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A smoking ban? Fine, but only with choice
Michael Young , February 26, 2010
Lebanese men smoke outside a pub in Gemmayzeh during a smoke-free night in 70 percent of the area's pubs. (AFP Photo/Joseph Barrak)

Never put it beyond Lebanon to adopt a terrible idea just because it arrives from abroad. The country is now debating whether to impose a smoking ban in public places, and anti-smoking groups can smell blood.

The Middle East was always considered resistant to such an innovation. However, last year both Syria and Turkey, countries with high percentages of smokers in the population, banned smoking inside public facilities, and Lebanese parliamentarians have said they would discuss a smoking ban in the coming months. Oddly, one of those who announced this was Atef Majdalani, doctor, but also a committed cigar smoker.

I share Majdalani’s fervor... but only when it comes to Cohibas. The debate over second-hand smoke is often passionate, and in many respects it has already been won by the non-smokers. However, as Lebanon considers the possibility of a ban, the real question should be a different one. Should a smoking ban be universal, or should it permit choice?

In virtually all countries it is the absolutist argument that has won out. Smoking bans in public are universal, barring sidewalks and outdoor seating areas. This effectively creates a disparity between the rights of smokers and non-smokers. But a question that never seems to arise is why that’s the case. Why can’t there be facilities that are officially open to smokers and others to non-smokers, and then let the market decide?

How would this differ from what we already have? After all, nothing prevents a restaurant owner today from preventing smoking in his or her establishment. In fact there would be a subtle but significant difference after a government ban. The ban could be complete in private and government offices, let’s say, while restaurants, bars and cafés would be officially labeled as smoke-free or smoke-friendly, which would become a part of their brand identity. Over time this would determine the nature of their clientele and whether they could survive financially.

If, as non-smoking evangelists claim, everyone prefers to spend their evenings smoke-free, then gradually the restaurants, cafés and bars will switch over to banning smoking. On the other hand, if the argument is false, the Lebanese will still be able to choose between facilities allowing smoking and others that do not, with no one really suffering.

But the authorities in most countries never allow choice, and their favoring the rights of non-smokers over smokers is to a large extent the result of the smoking-ban activists’ ability to inject moralism into their arguments. “If you light up in my presence,” the non-smokers will intone, “you are killing me.” But if that is true, then surely there are many other similar examples of unintentional homicide. When I start my car, am I not also contributing to someone’s early demise? And surely we have all had a few days knocked off our lives by driving behind those private buses the government has licensed that operate on unfiltered fuel oil.
 
There is no doubt that Lebanon would feel the impact of a smoking ban less than other places. Even in the depths of winter, people can sit outside in relative comfort. Not for us those dispiriting European or American scenes of human beings huddling and shivering on sidewalks outside office buildings and eateries, sneaking a puff in sub-zero gales.

But let’s come back to the moral argument, and take it a bit further. If smoking kills – in other words if it kills other people, but also the smokers themselves – this raises a host of interesting questions. If I’m victimizing someone else by smoking, then presumably a smoking ban inside public facilities is not enough; the state should ban all smoking that in one way or another might harm others. Even at an outdoor table, my burning cigar might stain the lungs of some unsuspecting innocent nearby.

Anti-smoking evangelists, of course, would like nothing better than to ban smoking everywhere, even in the privacy of one’s own home, since ultimately they regard cigarette or cigar smoke as polluting the general atmosphere. In this they behave like any religious zealot would, attributing righteousness and universality to their actions, therefore identifying dissenting voices as immoral. The state is right not to condone such excess, and would anyway be unable to implement it.

But there is a more pernicious side to the non-smoking argument that very much leads to potential intrusion into people’s lives: that by lighting up, smokers increase health costs across society, therefore non-smokers have the right to protest the actions of smokers. If we follow this rationale, though, we might soon find that any activity deemed “unhealthy”, such as drinking one glass too many, overeating, or even cooking with butter rather than margarine, becomes fair game for health missionaries.

This is an exaggeration, you say; but the reality is that in recent decades individual health habits have come to be judged by others with insufferable intolerance. A person who fails to exercise or who delights in fatty foods is frequently the target of jokes, or just quiet contempt. In some places overweight passengers can now be banned from flights, because taking up too much room is deemed legitimately punishable. In many homes in the West people don’t serve spirits anymore, with dinner party guests being made to stand around daintily sipping wine.

