they choose to kill themself thats fine but others shouldnt have to breath in their chemicals in the same way people shouldnt have to consume alcohol just because i choose to.
another thing is what about pot why is it illegal when the other very harmful drugs are legal im not saying to legalise it but personally i believe it causes less problems then alcohol.
lol probably not the most helpful answer0 -
I am bias I guess cuz I have experienced watching 2 of my friends battle for there life from the effects of smoking. One passed away and the other was at stage 4, lung cancer that had metastasized to the brain.....He by some miracle is alive 3 years later and cancer free today......No it should not be banned however it should not be legal to profit from it.....asbestos is a class a carcinogen in Canada.....no one would support it being sold at home depot so it could be used as an insulator in your child's bedroom...
I smoked for along time, had a brain tumor myself in 98 and continued to smoke.....well now I don't smoke...I don't preach either....but I do like to encourage peeps not to smoke.0 -
Its a personal choice to light up. Just like its a personal choice to eat cheeseburgers. However, our choices and rights are being taken away all the time.
The FDA is such a joke. These are the same people that allow all these drug companies to put these medications on the market that have more side effects than they cure the problem.0 -
No.
I hate smoke. I can't stand the smell of it. It makes me sick - literally - if I'm around it too long. However, if the FDA is going to regulate smoking or ban cigarettes, what's next? My addictive drug of choice is caffeine. God help the person who tries to control caffeine.
As much as I hate smoke, I don't read too many news reports in which an accident occured due to someone smoking. Will the FDA attempt to ban it? God help the person who tries to keep beer from me.
Smoking is an adult choice. Not a good one, but it's still a choice. Stupid to do around children and others, but so is sex abuse, verbal abuse, and physical abuse.
And, for what it's worth, I don't believe people who own their own business should be forced to not allow smoking. I can make the choice to go to a place where smoking is permitted or not. Personally, I'll chose to not go. But the owner knows his/her clientele more than I so if I'm lost as a customer, they must have plenty to replace me.
Good point about the caffeine. Are businesses forced to ban smoking where you are, or did I read that wrong? Where I am, it's up to the business, but most places either ban it entirely or just have a small smoking area.0 -
Facts that I know are this- My grandfather died a horrible death of lung cancer and I am now watching my mother die of the same thing. It is a horrible thing to watch, as any other drug related death. People will do what they want illegal or not. The government can ban anything they want, but there is always a way to get around it. I am not a smoker, but they way the government has banned smoking out of bars, in my opinion is ridiculous. If people want to smoke in a bar, they should be allowed. It is also the other consumers choice to be in that bar or to leave. If you don't like smoking, then don't go. I do understand some public places, but in regaurds to a bar, who cares.0
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Its a personal choice to light up. Just like its a personal choice to eat cheeseburgers. However, our choices and rights are being taken away all the time.
The FDA is such a joke. These are the same people that allow all these drug companies to put these medications on the market that have more side effects than they cure the problem.
:laugh: agree!0 -
hmm im kinda on the fence about this would the world be a better place if it didnt exist probably but at the same time i think if your going to ban that then you would also have to look at banning alcohol for a start they both kill they are both addictive and the one thing that alcohol does that smoking doesnt is that it causes violence.
Personally I would feel like a hypercrite asking someone to not smoke considering i like to have a couple of drinks etc even though i really dislike smoking i guess we have to find a happy medium where people can choose to smoke but only away from others if they choose to kill themself thats fine but others shouldnt have to breath in their chemicals in the same way people shouldnt have to consume alcohol just because i choose to.
another thing is what about pot why is it illegal when the other very harmful drugs are legal im not saying to legalise it but personally i believe it causes less problems then alcohol.
lol probably not the most helpful answer
Oh I so much agree with your last point, but I really won't get into that here :laugh:0 -
I believe it should be a persons choice what they want to do. However, saying that, I love that IL has a ban for indoor smoking. My son has a severe congenital heart defect and he CANNOT be around smoke. I love that now we can go places and he doesn't have to be affected by another persons choice to smoke, which can harm his health. If they want to smoke, fine, just don't make asthmatics, and others health be compromised by it.0
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Where I live smoking is banned everywhere unless the food sales are under a certain percentage. So most bars are smoke free.0
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I say tax it all (heavily) - cigarettes, alcohol, marijuana. We could be out of the federal debt crisis in no time.
Don't subject people who don't want to be around it, to it. So, make it more widely unacceptable and illegal to smoke in public places.
