• @_number8_@lemmy.world
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    1011 year ago

    aside from the issue of ‘prohibition still doesn’t work’, i don’t think giving kids or “underage” adults criminal charges for cigarettes is making anything better for anyone

    • TheWoozy
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      71 year ago

      I’d prefer they start at 60 and raise it every year, but I’ll take what I can get.

  • @purahna@lemmygrad.ml
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    321 year ago

    This is an amazing, for the sole reason that everyone who is 17 and change now will turn 18, be able to smoke, the law will bump to 19, they won’t be allowed to smoke any more, but then they’ll turn 19 and they’ll be able to smoke again until the law raises to 20…

      • @purahna@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        This is the better way to write the law of course, but the ham-fisted way it’s proposed by Rishi would look more like what I wrote, because he said specifically that the age should rise one year every year.

        • Echo Dot
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          11 year ago

          So the age is going to get risen to 19, then the Tories are going to lose the next election (basically the only reason to have the election at this point is to find out by how much they’re going to lose so we know how much to laugh at them), and then the law stops getting updated because it’s a dumb and badly written, and then Labour don’t implement it any more.

          If anything they will probably just rewrite the law to the above version.

    • You can just make it a “born before this date” and it just solves this entirely. That date just doesn’t change. Everyone who sells darts memorizes it. Then it actually changes every day by a day. Fuck it, let’s give it an hour too, just to fuck with those kids born an hour later

  • @Phen@lemmy.eco.br
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    271 year ago

    No no no, minimum age should increase by 360 days every year, that way people can still have hope that some day they’ll be able to smoke. Staying true to how capitalism works.

  • FiveMacs
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    271 year ago

    …how do 14 year olds get smokes now?

    Making it illegal to buy at certain ages has never worked…banning them outright also won’t work. You cannot stop people from doing things, no matter how many words you put on paper.

    Has the war on drugs not been a thought to these people? It is useless and does nothing.

    • CrimeDad
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      71 year ago

      I agree that prohibition doesn’t really prevent a thing from being consumed. However, I don’t think an age limit really counts as prohibition. Selling substances to those who are underage is bad and there should be potential consequences for doing so.

      • FiveMacs
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        -21 year ago

        Underage in this scenario could be 40, 50, 60. They will just drive to an Indian reserve and buy cigarettes.

        I assume you’re talking about teens though…I’m fine with the current age limits, but increasing the age by 1 year ever year won’t do anything.

        • TheWoozy
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          141 year ago

          Um, you do realize that Rishi Sunak is the Prime Minister of the UK? It’s a long and arduous drive to the nearest Indian reservation.

          • FiveMacs
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            -91 year ago

            This is on world news, so I took it as world change. But no, I didn’t know that

        • CrimeDad
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          21 year ago

          On balance I think it’s a good thing. A gradual ban like this will help break the smoking culture and save some lives. Maybe it will help gen-z get laid too.

    • @Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      Why have laws against drunk driving or speeding? You cannot stop people from doing things, no matter how many words you put on paper.

      • FiveMacs
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        11 year ago

        It’s true, you can’t stop people from doing what they want to do with laws, but smoking doesn’t smear a child down the street for everyone to see. What a terrible comparison

        • @Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Fine, why have laws against littering, or smoking in public buildings, or jaywalking, or embezzlement? People are just going to do those things anyway, no matter what is written on paper.

          We have laws to provide an enforcement mechanism for behavior that is unacceptable in our society. You’re right, in that laws written on paper can be ignored, but you do so at a risk of the penalties laid out in the law. Your argument essentially invalidates the purpose and effectiveness of every law. Clearly, we have laws and they work, so your argument is frivolous and empty.

            • @Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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              -11 year ago

              Because the social perception of marijuana use has changed? You’re not really keeping up with the conversation here…

              • FiveMacs
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                21 year ago

                I am, but it will always go back to the same. You want big daddy to protect you from others doing harm to themselves, whereas I see people being able to police themselves and if they screw up it’s their problem.

                • @Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  If only smoking harmed just the user, but secondhand smoke kills children daily in the US. https://www.lung.org/quit-smoking/smoking-facts/health-effects/secondhand-smoke

                  It’s also been found that 3rd-hand smoke can be just as dangerous a secondhand smoke. Not to mention that smoking smells awful and makes indoor and outdoor public places unpleasant. Smokers also routinely fail to dispose of cigarettes properly, leading to unsightly and unhealthy toxic litter, and causes multiple uncontrolled forest/wildfires every year.