Thank heavens that Lebanon is too undisciplined a place to ever plummet to such depths. Because of that, let’s do something different before imposing a smoking ban. Let’s give people a choice. The innate pluralism of the Lebanese makes that approach the most sensible.

Michael Young is opinion editor of the Daily Star newspaper in Beirut.

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Comments ( 25 )
Posted by
Lebanese princess
March 1. 2010
honestly lebanon has a lot more to worry about than if they should ban smoking in public places. Whats going on in this world? Soon they are going to ban theuse of argile? no way!
Posted by
Mazen Khaled
March 1. 2010
In my restaurant, I'm seeing that people who used to smoke 1 cigarette after dinner, now smoke while 4-5 while eating. After dinner, they chain smoke frantically. I've seen people come into the restaurant with 4/5 packs for a table of 4, finish them, then complain that we don't sell cigarettes. There's no doubt here: more people are smoking more cigarettes. We tried to have a smoke-free night, we had customers refuse to comply, ending up in argument and just plainly saying "try and stop me." Unfortunately some smokers are aggressive about their 'right' and fail to understand that smoking is not a personal choice for nonsmokers. By banning, you're actually making it a choice for everyone. This is not about a trend but about health. I've been struggling with allergies/asthma to the point where I can't go out any more. I'm not the only one in this situation. Just ask around! Oh, and letting the market decide on people's health and rights? Come on, do you really believe that jok
Posted by
Kouki
March 1. 2010
No matter what you do or say, the Ban is coming according to anti-smokers rules. Extremely strict rules Like in every other country that has implemented these laws. Lebanon will not be any different. So stop wasting your time coming up with theories and suggestions as it will all fall on deaf ears. As for Mr. Young, well I am surely not reading anything he would be writing anymore.
Posted by
Fadi
March 1. 2010
come on guys, focus on something else. We have more important things to do than to ban smoking. Actually, now, it is energy that could be used to do much bigger things, like saving the country...And based on the comments that I see here ... you, anti smoking campaigners, really have a lot of energy. Imagine the good you could do if it was directed at something worthwhile.
Posted by
SMOKER
February 28. 2010
What Mr. Young suggests is completely logical; I am as he are and so many others surprised at the level of anti-smoking campaigns in the past decade. He is simply suggesting a better approach to deal with the problem that could help every citizen, be him a smoker or non-smoker. Can anyone of you put the slippery slope formula on what anti-smoking campaign is trying to do? Finally to add one last example of a liberal approach to legalizing and banning certain activities like legalizing Marijuana. What stops to make Cocaine an argument for health? or MDMA an argument of improving health in the coming two decades? Folks, there is certainly a missing gap in the anti-smoking campaign. Let people have a choice and other factors would judge if smoking is about to survive. AS as smoker and as a person who have suffered from smoking in the past, I still appreciate the ideas Mr.Young injects in our daily argumentative methods.
Posted by
Daniella
February 28. 2010
Anti-smoking campaigners are not calling for smokers to stop smoking or for smoking to be banned in private homes, not at all. ANti-smoking campaigners are calling for smokers to realize their actions pollute the air around them and have no right to harm others by their actions.
Posted by
Gebran Sons for Cedar Revolution II in 2013
February 28. 2010
Smoking should be banned in all public spaces with no exceptions. Mr. Young arguments are out of place and out of time.
Posted by
H
February 28. 2010
But then what's the choice you're proposing? As a person suffering from allergy to smoking I was unable to go out practically anywhere in Lebanon (that's in addition to other risks smokers are imposing on us). Comparing this to eating fatty foods is a fallacy that cannot fool even the silliest person for very obvious reasons. But I do agree that Lebanon should not import bad ideas, such as hiring foreigners who like to tell us what to do.
Posted by
insultedbyyoungsignorance
February 27. 2010
young, you're a ......., are you seriously making this argument?
Posted by
rabih
February 27. 2010
indeed, what you written here sets a dangerous precedent. you suggest that smoking a cigarette is no different than turning your car outside and emitting emissions into our environment. is the next natural arguement you will suggest be that the world should not take action to reduce harmful emission by creating better technologies to reduce climate change? what's worse is the last i checked you had advocated for a more capable state, yet you rejoice that "Lebanon is too undisciplined a place to ever plummet to such depths." i recommend you re-evaluate your postion as a leading voice within Lebanese community because the choice you have presented to your readers today threatens to undermine the very people you seek to empower. an active civil society campaign in lebanon that protects the rights of individuals to their health - a true display of political participation - should be lifted in their advocacy efforts, not undercut be selfish endeavors.
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