. With all due respect, who is ignorant here?
If change is so good how come people just 10 years ago had it much better than people do now, or will for the next 10 years anyway? Change is not always a good thing!
All I know, is the most successful pool rooms in this part of the country are smoker friendly and in fct have a cigar shop connected to them. They're doing well enough the owner just bought a new Porsche.
That's so true. My father made more than I make now (college educated professional job), in the 80s. Around 80K a year back then. His new house he built cost 23,000 in 1974, new car about 4100, gas around 88 cent a gallon, bread like a dollar.
These days, gas around 3-4 dollars, houses 200K or more, bread what 2.50, cars 30-50K... And the average pay is the same or lower.
You do the math..
You cannot even wrap your brain around that smoking bans have nothing to do with pools decline, and if they did, even if they did, well the sport just needs to go away then.![]()
I think you may be getting your wish. Miniature pool in bars should survive for now (at least till the anti-smoking crowd morphs into an anti-alcohol crowd). The regulation table in billiard rooms is very nearly a thing of the past.
Watch out. These same people (like ChicagoRJ) are also after your favorite foods.
We've had these same arguments before, Paul. There were lots and lots of things that people used to do that have been proven to not be the best choice....why is smoking any different? Our society has always needed to adapt, over the millenniums, why should inhaling a carcinogen be exempt from that fact?
As ChicagoRJ points out, if pool needs smoking to thrive, then it is doomed.
I have smoked for over 40 years and I'm still here. I also never cough and have been told by doctors that my lungs look as though I have never smoked. When the media turned anti-smoking the masses got on the banwagon just as they do about anything the media/hollyweird promotes. People now put smokers on the same level as child molesters. You have very ignorant people who would like to see the government make all places no smoking, and many would like to see smoking a felony! When some of these same people complain about the government taking away their liberties, I have to giggle a little.
Oh, wait a minute. You miss Joe Cool. And that is why pool is dying, because we can't promote Joe Cool shooting pool with a cigarette hanging out of his mouth, with his ball cap on backwards, no less....
I get it now.
Silly frickin' me.
Congrats to you sir.
I on the other hand watched my mother slowly die because of cigarette smoking, but maybe i imagined her walking around barely able to breath and die at 59 from respiratory problems. But maybe her lungs turned to shit because she ate too much brocoli or something because it surely couldn't be the tar, arsenic and other crap they put in cigarettes.
My sincere condolences for your loss.
Your Mother though had the freedom to make a choice. She chose to smoke, she chose to use a product sold legally.
That would be you Paul. You cannot even wrap your brain around that smoking bans have nothing to do with pools decline, and if they did, even if they did, well the sport just needs to go away then.
If the only folks we can get to play pool have to smoke while doing it, or they would give it up,well, let them go, cause they are NOT pool players.
I love baseball, and they took smoking out of the dugouts, heck, they even recently took it out of the park. You cannot smoke in the park or parking lot. And all the smokers are right back and playing, didn't lose one single teammate. Because they love the game. Smoking is an addiction but baseball is LIFE.
If we non smokers loved pool enough to stick around the last century enduring the smoking, the smelly clothes, the disgusting smell, the constant ashes left all over, the burn marks on the rails, the yellowing stains on the walls, and the disgusting film on the windows to play the game we love, certainly the smokers must love pool enough to step outside a few feet. If not, than good riddance, they do NOT love pool and are not want we need to build up the sport.
Heck, pool is the only sport, professionally and amatuer as well as in leagues that you can drink while playing.... mabye darts and bowling, but yikes,who wants to do that![]()
Almost all pro-smoking arguments a founded on the idea that people have a choice. The smoker chooses to smoke. The business owner chooses to allow it. The nonsmoker can choose to go to another pool hall.
The horrible thing about addiction is that it removes choice from the equation.
The smoker lights up the next one because he feels compelled to, not because he wants to. Most of them know it's terrible for you, and expensive, and makes them smell nasty. If it were strictly a rational decision where you balance pros and cons, then almost nobody would do it, it'd be a dead archaic hobby.
It's possible to 'choose' to quit but anyone who's tried knows it's very hard. My own mom described it as one of the most difficult things she ever had to do in her life.
