Same here. If someone wants to unwind in a pool hall by lighting up after a hard day at work, I can keep my distance. I might smoke in moderation, myself (Sometimes I'll buy a pack, smoke one or two cigarettes out of it a week, and eventually give the rest away to a hardcore smoker knowing I'll never finish the pack). I personally feel that this country had a sort of 'film noir' when smoking was allowed in public areas just a few decades ago . . . call me crazy, but the cigarette butts in the urinals just whispered 'freedom' to me - everything from the haze in the bar room to tune of "As time goes by" played via piano in the background. I also believe that by trying our hardest to outlaw cigarettes, we've successfully re-created that rebellious allure that made cigarettes so fascinating in the first place.
Note to whom it may concern: I know it's bad for my health, so don't expect a rousing debate out of me. As Ron Paul is a medically-oriented man, he would probably not suggest anyone pick up the habit, but his stance on marijuana makes me assume he would not interfere with tobacco use (and especially because the Constitution doesn't allow the fed to regulate it).
Drew Carey can express this much better than I can: http://reason.tv/video/show/160.html
"cigarette butts in the urinals" and a "film-noir" atmosphere..


I think that's a pretty eloquent depiction of freedom; I couldn't agree more, and I don't smoke.