                  You need to throw out your preconceived notions about smoking and the purpose of laws, they are not compatible with reality.

    • queermunist she/her
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      -91 year ago

      The war on drugs can’t work because the CIA uses illicit drug running to fund off-the-books projects.

      Maybe if they stopped fucking doing that?

      • @Badgernomics@lemmy.world
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        171 year ago

        Sure on a global scale, but on a more macro level, the war on drugs failed because people want to buy and consume drugs… if there is no legal, regulated, safe method to buy them then the black market will fill that gap… same under rationing, same under prohibition, same with drugs and in the future cigarettes…!

        • @SheeEttin@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          True, but the want of cigarettes is much lower than recreational drugs. One of the reasons they’re still so popular is because they’re legal and easy to get.

          I don’t smoke and never have, but I can’t imagine anyone starting smoking in order to get some effect like with marijuana.

          • TheWoozy
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            41 year ago

            Yet, the addiction of cigarettes is much more powerful than non narcotic drugs & every day new people are starting smoking.

        • pips
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          1 year ago

          There is a legal, regulated, mostly safe method to buy cigarettes. It is inaccessible if you are under a certain age, but only the seller/provider is punished for violating regulations. It’s okay to have restrictions on what children can consume.

          While current laws on illegal drugs do not work, arguing against any regulation whatsoever is similarly silly, the laws obviously work. Smoking rates have dramatically declined since those laws and public education campaigns began.

        • queermunist she/her
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          -101 year ago

          I think you’re wrong. The market isn’t magic, it needs supply to meet demand and there is a steady supply of drugs to fulfill the demands because of state intervention in the market. The CIA isn’t the only government entity that uses the drug trade to raise illicit funds for off-the-books jobs, it’s just the biggest. If it weren’t for bad state actors, the war on drugs probably would have worked to a large extent; maybe not eliminate the drug trade completely, but at least reduce the volume of trade substantially.

      • TheWoozy
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        31 year ago

        It’s not the 1980’s. Reagan’s long dead. What makes you think they still do that?

  • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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    241 year ago

    Man the fuck up and outlaw it for everyone instead of this sneaky prohibition that only affect people that can’t vote yet. It’s such a cowardly, disingenuous way of doing it.

    • @BestBouclettes@jlai.lu
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      331 year ago

      Prohibition never works, the best bet is to keep it legal and make it as inconvenient as possible like: raising taxes on tobacco, make it illegal to smoke outside of dedicated zones (Quebec has done it I believe), fine people who litter their cigarette butts (hard to implement but, it might deter a large majority from doing it), keep helping smokers to quit and keep raising awareness for younger people.

      • @nathris@lemmy.ca
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        101 year ago

        This is the way. There are so few places to smoke in BC that I pretty much only ever see people doing it 5 metres from a bus stop.

        They are so expensive that the few people that still do it smoke maybe a pack a week.

        We even banned the sale of no-nic vape juice because they were becoming a gateway to nicotine addiction for teenagers.

        • @ledtasso@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I just visited Canada for 4 days, was around a lot of people and I only smelled smoke twice. Both times were outside the airport (once arriving and once departing).

        • @mwguy@infosec.pub
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          31 year ago

          We even banned the sale of no-nic vape juice because they were becoming a gateway to nicotine addiction for teenagers.

          That’s crazy and backwards. Ecigs were a critical tool I used to kick a 2 pack a day habit. Vaping is the best smoking cessation system around.

          • @potato
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            11 year ago

            except the ones using it don’t even smoke rn.

      • @OurToothbrush@lemmy.mlM
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        -41 year ago

        Nah the best bet is to remove the profit motive. And through legal means execute every cigarette company owner or employee who covered up health risks for mass manslaughter.

    • @ForgotAboutDre@lemmy.world
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      201 year ago

      This method stops current smokers from being criminalised.

      If you ban it like prohibition, you will instantaneously create a black market. Continually increasing the age you can buy cigarettes is easier. Everyone that this effects will not have the option to legally create a cigarette habit/addiction.

      A straight up outlawing would have the maximum effect. But it would be costly to enforce, whilst increasing overall criminal activity.

      • @2ncs@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        They just need to outlaw the commercial production of cigarettes. I’m very anti cigarette personally, but at the end of the day, tobacco is a plant and should not be outlawed. But outlawing commercial products it makes tobacco legal and accessible to those who want it. With commercial cigarettes being less available, in guessing through either lack of convenience or lack of ability to act on an impulse, that the amount of smokers will drop.

