Smoking bans vs Civil Rights Part 2

Preventing people from smoking in public was never about real health risks - that is, it was never about protecting non-smokers so much as it was about stigmatising smoking and smokers and making it difficult for them to smoke. So with the science of second-hand smoke now never discussed, the anti-tobacco movement feels confident in moving the argument forward and revealing the starkness of its real agenda.

There is no compelling evidence that second-hand smoke poses a health risk to anyone in open spaces like public parks and beaches, but that is beside the point. The new push seeks, first, to demonise smoking and, second, to exert a brazen paternalism in which it is made virtually impossible for smokers – for their own good, of course – to light up in any public space.

There are profound difficulties with both of these objectives. For one thing, where is the justification for banning unhealthy behaviours from the public square simply on the grounds that someone might see them? Or, indeed, what is the justification for banning unhealthy behaviours from public viewing full stop? This opens up substantial room for prohibiting an enormous range of other behaviours which are neither immoral nor illegal, but simply unhealthy.

For example, by parity of reasoning it could be argued that children should never have to see anyone eating unhealthy foods in public, or indeed see anyone who is fat in public. Surely, there must be some evidence that seeing someone engaged in unhealthy behaviour puts others at risk. But where is this evidence?

For another thing, there is the issue of whether such measures actually work. For example, the NHS recently released a study on the effectiveness of the public smoking ban (4). The fact is that certain groups, such as young males, are smoking more after the smoking ban than before it. So, not only are such bans not supported by science, they are also not supported by the evidence on their practical effect in changing behaviour.

Finally, any policy by which the government engages in stigmatising the legal behaviour of its adult citizens is repugnant in a democratic society. Fundamental to democratic government is the respect that it owes to its adult citizens’ choices about legal behaviour and, more fundamentally, how they choose to live their lives. Paternalistic interventions, whether through stigmatising or other means, can only be justified in the rarest of instances.

What the evolution of the debate over public smoking shows is how little science has to do with the anti-tobacco crusade, how disingenuous that crusade is about its real motives and goals, how easily the crusade on tobacco can be extended to other causes (most notably the war on obesity), and how fundamentally dangerous it is to a society both free and democratic.

Patrick Basham directs the Democracy Institute and is a Cato Institute adjunct scholar. John Luik is a Democracy Institute senior fellow. They are co-authors of Hidden in Plain Sight: Why Tobacco Display Bans Fail.
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Comments (5)

There are new commercials out. One is if you drink while you smoke and the other is when you drive you smoke. This seems to be directing us to the new laws to come.
look I dont care if you want to smoke outside ,its just the smell its like burnt skin and I dont want to share in your habbit so do the right thing and keep it to yourself
Read the article. It's really not about smoking but what the anti whatever types can do to your civil rights and Governments go along with it. If they can do it to smokers, what's next? Obesity, people that don't like perfume or pets. Once they get a hold thy don't stop and this is not right in a so called free and democratic society. They are starting to act like Muslim fanatics.
Thats so stupid, what you think about the civil rights of people who dont want smell your smoke? Did you ever ask any people if its ik to smoke?
Yes smokers hate a reformed smoker ,I look forward to the day that all tobaco products get banned and we get to live in a smoke free world ,hopefully sooner the better ,the tobaco companies have had enough time to move into other fields of business ,just think how much more money you will have to spend on your health care ,and you can by a new car with the money you spend on smokes , or pay your morgage off sooner
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by Recland
created Jan 2010
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