K
jem said:Kazbah, I think the company that you work for is a discrace.
kazbah said:If I was obese would they act the same if I was eating. It's rude. .
Janet said:Being the nice person that I am if someone is smoking near me and it's enough to bother me (depends on the way the wind is, what kind of a mood I'm in etc.) then I don't ask them to stop, I may cough to clear my throat and if it's bad I move away.
Janet said:I think the whole point though (and one I don't want to get too caught up in because it's been done to death before on here and it's one of those issues some people will never see eye to eye on) is that an obese person eating is not damaging your health. Someone smoking near you is inflicting their smoke on you. Someone eating near you is not forcing you to eat their food too and become obese too.
Being the nice person that I am if someone is smoking near me and it's enough to bother me (depends on the way the wind is, what kind of a mood I'm in etc.) then I don't ask them to stop, I may cough to clear my throat and if it's bad I move away. However, what I find really annoying is the insulted or sneering look I sometimes encounter if I do this. It hasn't happened that often but it does happen.
Janet said:Being the nice person that I am if someone is smoking near me and it's enough to bother me (depends on the way the wind is, what kind of a mood I'm in etc.) then I don't ask them to stop, I may cough to clear my throat and if it's bad I move away. However, what I find really annoying is the insulted or sneering look I sometimes encounter if I do this.
It's a bit difficult to move away when you're stuck in the Luas ticket queue, or on a crowded Luas platform, or even when walking on the path behind a smoker - Should I speed up (taking in their smoke all the time until I pass them) or slow down and delay my journey, just to get some fresh air?stuart said:BUT it isn't banned and I don't see why someone would find it a problem if someone else is smoking outside
If you don't like it you can move away, it is not an enclosed space trapping the smoke
It's actually not that simple. My daily walking commute to/from the Luas station is along a very busy major route (Wyckham Bypass, beside new Dundrum centre), and I genuinely haven't got a hope in hell of crossing the road without taking my life in my hands.Sarah said:Cross the road!!!!
If you shoved your half-chewed food up their nostrils and mashed it into their hair, then yes, they might well object. That's what you do when you smoke beside a non-smoker. It's not a question of 'entitled' - it's a question of good manners.kazbah said:If I was obese would they act the same if I was eating. It's rude. I am perfectly entitled to smoke outdoors.
There are companies which have no-smoking rules for good reasons, in particular to avoid contamination - I've come across this on pharmaceutical manufacturers and disk manufacturers.kazbah said:WorkED - past tense thank God.
they introduced the new policy while I was there and it was the nail in the coffin.
RainyDay said:It's not a question of 'entitled' - it's a question of good manners.
Meaning that smoking where your smoke will impact other people is bad manners.kazbah said:Meaning what? Smoking in public is bad manners?
RainyDay said:Meaning that smoking where your smoke will impact other people is bad manners.
RainyDay said:It's actually not that simple. My daily walking commute to/from the Luas station is along a very busy major route (Wyckham Bypass, beside new Dundrum centre), and I genuinely haven't got a hope in hell of crossing the road without taking my life in my hands.
podgerodge said:I'd be insulted! You even admit it's down to your mood! Have you become physically intolerant of smoke or mentally intolerant of smoke? I don't have much sympathy for a mental intolerance given that there is a fair amount of fresh air outside to move to.
Anyway, could you not move away and then cough to clear your throat rather than the other way around and spare the poor smoker another guilty feeling!
Janet said:I mean physically intolerant. I'm far more aware since the ban of when someone is smoking and can take far less of it before I start coughing
podgerodge said:I will go on believing that the potential damaging effects of a whiff of smoke in the outside air are negligible compared to the rest of contaminants in the city.
podgerodge said:I'll stop arguing but I can't see how being more aware of someone smoking can contribute to a greater physical intolerance!
podgerodge said:I will go on believing that the potential damaging effects of a whiff of smoke in the outside air are negligible compared to the rest of contaminants in the city.
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