Friday, July 31, 2009

Do You Support the "Education Begins at Home Act"?

Lawmakers have essentially inserted the “Education Begins at Home Act” – which was introduced in 2008 and again this year by Rep. Danny Davis (D-IL) and Sen. Kit Bond (R-MO) – into the health care bill under the home visitation section. Section 440 of the House bill – Home Visitation Programs for Families with Young Children and Families Expecting Children – would provide grants to states to establish home visitation programs to educate parents on child behavior and parenting skills. The “well-trained and competent staff” will:

"…provide parents with knowledge of age-appropriate child development in cognitive, language, social, emotional, and motor domains…modeling, consulting, and coaching on parenting practices; [and] skills to interact with their child…"

Many question the role of federal government in such practices. Also, the vaguely-worded program specifics are troublesome. The home visitation provision dictates that the state will “prioritize serving communities that are in high need of such services, especially communities with a high proportion of low-income families or a high incidence of child maltreatment." Concern with the bill is that it will encourage government officials to enter homes and educate and interact in parenting methods that are approved by the Secretary of Health and Human Services.

Does such a bill violate the First Amendment and the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution? What seems like a good idea to expand and improve programs that are already in place, this bill, if it were to become law, opens up the door of every family to government involvement. People don't necessarily believe the law is targeted at low income families or other families that are otherwise considered "at risk" by the government. They, instead, believe this is targeted to everyone including primary caregivers who maybe grandparents, other relatives, foster parents, and noncustodial parents. So, birth parents may not be the only participating parties.

There are privacy concerns because when home visitors come into the home they assess everything about the family: their financial situation, social situation, parenting practices, everything. All of that is put into a database. Questions arise about how agents of the government plan to acquire private medical and financial records to offer the home visiting program.

While the home visitation program is described as “voluntary,” it’s not clear whether it would remain voluntary throughout or just up to the time a parent trainer enters the home. There is no wording in the Education Begins at Home Act requiring parental permission for treatment or ongoing care once the family is enrolled.

Indeed, the states may have an economic incentive to increase enrollments in these home visits and may pressure families to participate in them. Some feel this especially likely because the bill requires states that receive these grants to submit an annual report to the Secretary of HHS which includes the number of families in the home visitation program and retention rate.

Such visitation programs would further increase the federal role in preschool education, and this represents another reason for parents to be concerned about what’s actually in the health care bill. So, many assume that someone coming into homes and telling them how to raise their children strips their personal liberties.

Do bureaucrats know more about parenting than most parents? The government may pressure parents to adopt child rearing methods that are against the family's religious beliefs. Home visitation officials may even threaten families with abuse and neglect investigation if the families do not choose to follow the official parenting education models. Does the good intention of the bill outweigh the possible harm inflicted upon the innocent?

The legislation does not specify whether parents are allowed to decline evaluations, drugs or treatment for their children once they are diagnosed with developmental or mental conditions. There seems to be evidence that state-diagnosed conditions would remain in a child’s permanent medical history. Mental health screening is very subjective no matter what age, especially with very young children.

Proponents of the bill say home visiting has shown to be a strong factor for overall school readiness and serves as key prevention of child abuse, criminal justice, along with improving children’s health, and with linking the child and family with other community based services.

The core components of the Education Begins At Home Act are:

· $400 million over three years to allow states to implement proven home visiting programs of their choosing.

· $50 million over three years to implement home visiting services focused on English Language Learners.

· $50 million over three years to implement home visiting services focused on military bases.

A broad coalition of organizations is working to move this legislation forward. Among them are organizations dealing with child abuse, child advocacy organizations and social workers. Organizations such as the United Way? Advocates for or against this proposed bill should speak out. Now is the time to voice opinion about the proposed program. As part of the costly health care proposal, the "Education Begins At Home" section is open for scrutiny. Weigh in on the issue. Make your voice part of the vocal minority and read more about the proposal for an informed opinion.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Does God Exist?

