My point is that there is scientific consensus here. The World Health Organization has gone on record saying that 2nd hand smoking could even have a positive effect on your health. The international journal of cancer has found no correlation between 2nd hand smoking and lung cancer. And those are just two notable examples, I already posted a good selection of links on the previous page, which nobody has tried to refute.
And neither will I, I dont have time, the needed experience, professional skill or will to do that.
Science is about creating ever better approximations of reality, based on empirical evidence. We seem to agree on that - you seem to feel that since the present approximation may at some point in the future change (one way or the other), it should be ignored entirely.
What I feel that with these two studies that you mention, you seem to happily disregard previous global opinion (does two add up to a concensus?) that 2nd hand smoking is dangerous. Why these studies or discoveries haven't been more in public? This is the first time I hear about these. That is one reason why I'm not willing to take them as granted.
Unfortunately, you cannot choose which bits of science to believe in - well, actually you can - it's just that you can't call it science.
Do you
believe in science? As I said we could argue about "knowing" and "believing" forever. I personally like Ludwig Wittgensteins
approach that we can only be certain to some extent.
Also, science and public opinion do not always align, and you seem to be confusing the two.
Not quite, I might confuse hearsay to facts, since I haven't done any deep research on the subject. I even may be a victim of subconscious exposion to publicly expressed opinions instead of raw scientifical facts. I can say that I don't know much about the subject.
Yet you fail to produce a single one. Which study do you believe in, specifically?
I don't have any studies at hand. I would say that the internet is full of them, since it has been the major trend in views of 2nd hand smoking. What amount of studies is enough to disprove something?
But as previously stated the 'best guess' currently is that 2nd hand smoking does not negatively impact your health.
Is 2nd hand smoking really proved to be harmless or not? Can there be any arguments claiming 2nd hand smoking is dangerous? If we had known the dangers of asbestos in beforehand would we have banned it?
If you were to say that this law is solely based on public opinion (for the sake of discussion your own), the matter would be an entirely different one.
I would say that the law is based both on science and public opinion.
Your definition of 'better' seems to be to ignore minorities, scientific fact and hinge decisions of health on opinion at the cost of economic opportunities and freedom of the individual.
Needless to say my definition of 'better' is somewhat different.
We are still discussing about 'scientific facts'. I will not take your word for it :-P. Unfortunately I don't have time to spend on more thourogh studies, so we have to keep this conversation at lower levels. I think that 2nd hand smoking is not healthy, you disagree. That's why our ethics do not meet. Here's an example:
Let's say that a minority wants to harm themselves,
possibly harming others in the process? A rough analogy would be suicide bombers, they want to harm themselves, if they want to detonate in a bar shoudl we allow them to do so?
As I think that 2nd hand smoking is dangerous that analogy works. It propably won't work for you, since you can argue that an explosion will definitely harm people nearby whereas 2nd hand smoking does not.
I don't understand the Antarctica argument. If I were to get rid of my (non-existant hypothetical) car, and replace it with a bike, how would this move me to Antarctica?
There will be others driving cars around you. You will still suffer from exhaustion fumes.
By the way this Friday I was in Brussels, and every now and then they close off the center of town for car traffic in the evenings, with only rollerskates and transportation by foot allowed. But I digress.
I would love to see carless Helsinki center!
These two statements are an oxymoron. On the one hand you would be in favor of severely restricting the rights of individuals by outlawing a presently legal recreational drug, which goes well beyond the scheduled restriction of individual rights you are also arguing for, on the other you say you support individual rights. You have to choose between one or the other.
Yes, sometimes you have to prioritize. This time I would be ready to force smokers into cubicles in places where people might be exposed to 2nd smoking. Thus, I consider the harm done to individual rights to be smaller than the possible health risks. If someone dies from 2nd smoking isn't it the most gruesome violation of individual rights ;-)
I also do not agree with your definition of protection - you claim to be protecting workers health, but you certainly are not protecting their individual rights.
You are chasing Utopia. In reality we can not achieve a situation where everything would be in balance.
You are also trying to pass a law instead of fostering discussion and compromise between employees, employers and customers of a business - in effect you're saying that these avenues of discourse are irrelevant, at least when it comes to the consumption of tobacco.
Do you think that the state should not interfere in any way how people do theri business? You are starting to sound like a libertarian at some points..
You could only argue that it were protective work if
- You had a scientific basis
See above where I stated my opinion about scientific facts. Also, you expect me to to blindly believe what you say based on couple of internet links. Sorry, can't do that.
- Considered scientific basis as relevant for a discussion of public health
I do consider scientific facts important. Don't put words into my mouth. I simply refuse at this point of time to believe that 2nd smoking is harmless. The law has been prepared with the help of health experts, doctors etc. I'd rather trust them than couple www-sites. I would say that they are familiar with the studies you provided and that they are much more able to evaluate the content of these studies.
Last but not least, you are discriminating against smokers, since you're defining where they can go after this activity outside their own home - I'll be the first to admit that much more severe forms of discrimination exist, but it does not change the fact that this is discrimination.
As I said before, in reality we have to make compromises and prioritize.
'So be it', you say - but this is where I beg to differ, because I feel that neither you nor I, nor anyone in politics is able to do this.
Democracy is dictatorship of the majority. We simply don't have a better system.