Sometimes smokers will keep at it even after a diagnosis of lung cancer or bronchitis. If you've ever seen someone smoking through a hole in their throat, you'll start to get an inkling of how little part 'choice' plays in it.
But... they chose to have that first smoke right? Again, the deck is stacked against you. A lot of people started at ages like 14, 15, 16. People at that age just don't have the brains or experience to make a rational adult decision about it. They don't understand they're making a serious decision that will have an impact for the next 50 years. By the time they've acquired a little wisdom and understand they won't live forever, it's too late.
As for the business owner having a choice - pool halls already seem to be a tough way to make a buck, they're closing all the time. If he believes he will lose even 10% of his money, and he's a smoker himself, then opting to ban it is a tough choice to make.
Finally we have the nonsmokers who choose to go there. If the next nearest pool hall is quite a ways away, and you friends smoke, then do you realistically have much choice? Not shooting pool is another tough choice to ask of the people on this forum who love the game.
What legislation does is act as a counterbalance to addiction. They are both compulsions that are difficult to ignore. Nicotine stacks the deck against people 'choosing' to step outside, even if those people normally want to be courteous to others. So the law is our best remedy, one of the few compulsions strong enough to go to-to-toe with addiction and give nonsmokers a better option than driving 50 miles or putting up with a shitty atmosphere.
Almost all pro-smoking arguments a founded on the idea that people have a choice. The smoker chooses to smoke. The business owner chooses to allow it. The nonsmoker can choose to go to another pool hall.
The horrible thing about addiction is that it removes choice from the equation.
The smoker lights up the next one because he feels compelled to, not because he wants to. Most of them know it's terrible for you, and expensive, and makes them smell nasty. If it were strictly a rational decision where you balance pros and cons, then almost nobody would do it, it'd be a dead archaic hobby.
It's possible to 'choose' to quit but anyone who's tried knows it's very hard. My own mom described it as one of the most difficult things she ever had to do in her life.
Sometimes smokers will keep at it even after a diagnosis of lung cancer or bronchitis. If you've ever seen someone smoking through a hole in their throat, you'll start to get an inkling of how little part 'choice' plays in it.
But... they chose to have that first smoke right? Again, the deck is stacked against you. A lot of people started at ages like 14, 15, 16. People at that age just don't have the brains or experience to make a rational adult decision about it. They don't understand they're making a serious decision that will have an impact for the next 50 years. By the time they've acquired a little wisdom and understand they won't live forever, it's too late.
As for the business owner having a choice - pool halls already seem to be a tough way to make a buck, they're closing all the time. If he believes he will lose even 10% of his money, and he's a smoker himself, then opting to ban it is a tough choice to make.
Finally we have the nonsmokers who choose to go there. If the next nearest pool hall is quite a ways away, and you friends smoke, then do you realistically have much choice? Not shooting pool is another tough choice to ask of the people on this forum who love the game.
What legislation does is act as a counterbalance to addiction. They are both compulsions that are difficult to ignore. Nicotine stacks the deck against people 'choosing' to step outside, even if those people normally want to be courteous to others. So the law is our best remedy, one of the few compulsions strong enough to go to-to-toe with addiction and give nonsmokers a better option than driving 50 miles or putting up with a shitty atmosphere.
Nice try. After smoking for over 30 years, I quit a 2 pack + per day habit 5 years ago. Cold turkey, haven't had a puff since. BTW, I'm not defending the smoking habit, I'm defending what should be basic civil rights and voting against the Government intervening in our lives. I can't find any argument for smoking being good for you. However, I also believe obesity is a far greater problem than second hand smoke but you don't see the Government closing McDonalds do you? If anyone thinks Government should be allowed to pass laws because they're "for your good", prayers sent. I don't have any desire to have a bunch of slime ball morons who can't run a business without going in debt by $15 trillion telling me what's good for me.
What part of the country are you located. What room do you play out of? Just curious.
Your assumption is incorrect. The govenment did not intervene.
All smoking bans, that I am aware of, were done at the local level and were done mostly by referendums where citizens circulated petitions requesting the question be placed before the voters who then decided whether, or not, to allow smoking in public places. This is how our democratic republic has operated for lo these many years, and hopefully, will continue to do so.