• @Zrybew
    link
    English
    28
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Bruh, they’re trying to make sure the next generation who never smoke, don’t start smoking.

    The same way they ensured our generation didn’t have to deal with asbestos or lead pipes.

    • @5BC2E7
      link
      English
      -41 year ago

      what about banning crimes? wouldn’t making crimes illegal solve all our problems?

        • @5BC2E7
          link
          English
          21 year ago

          Either you don’t have good reading comprehension or you are trolling. To spell it out for in case you are really challenged crimes are already ilegal by definition and yet that doesn’t make society free from crime. In other words your assumption of this working is delusional

      • @Zrybew
        link
        English
        121 year ago

        ? Alcohol consumption has been dropping consistently with each new generation…

        • @thehatfoxOP
          link
          English
          81 year ago

          That’s because of gradual shifts in culture and attitudes, not due to prohibition.

          Prohibition has failed to effectively “ban” any drug, and often tends to encourage their usage and harm efforts to alleviate addiction.

          Tobacco smoking is also declining in many nations in response to improved public health awareness and again cultural shifts. If those trends continue it could all but fade away naturally. Tobacco prohibition is arguably not necessary and could even become counterproductive.

          • @Zrybew
            link
            English
            11 year ago

            You call prohibition, I call education and restriction

          • @AA5B
            link
            English
            11 year ago

            Raising the legal drinking age has definitely helped. While there’s still all too many teenagers drinking, my experience through my teens is that it’s a lit fewer than when I was a kid and harder to get.

            — funny story - as an obviously older adult I got carded a couple years ago at a baseball game. They had a zero tolerance policy so I could not get a beer, despite going to multiple stands. Finally, partly out of amusement, I asked a newly legal intern less than half my age to buy beer for me

            • @thehatfoxOP
              link
              English
              41 year ago

              I’m not so sure. I’m in the UK, many parts of Europe have more liberal laws and attitudes towards alcohol than us, but it’s the British teens (and the British in general) infamously known for binge drinking.

              • @AA5B
                link
                English
                11 year ago

                Yeah I always used to prefer the more liberal policies (when it affected me) and wanted to raise my kids that way but here in the US you just can’t hide from binge drinking issues predominantly in teenagers. And that type of alcohol abuse seems to have decreased with the stricter laws (a later start to problem behavior gives some time to mature)

                I don’t know what about those other cultures may cause different behavior patterns but it’s not simply a matter of us loosening up, nor of parents setting an example of moderation