Smokers die younger. Smoking kills. Protect children: Don’t make them breathe your smoke.
These are the warnings that decorate my 10 Euro, about $14, pack of Camel Lights. Cigarettes in Lawrence cost less than half of the price here, and don’t come with those pesky reminders that you’re not breathing in anything good. So why am I finding Dublin to be a smokers paradise?
Maybe it has to do with being pushed 20 feet away from doors and entrances while its pouring rain on campus. Here though, I can blissfully seek cover under building overhangs during a typical rainy Dublin day. Ashtrays are outside nearly every building so smokers don’t have to litter the street with cigarette butts (and yes, people use them). Certain bars and restaurants even offer indoor smoking lounges for those who choose to smoke.
The number of smokers here and at home isn’t much different — 20 percent in Kansas and 25 percent in Dublin.
The biggest difference between smoking here and in the states though, is that buying cigarettes doesn’t make you a bad person.
In the U.S., smokers pay a “sin” tax that goes towards healthcare and other public incentives. If smokers are expected to make up for their sinful habit by paying a tax, I wonder why there’s no “glutton” tax on Big Macs that goes towards education. Yes, I know such a move would be impossible, and slightly totalitarian. You can’t prove Big Mac fiends are gluttons in the same way you can prove smokers are bad. Here though, people don’t take much stock in the statistics, which have scared the U.S. into a national health frenzy.
According to John Brignell, a retired Professor of Industrial Instrumentation at the University of Southampton, smoking isn’t nearly as bad as most would believe. In his book, “Sorry, Wrong Number” Brignell claims that of the 400,000 premature deaths a year in the U.S., 60 percent of the smokers who died prematurely were older than 70, and 17 percent of them were 85 and older.
I’m sure Brignell’s own research has flaws and just like anti-smoking studies, I’m sure he also has his own agenda. It goes to show though, that a good and healthy lifestyle is not something that can be quantified with statistics, but needs to be determined by the individual.
This is something understood in Dublin. With more than 1 million people currently living in the city, 10 percent of which come from foreign nations, Dublin is exceptionally open-minded and respectful of individuals and their freedom of choice. And unlike in the U.S., this tolerance is extended to smokers.
Americans, I think, are expected to live a perfect life. But we’ve become so concerned with the longevity of our lives that we sometimes forget about the quality of it.
After living here, I’m more concerned with how I live rather than how people say I should live.
A billboard advertisement in Dublin reads “It’s not the years in your life, it’s the life in your years.”
Editorial: Tobacco tax, decrease deficit
Editorial board discusses the benefits of raising the tobacco tax.
Politically correct: Columnists weigh in on cigarette ...
Cohen, Thompson and Compton discuss Gov. Parkinson's proposed tax increases.
Smokers feel the heat of rising price
Legislature consider tax on tobacco for revenue.
Seeing Through the Smoke
For years, we've seen the Surgeon General's warning on cigarette packs. But ...
Stewart: Finance health care with larger sin ...
Letter: A single glass kills more tha ...
Alcohol abuse causes more damage than cigarette use.
Kieler: Smoking ban offers only positives
Considering the majority of Americans do not smoke, the ban offers the ...
Graphic labels for tobacco products blocked by ...
An anti-smoking initiative by the Food and Drug Administration was blocked by ...
Editorial: Students should support smoking ban
Smokers and nonsmokers alike should support a statewide smoking ban in public ...
New cigarette ads designed to persuade smokers ...
FDA will require cigarette packaging to contain graphic warnings about the dangers ...
Editorial: Statewide smoking ban would benefit Kansans
Health benefits alone are enough to warrant a ban.
Health Authority wants state smoking ban
The Kansas Health Policy Authority proposed a 50 cent per pack user ...
Regan: Drinking a major part of Irish ...
Irish embrace drinking as a major aspect of life.
Health program targets nicotine
This six-week free smoking cessation program assists students kick their long-term smoking ...
Gentry: Blowing smoke
Student smokers continue to ignore restrictions across campus, putting others at risk. ...
Better Options for Bad Situations: E-cigarettes
If you’re going to do it, be smart.
E-cigs provide no-smoke option
Electronic cigarettes use a liquid nicotine and offer a variety of flavors.
Miyakawa: Don’t cut smokers slack for casting ...
Cigarette butts may be small, but they pile up — and they ...
College smoking creates concern for future
Students have resources on campus to quit smoking despite societal and emotional ...
McNaughton: Smokers refuse to acknowledge health problems
I still don’t understand because smokers smell and taste terrible.
Local smokers face further restrictions
Bill mandates outdoor smokers be 10 feet away from restaurant doors and ...
Smokeout focuses on smoke-free students in 2008
The University's idea is based on the Great American Smokeout. Smokers spend ...
Moffitt: Pressure on smokers to quit, harder ...
It is hard to give up smoking, but in a world where ...
Hirschfeld: Who are the biggest victims of ...
Changes to smoking ban could affect local ...
State law will ban smoking within 10 feet of doorways and windows.
Bornstein: Sexuality isn't simply about blowing smoke
Percentage of people who smoke is above average in LGBT community.
Cigarettes a drag on students’ wallets
KanUquit helps students grapple with financial, health concerns associated with smoking.
Lighting up en masse
The lethal addiction behind social smoking
Letter: Why I’m against the statewide smoking ...
Tactics employed by anti-smoking advocates turn
Tan tax worries local salon owners
A 10 percent tax on tanning included in the health care bill ...
Hookah could be on its way out ...
Studies squash long-time myths about shisha smoke.
Health care plan proposes ‘tan tax’
Senate’s proposed tan tax could halt dangerous behavior but may negatively affect ...
Tax motivates smokers to quit
April's smoking tax increase is providing additional funds for state programs and ...
Syring: Smoking ban should be upheld
The owner of two local bars filed a lawsuit against Lawrence in ...
Blog: Trying the Electric Cigarette
A blog about giving it a try.
Street musician upbeat about lifestyle
Joe Schreiner, a transient street musician, views his job as an “open ...
Ho: Slowing down to enjoy life
Students forget the simple things in life are just as important as ...
Puff the Magic Hooka
Shorman: Smoking ban strips student rights
Banning sale of tobacco on campus is about more than blowing smoke.
From left: Kimberlee Hinkle, Libby Johnson and Hannah ...
1 comment
Kansas Jayhawk fans hold aloft a reproduction of ...
2 comments
Erin Saupe, a Ph.D. student from St. Cloud, ...
1 comment
0 comments
Armed robbers continue to threaten.
3 comments
Comments
Regan: Smoking taboo doesn't fly abroad
So are you becoming an Irish citizen so you may smoke without 'hassle'?
Sign in to comment
Or login with:
OpenID