        • @ledtasso@lemmy.world
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          That’ll never happen, the tobacco industry is too big and too many jobs will be lost all at once, so it becomes highly politicized and loses popular support. With the proposed law, the tobacco industry at least has time to pivot to something else.

          • @2ncs@lemmy.world
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            31 year ago

            So let’s give the companies that have lied about the harms and effects of their product a heads up? They never gave people who died of cancer when they knew it caused cancer but denied it. Moving the age will just give the time for the business owners to get more of the money out and fuck over the smaller employees anyways.

            I honestly think there is no solution that doesn’t have negative effects. I’m personally very against the banning of something (especially a plant) as a solution to a problem as it creates plenty more problems (see America’s drug problems)

        • Ok, but and believe me I’m all for this, cocaine and heroin are plants as well, or at least you can grow coca and poppies and get the drugs from them. Should cocaine and heroin be legal as well just because a) they’re plant derived, and b) people will use the drugs and get addicted to them because that’s how it works? As I said, I personally would legalize, tax, and educate people about safe recreational, therapeutic, and medical drug use for all drugs personally, but most people find that too extreme.

      • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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        51 year ago

        The reason I used the word Prohibition is because I think it’s bullshit either way. We’re sitting here legalizing pot because Prohibition doesn’t work, but somehow doing this chickenshit year-by-year outlawing is somehow going to fix something that education is doing a fine enough job. People are going to smoke cigarettes, there’s always a group that will do it, legal or not. Whether you want a crime problem around it or not is the obvious question these chucklefucks don’t seem to understand, despite repeated examples to the contrary.

        • Add in the danger of having the following mentality: “what are these rights laying around that I’m not utilizing? What, that person over there enjoys having these rights? Well, I don’t like that person, so I don’t care about their rights fuck em”

          This ladies and gentlemen, is how you Nazi 101 (but with rainbow flags and affirmative action this go-around)

  • @orcrist@lemm.ee
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    221 year ago

    If this is the only effort, it’s weak. Better to also (or instead) tax each box by another 20 pounds. Kids don’t have that money. They’ll find other things to do.

  • @Icaria@lemmy.world
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    211 year ago

    NZ already did this and it is the most cowardly way to avoid political blowback.

    There’s plenty of other options for minimising smoking. A more altruistic way is by lifting people out of poverty and tackling social disintegration, since smokers are overwhelmingly poor and disaffected.

    • @ForgotAboutDre@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      Your right there are better ways. Both methods should be implemented. A carrot and stick approach is going to be more effective.

      I don’t think we can expect the altruistic way from a Billionaire Tory. As far as policy goes, this is the best one the Tory have had in a long time. But that doesn’t say much.

    • So instead of reducing a clearly destructive habit now we should wait for a major social change that likely won’t happen. I don’t see how that is more altruistic for the “poor and disaffected”.

      • @Icaria@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        You can either try to do things the right way and cure multiple social ills, or you can do it the wrong way and end up with different rules for different adults all in an attempt to prohibition your way out of one issue.

      • @Scubus@sh.itjust.works
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        181 year ago

        It’s directly related. Why are 18 year olds able to lock themselves into a 6 year contract that they might be killed before they see the end of, when they are, legally, too dumb to make their own decisions regarding a chemical they put in their bodies?

        • @KillAllPoorPeople@lemmy.world
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          It’s really simple. The ruling class of society benefits more sending the little shit into the military than it costs. The ruling class doesn’t benefit as much when this little shit costs more than the little shit produces. It has nothing to do with protecting the little shit, it has to do with protecting the people in power.

        • @Oyster_Lust@lemmy.world
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          01 year ago

          They can choose to take hormone blockers at 12, but they can’t choose to have sex until they’re 18 (depending on local statutes). The laws are filled with hypocrisy.

  • @sunbeam60@lemmy.one
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    141 year ago

    “We operate a Check-74 policy. If you are lucky enough to look younger than 70, we will ask for ID when buying cigarettes”

    • comfy
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      11 year ago

      Maybe we will make groundbreaking leaps in cosmetic surgery. Or have Jackass-style elderly disguises become popular.

    • Echo Dot
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      41 year ago

      Rishi it’s a background character in his own life. There are more dynamic jellyfish.