Smoking resistance takes on Europe’s health Nazis
The banning of tobacco displays in Britain is another victory for the anti-smoking zealots. But it’s a different story on the continent...
IF YOU HOLD to the stereotype of Germans as people who love obeying rules, however ludicrous, then think again. Across Europe, a resistance movement is growing to the many draconian bans on smoking, and leading the rebellion are the Germans.
Germany is home to a plethora of anti-ban organisations and smokers' rights groups including the 'resistance' group Smoking Rebels, who record pro-smoking rock songs and rail against Europe's new anti-smoking 'dictatorship', and the Pan-European Association of Smokers, whose purpose is to "achieve reasonable conditions for smokers in all European countries".
Bans on smoking in Germany have been circumvented by bars charging a nominal entry fee and thereby transforming themselves into private clubs, which still have the right to set their own smoking rules. Bans have also been overturned in the courts: this summer the Federal Constitutional Court upheld complaints made by small bar owners in Tubingen and Berlin that the bans were damaging their business.
Meanwhile leading German personalities, including the 89-year-old former Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, a life-long heavy smoker, have openly flouted the new laws. Schmidt and his 88-year-old wife Loki were pictured smoking at a theatre reception in Hamburg. A case bought against them by an anti-smoking group, which accused the theatre of abetting the pair by providing them with ashtrays, was dismissed by the city's authorities.
It's a similar story of rebellion in the Netherlands. There, the ban on smoking tobacco (but not, incidentally, marijuana) in enclosed public places, introduced in July, has been widely ignored. In the city of Den Bosch last month, the majority of pubs allowed their clients to smoke in protest against the ban. Around 500 establishments have been fined for breaching the new law, but faced with the prospect of losing their clientele, many bar owners have preferred to allow their regulars to carry on smoking.
The Danish Smokers Party has been renamed the ‘Party Against Nannyism’In both Holland and Denmark, smokers' parties have been formed. The Danish Smokers Party (Rygerpartiet) has as its first stated goal "to get parliament representation, in order to combat smoking laws". It fights "for the right to diversity and nonconformism" in Denmark and opposes the "daily discrimination, harassment and persecution of tobacco smokers". The party has recently been renamed the 'Party against Nannyism'.
Ironically, the country in Europe where there has arguably been the least resistance to anti-smoking legislation is Britain. The country that stood alone against the Nazis in 1940 is the one which seems keenest to observe laws that were first introduced by the Nazis in Germany in the 1930s. Whatever would the inveterate cigar smoker Winston Churchill have made of that? ·
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Comments
They said that you would get lung cancer from smoking, now we get pneumonia because we have to stand outside and freeze to death
I am tired of the whole nanny-state attitude. I am a smoker, but I have always been careful to make sure I did not smoke around those that do not. I watched my favorite pub go out of business because non-smokers wanted a smoking ban in all pubs. They said they would patronize pubs if only smokers wouldn't smoke. Needless to say, the non-smokers never came. Smokers were offered no place outdoors to smoke, as that was also the domain of non-smokers. I am banned from smoking in public places, indoors and out. I can not smoke in my car. Now I can not even make an informed consumer decision on which brands are comparable in prices as neither may be seen by anyone.
Smoking kills and that is why, plain and simple. It is not fair to put those who do not smoke in a smoky and unhealthy environment. Smoking causes harm so it is only fair that smokers go to smoking rooms when they need to smoke, it does not take very long to smoke a cigarette and its a great place for all the smokers to cough and bond over the smoking ban. . .
I voted Liberal for thirty years, and never will again because they sided with the government on bring in anti-smoking legislation. I don't smoke, but I vehemently oppose legislating against an activity that is legal. How can the moral cowards call themselves 'liberal'?
Is it any wonder why us smokers offer so little resistance in the police-state Britain that New Labour has hoisted upon us : CCTV cameras in the pubs, self-righteous snoops ready to pounce at every & any misdemeanour, and a general, growing intolerance to anybody wanting to enjoy life. Freedoms are being eroded, and choices are narrowing as we all allow the Nanny State to do its worse : all in the name of democracy of course !
Don't know what the smoking laws are in Spain but there you seem to be able to smoke in pretty much any bar or restaurant. It seems to work.