Have you ever noticed that people who don't believe in God want things both ways? They tend to leave a little room for unknown possibilities but angrily profess their own designs with supreme authority. A favorite foundation for an atheist is the following: "People cannot know God or determine the existence of God." In other words, the lack of scientific evidence for the knowledge of God or for the existence of God is enough to deny His being. Most atheists believe that the assertion "God exists" does not express a proposition, but instead is nonsensical or cognitively meaningless. I feel very sad for people who lack faith. While it may be true, no one can fully comprehend God, and no one can be completely sure that he does or does not possess certain qualities such as omnipotence, this does not disprove his existence. As for the proof of existence, why can't the believer simply put the burden of proof on the skeptic? Considerations, discoveries, and breakthroughs have all been used in efforts to render religious beliefs false, yet the point on which the acceptance or rejection of these new thoughts rest, for a moment the latest thing, is all too soon forgotten or refuted itself. It is no less reasonable for one to believe in God than to believe in the non-existence theories of other minds. After all, a theory is defined as "a proposed explanation whose status is still conjectural." Likely, much more attention is paid to theism, religious belief, the existence of God, as a problem to be dealt with, as something that is an intellectual task, by the skeptic than by the believer. It seems skeptics are looking for airtight proof for the existence of God. The atheist wants absolute factual proof for God, not theory -- how unfair to establish science as the "know all" and "be all" of creation in theory. The believer establishes truths about God on the basis of other truths which are accessible in principle to any human being. The believer cannot, by himself, establish all truths (or falsities) with natural reason. But, why can't the preambles of faith provide premises from which the mysteries of faith can be concluded? The atheist is willing to convict all generations of human believers as irrational beings. He is willing to decry whole cultures that base belief in the divine and worship are mindless civilizations. Going against the grain of human experience is risky business. The order and arrangement of natural creations and events impose the idea that a Creator lives. Humans then live within the laws of His natural creations. Indeed, this idea is almost innate in the surroundings if people merely open their eyes to the mysteries of nature. Why can't "God exists" be one of the basic propositions of the religious? For example, when Job says that "he knows that his redeemer liveth," even if he is simply reporting his idiosyncratic convictions, he has as much right to take "God exists" as a basic proposition as his critic does to take other sense, data, or truths about the world as basic. The believer and his critic are "in the same boat" in relation to accepting basic propositions. The atheist is simply wrong if he thinks some version of empiricism is beyond dispute or, worse, that it is part of the formal theory. This view has been reinforced time and again. Besides, without conjecture, no new science is possible. Lisa Miller ("Arguing Against the Atheist," Oct. 6 2008) says, "Submitting faith to proof is absurd. Reason defines one kind of reality (what we know); faith defines another (what we don't know). Reasonable believers can live with both at once." Lorenzo Albacete, a Roman Catholic priest and physicist who speaks of the importance of both science and faith in his life expresses his opinion. "Faith," he said, "is like trying to explain to your uncomprehending family why you have fallen in love with so-and-so. They have all the arguments, and you can understand what they're saying, but you can't help it, you're in love." It is impossible to measure what people do mean when they talk about God—their individual experiences with Him. But, over 90% of Americans believe in God. According to a new survey by Baylor University, just about half of Americans believe that God intervenes in worldly affairs while less than half characterize God as "punishing." Many also believe in eternal salvation for people from faith traditions other than theirs. So, maybe any conceived problem with religion is not belief itself, which even in the most orthodox believers is inconsistent, but the (violent or oppressive) enforcing of one truth over another. Maybe it is time to put the burden of proof for "God does not exist" on the atheist since he so willingly puts the proof of "God exists" on the believer. ).

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Wonder Why

Wonder Why Your wonder trips wires of emotion in your mind That ignite charges of inexplicable awe And shower you in jagged slices of cutting doubt That cripple reason for the brief time being. Had you presence of mind, Searing lust for adventure, Simple stimuli for motivation, Unquenchable curious nature. Instead, dilemma bleeds yellow streams of uncertainty That seep into all order and precise calculation Until systems shut down by the incredulous agony Leave a shell of unforgiving, lonely paradox. Had you proper admiration, Overwhelming sensation, Adequate meditation, Rational skills of query. You wonder about the lost opportunity. You wonder about the fork in the road. You wonder about the twisted turn of fate. You wonder about the cruel circumstance. The smile The kiss The deal The luck Money Passion Pretense Moment Life God Soul Death

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

How Well Do You Know Frank?

