Klaus, an economist, said he opposed the “climate alarmism” perpetuated by environmentalism trying to impose their ideals, comparing it to the decades of communist rule [...]
Read the rest of this entry »Archive for May, 2008
Outraged Parents Confront China’s Communist Party Over Poor School Building Safety
DUJIANGYAN, China — Bereaved parents whose children were crushed to death in their classrooms during the earthquake in Sichuan Province have turned mourning ceremonies into [...]
Read the rest of this entry »Every adult in Britain should be forced to carry ‘carbon ration cards’, say MPs
Yeo! Brit enviro-fascist crap! http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1021983/Every-adult-Britain-forced-carry-carbon-ration-cards-say-MPs.html
Read the rest of this entry »The Bureaucrash Bulletin: May 26th, 2008
May 26, 2008
Fellow lovers of liberty,
I hope you’re out and about enjoying the freedoms we have left. This week, with just a few items [...]
Read the rest of this entry »Game Lets You (not really) Control Federal Spending
http://www.michigansfe.org/Home/tabid/53/EntryID/5709/Default.aspx
Read the rest of this entry »Teenager faces prosecution for calling Scientology ‘cult’
A teenager is facing prosecution for using the word “cult” to describe the Church of Scientology. http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2008/may/20/1
Read the rest of this entry »Under Auspices of “Protecting the Public” British State Plans To Record Phone and Email Details
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/telecoms/article3965033.ece
Read the rest of this entry »Foie Gras, once illegal, now legal in Chicago
Foie gras is legal in Chicago again! This is one good step backward for governmental intervention in individual decisions.
What will be next?
Lifting the ban on [...]
Argentine Beef Producers Take a Page from Atlas Shrugged
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/7330466.stm
Read the rest of this entry »Smoking is Still Healthier than Fascism
Under the auspice of public safety, Michigan is inching forward with its ban on smoking.
If second-hand smoke is in fact a legitimate health risk (I do not believe that it is) to non-smokers, imagine how bad smoking is to the smokers! It’s a freaking epidemic! The real public health issue is “smoking,” not “second-hand smoke.” Nobody should ever be allowed to smoke.
But this choice isn’t yet outlawed, because somewhere deep down inside, most people understand that it is a matter of individual liberty, which most people tacitly recognize. And if you are free to decide whether you want to inhale burning tobacco smoke in the privacy of your own home, you are equally free to decide whether you want to inhale someone else’s tobacco smoke on someone else’s property.
Besides, an increasing number of establishments (most professional buildings, offices, malls, retail spaces, and fast-food restaurants) have gone smoke free. They have done this, at least in part, to gain an advantage over their competition, by offering a different customer experience that some people prefer.
[N]early 5,100 Michigan restaurants and taverns — about one of three — prohibit smoking, an increase of 130% in the last 10 years. He said owners made the switch to accommodate customers.
At the 50-year-old Clawson Steak House, co-owner Jim Alex said his restaurant has changed dramatically in the last two decades, “and I didn’t know we needed a bill to finish this out.”
He said when the steak house first set aside five no-smoking tables in 1987, “it was hard to fill them.” By 2006, the entire 200-seat dining room had become smoke-free, and customers only could light up in the bar.
Now, he said, the 10 booths in the smoking area go begging for customers.
And that’s a key takeaway! Many businesses have gone completely smoke-free in the last 10 or 20 years. The market (or what’s left of one) is delivering smoke free establishments, many places even tout their smoke free-ness as a competitive advantage. If the law forces every restaurant and bar to operate in the same manner and by the same rules, the competitive edge, the differentiation begins to fade.
Case in point: “The Senate ban includes Detroit’s three casinos, plus bingo halls and cigar bars.”
If you own a cigar bar, you’re world is about to be turned upside down. You’ll probably go out of business, and your creditors will take your house and your savings. Your creditors don’t care that your government just bankrupted you by legislation. I imagine that the Casinos won’t be going down without a fight.
Get ready for a shload of money to be wasted lobbying the legislature to craft exceptions to this all-encompassing rule, which would essentially stipulate that the rights of certain proprietors are more inviolate than the rights of others, and that the public health concern for the employees and patrons at these establishments is not really anything with which to be concerned.
A FreePress poll asks, “Should Michigan ban smoking in public places?” and a whopping 70% say “yes.”
Framed improperly, of course, there might be a case. But since all of the properties subject to the ban are private properties, not public places, we can disregard the idea that if a government which respects property rights (which is to say, none of them) would only be permitted to control the public’s behavior on public property: parks, roads, sidewalks. Some people think that smokers should just step outside, but “outside” really is public property!
Look: smoking will always be healthier than fascism, and as usual:
Read the rest of this entry »[A]n improper application of the term “public” exacerbates the debate. What anti-smoking advocates want is to rid private places of smokers. When we begin to recognize that your restaurant is your property, we will be able to table the issue permanently. But as long as people continue to delude themselves into thinking that your restaurant is “public” property, smoking, trans fats, nude dancing, beer sales on Sunday mornings, etc., will continue to be banned.







