This whole conversation seems to be running in circles. Having somebody outside the US try to have a stand on US law doesn't work for me, either.
It should. It adds a new perspective and I think it also helps that I live in a country where smoking in bars is illegal (which means I know how this actually works) and that I come from a country which is much more liberal about smoking than the US (which means I also know how well complete freedom of choice for smokers works).
I know it is more convenient to have such discussions only among people who see everything the same way. I grew up in West-Berlin. I still make fun of East-German and Soviet television where such "discussions" were often aired.
In America you can always find a party, in the Soviet Union the party can always find you.
The US was founded on personal freedom- the freedom of choice.
No. The US was founded on freedom and responsibility for one's actions.
Now, nobody is forced to work in a bar. I don't like bars- I don't work in one. I also don't like heights, so I don't work in construction. I really don't like dead animals, so I don't work at the Humane Society. People can choose where they want to work- that is freedom of choice.
People don't have to go to a restaurant or bar or anywhere else that allows smoking- it's freedom of choice.
People can also choose not to work in a factory that doesn't implement safety regulations. But society has decided that safety regulations are a good thing still. Are you saying that you would prefer to live in a country where mines and factories are death traps like they used to be?
The more laws that the government (especially when it gets to a federal level) puts on people, the less freedom of choice the people have. It becomes a very slippery slope- where does it end? Who is to decide whose freedoms are more important?
The smokers, apparently.
Why is it a slippery slope when non-smokers' right not to be harmed outways smokers' right to do harm? Perhaps it is a slippery slope as it is now. Allow one group of people to cause harm to others in the name of "freedom"... how is that not a slippery slope?
I'm pretty sure that people working at toll booths inhale way more harmful fumes in a day then they should- should we outlaw cars?
No. But I think we should outlaw installation of carbon-monoxide inducers in tall booths, even if tall booth workers could "decide" to work elsewhere.
Some risks are inevitable in a job, some aren't. I have no problem with outlawing the reasons for risks that people do not have to take. That's what safety regulations do.
Nurses and Doctors get exposed to all sorts of disease, what are we going to do about that? The government should protect us!
The government does. That's why there are safety regulations for hospitals in order to reduce exposure to disease to a minimum.