Enforce laws about operating vehicles while under the influence any mind-altering substance.
To add on to your debate question: Should highly processed foods and trans or saturated fats be taxed, banned, or made unavailable? I don't want the government telling me what I can and can't do, so my opinion on this one is the same: tax the heck out of it. I can still have it if I want it, but hopefully it discourages.0 -
You can't smoke in any public building in British Columbia. Bars included. It's fabulous for non smokers. And it's the norm here now for the past 8-10? years. No one questions it, and my kids can't imagine it being different.0
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this sounds like a college qu i just did. On non bi is that yes tobaco kills people so regulation makes sence, but bi is that people can make there own choices. If they wanna die via cancer its there choice.
On one hand people can make their own choices, but as soon as that choice affects someone else it's another story.
I don't like having choices made for me.
As someone who lives upstairs from a smoker who's smoke filters into my apt. I say regulate, not just cigarettes, but second hand smoke as well.
(Guessing I'm probably predisposed to cancer, since my Dad had 7 different bouts with at least 5 different types of cancer before he died of... cancer)
Maybe regulation would include limiting chemical additives that are included in cigarettes or at least a comprehensive list of ingredients. So people CAN make a decision based on facts instead of marketing.0 -
Yes, for the most part I live in a smoke free county. You cannot smoke in restaurants. I think you still can in some bars, so restaurants that also have bars had to build walls, etc to accommodate the no smoking ban. For the most part national chains just eliminated smoking altogether (Applebee's, TGI Fridays, etc.), but this created issues with mom and pop restaurants.0
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shouldnt it be the right of the business owner to decide if they want a nonsmoking facility?0
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I agree with that. It should be the right of the business owner. If their customers smoke then let them. Especially in bars. Everyone in the bar are adults, it is your choice to go.0
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I say tax it all (heavily) - cigarettes, alcohol, marijuana. We could be out of the federal debt crisis in no time.
Don't subject people who don't want to be around it, to it. So, make it more widely unacceptable and illegal to smoke in public places.
Enforce laws about operating vehicles while under the influence any mind-altering substance.
To add on to your debate question: Should highly processed foods and trans or saturated fats be taxed, banned, or made unavailable? I don't want the government telling me what I can and can't do, so my opinion on this one is the same: tax the heck out of it. I can still have it if I want it, but hopefully it discourages.
Shall we put a luxury tax on chocolate, soda/pop, potato chips and other non-essential delights? If we did, our country would be out of debt by the end of the year.0 -
Every opinion is biased, no matter what facts you put out on the table.
I don't think it should ever be banned. It is certainly an addictive drug, but I have similar views about narcotics, psychedelics and marijuana. I don't think any of them should be banned.
All alcohol prohibition did was make outlaws out of people just trying to make a living and keep booze a human pastime. Having marijuana as a Schedule I controlled substance only makes it more enticing for rebelling kids and keeps us from utilizing industrial hemp as a sustainable form of paper/building material/glue/food/etc. If tobacco would be outlawed, we'd just have a lot of angry nicotine addicts doing whatever they could for a fix. More criminals, more money and inmates in the already overcrowded jails and prisons.0 -
Shall we put a luxury tax on chocolate, soda/pop, potato chips and other non-essential delights? If we did, our country would be out of debt by the end of the year.
Actually - I think that's a brilliant idea!!! Considering the number of Americans that are overweight and the exponential rise in diabetes... and the associated cost on healthcare... with the number of underinsured and uninsured where the masses have to PAY for unhealthy lifestyles..... I LOVE IT. Imagine: Healthy foods cheaper and tax-free. Unhealthy foods: Taxed and pricey. The only crimp is who gets to decide "healthy" vs "unhealthy." I'd hate to see my avocados and cashews taxed exorbitantly because someone ruled all fats as evil...0 -
I agree with that. It should be the right of the business owner. If their customers smoke then let them. Especially in bars. Everyone in the bar are adults, it is your choice to go.
yes! exactly.
its all about people being able to make choices.
we have a local sports bar that has a smoking section in the very far back. a non smoking section in the front. its awesome cause we dont have to hang out in the smoking section and we can still go and enjoy their food and cheap drinks!
P.S. my husband and I both are smokers and i can appreciate a non smoking facility myself. I can take my kids. I can also go in the back when i want to smoke and have a few cocktails
PSS yes i am going to be quitting soon. One tool out of the tool box at a time for me though. Weight loss, then no smoking, then decluttering my house! lol0 -
Every opinion is biased, no matter what facts you put out on the table.
