Chuck I understand your arguments,
and they do have merit, but you said:
'I also wouldn't have a problem with you or anyone else smoking, if it didn't cost me money. Millions of health care dollars are spent every year on smoking-related illness, driving healthcare costs up and up.'
The same could be said about people who have drinking illnesses, illnesses from social diseases because they refused to wear protection, heart disease and obesity from overeating. How about car accidents caused by careless distractions? Sports injuries?
Every one of these things is as preventable as not smoking, if we are talking about insurance here. Don't fall into that trap, that is PRECISELY what the insurance lobbies want you to do to pass these laws.
ALWAYS follow the money trail. Who is really behind the anti-smoking agenda? I believe it truly is the insurance companies. Look what horrible, disgusting damage the drug culture does to our society, and it doesn't get the same press, because the insurance outlays aren't as pronounced.
Life is about risk. The whole point of insurance is that EVERYONE's risk is covered. Some days you skydive. Your neighbor may smoke (and pay more for his insurance as stated earlier). Some days I drive my car too fast. It's all about risk that is precisely why you have insurance. But the corporations want to find ways to cut down payouts, and hey, they go after whatever they can to do it. Seatbelt laws? Motorcycle helmet laws? Please give me the logic that you have to wear a bike helmet but you can tow your kid in a flimsy canvas trailer at 30mph behind your bike, and THAT is ok.
Shouldn't you have a right to own a "smokers bar"? Yes, I think you do. I don't smoke and I don't want to be around it, but we are supposed to live in a free country. So many of my friends here seem to just post "GOOD", because they don't like smoking. To me, this is like saying I am OK with them outlawing ice cream because I am a diabetic and can't eat it, and it annoys me no end to see others eating it.
Ask yourself this question. How would you feel about these laws if there was no second hand smoke threat, and the smoke smelled good and fresh. Would you feel differently, or is it just that the unpleasantness of it to you allows you to be ok with someone's freedoms being tossed?
Again, no one has answered my question asking how are YOU bothered by a privately owned facility that allows smoking? I don't get how that affects people who DON'T have to frequent it. To be honest, I don't go to bars because I don't like drinking, and I don't like being around people who drink too much. Drinking causes tons of accidents and deaths. Should drinking in public be outlawed? Think of the insurance claims that have been paid out because of alcohol.
Again, don't be so eager to see rights being taken away, simply because they are rights that YOU are not exercising.