I don't think it should ever be banned. It is certainly an addictive drug, but I have similar views about narcotics, psychedelics and marijuana. I don't think any of them should be banned.
All alcohol prohibition did was make outlaws out of people just trying to make a living and keep booze a human pastime. Having marijuana as a Schedule I controlled substance only makes it more enticing for rebelling kids and keeps us from utilizing industrial hemp as a sustainable form of paper/building material/glue/food/etc. If tobacco would be outlawed, we'd just have a lot of angry nicotine addicts doing whatever they could for a fix. More criminals, more money and inmates in the already overcrowded jails and prisons.
Well if you're looking at a cold hard fact, it's not really an opinion, but I see your point. I would disagree with the heavy narcotics and such that you pointed out, but that's just me.0 -
Shall we put a luxury tax on chocolate, soda/pop, potato chips and other non-essential delights? If we did, our country would be out of debt by the end of the year.
Actually - I think that's a brilliant idea!!! Considering the number of Americans that are overweight and the exponential rise in diabetes... and the associated cost on healthcare... with the number of underinsured and uninsured where the masses have to PAY for unhealthy lifestyles..... I LOVE IT.
But what about personal responsibility?0 -
What a person does to their own body should be their own choice. Smoking is bad for the one person who does it and anyone who is in constant contact with the smoket in a confined spot. Owners of private businesses and property should be able to dictate for themselves whether or not to allow smoking based on the needs and wants of their customers. In a free market, and with so many non-smokers, there should be plenty of non smoking clubs and bars to frequent without infringing on the owners rights by forcing his/her hand in the situation. Also, if you are in a bar often enough to feel the effects of second hand smoke, then you probably need to worry about your drinking problem before the second hand smoke problem.
Also, smoking outdoors on government property should be regulated to smoking areas or banned. But second hand smoke has been so blown out of proportion that people are quick to think that getting a whiff of it will give you cancer, but don't worry about the crap coming out of their cars muffler and exhaust. If you want a lesson in second hand smoke vs. exhaust, play poker all night in a closed garage with cigar smokers. The next day your chest will hurt, your eyes will be blurry. Now spend a night in the garage with the engine of your car running. You won't be able to finish the experiment because you will be dead.
Let americans make up their own minds. By now, every one knows how bad smoking is. Use that tax money we gouge the smoker for and use it to educate children and adults alike about smoking and also give out free Chantix, patches, or quit smoking meetings, but don't nanny these people.
And I am an ex-smoker.0 -
But what about personal responsibility?
Unfortunately, we've seen less and less of any personal accountability. I don't advocate removing the OPTION, but I'm not opposed to making it more costly to access. Just sticking to the food part of the argument, I'd love to see costs shift so schools and institutions find it LESS expensive to provide whole, healthy foods.0 -
We will try to allow this topic for now, as long as it stays respectful and doesn't veer into political discussion. Please keep it on topic and remember, no attacks/insults.
Thanks for your cooperation.
Ladyhawk00
MyFitnessPal Forum Moderator0 -
What a person does to their own body should be their own choice. Smoking is bad for the one person who does it and anyone who is in constant contact with the smoket in a confined spot. Owners of private businesses and property should be able to dictate for themselves whether or not to allow smoking based on the needs and wants of their customers. In a free market, and with so many non-smokers, there should be plenty of non smoking clubs and bars to frequent without infringing on the owners rights by forcing his/her hand in the situation. Also, if you are in a bar often enough to feel the effects of second hand smoke, then you probably need to worry about your drinking problem before the second hand smoke problem.
Also, smoking outdoors on government property should be regulated to smoking areas or banned. But second hand smoke has been so blown out of proportion that people are quick to think that getting a whiff of it will give you cancer, but don't worry about the crap coming out of their cars muffler and exhaust. If you want a lesson in second hand smoke vs. exhaust, play poker all night in a closed garage with cigar smokers. The next day your chest will hurt, your eyes will be blurry. Now spend a night in the garage with the engine of your car running. You won't be able to finish the experiment because you will be dead.
Let americans make up their own minds. By now, every one knows how bad smoking is. Use that tax money we gouge the smoker for and use it to educate children and adults alike about smoking and also give out free Chantix, patches, or quit smoking meetings, but don't nanny these people.
And I am an ex-smoker.
exactly0
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