Those "Getting To Know Me" exercises on Facebook usually just kind of make me go "blah." I am going to devise my own one just to see if the revelations are more precise for understanding true character. Anyway, here is my personal quiz. Please read it and reply with your own answers to the questions. If you dare. 1. What do you long to do again the most? Have the old athletic abilities back and play centerfield in a baseball game every day of my life. 2. What is something you most like about beautiful girls (handsome guys)? They are friendly, act as if they really are interested, smile, and have something to say with eye contact. 3. What is something you were never comfortable doing? Making small talk with a diva or a cocky guy whom I have never met before and acting as if I cared. 4. What goal did you set for yourself that you did NOT achieve? Teaching English at Valley High School for 30+ years. 5. What is my usual role in group functions? I am normally the one who tries to humor the group or encourage people to help teamwork. 6. What can't you seem to give up? Keep from making a pointed comment when I get upset. And, an occasion beer or two. 7. What is your biggest disappointment so far in life? My inability to secure stability and harmony in the future of my family. 8. What is your most memorable experience with the opposite sex? Dancing with happy feet until early hours of the morning, drunk with beer and music and laughing eyes. 9. Who, besides your significant other (mate, spouse) would you always trust to be a confidant? My brother, Phil. 10. What simple request do you find it hardest to turn down? An honest plea for help when I know I can be of assistance. 11. What is a observed behavior that always makes you angry? When someone treats another person as a "lesser" human being to gain a personal advantage. 12. What is something you vow to do with people you love? Be honest to the point of self humiliation. 13. What is something you vow to never explain, even with your closest companion? Reveal the makings of my most private inner-soul. 14. What strikes you as truly amazing? Few women "get" a wide variety of musical styles to appreciate individual artistry. (substance vs. appearance) Or women who don't understand Robert Johnson or Jimi Hendrix. 15. At what point in your life did you decide "who you are today"? Actually two points: when I changed majors in college from Journalism to English Education and when I went through a divorce in my twenties. 16. What was the happiest moment in your life? The day I finally accepted that I am, and always will be, an imperfect human being and decided to live with all the consequences while continuing my best attributes. 17. What was the unhappiest moment in your life? In 1984, in deep depression, I walked through a psychiatrist's door for the first time. 18. If someone gave you $200 and said, "Be sure to spend this money on something personal that makes you feel good," what would you do? Head for Columbus and Used Kids CD store for some new music. 19. What can you do better than anyone else? Teach a few concepts and play a limited role on a team that needs help. 20. What do you wish people understood about you? Although I have compulsions, I try to keep them within and never mean to hurt any one other human. In other words, I struggle at times with fears that are silly to most. 21. What do you think God has planned for your life? It seems to be work with teenagers- directing the West End Tutoring Center, working for the Youth Conservation Corp, teaching high school at Valley. Lately- writing something meaningful for someone. 22. What do you think is the most mysterious part of living? Loving, by far, in all its forms, complexities, and understandings. I'm an "All You Need Is Love" devotee in belief but mystified by its very nature. Nothing compares with its pleasures and heartaches. 23. What do you find it very hard to do? Discuss intimate matters of concern with my children when I find talking with other young adults fairly easy. 24. Who are your heroes from history? Give me Gandhi for a strategist. Martin Luther King, Jr., for a fearless leader. And an author named Corrie Ten Boom, The Hiding Place, for grace and forgiveness. 25. Fill in: "I am a frustrated __________." Musician 26. Fill in: "The best thing I have ever felt was _________." A hand or a kiss, depends on the circumstance and need. 27. Fill in: "Some of the goofiest things I have ever done include __________." Streaking, skinny-dipping, climbing a fire tower. 28. Fill in: "Something I have never done that others may think I have done is ________." Do or buy any illegal drug. Prescriptions out the wazoo and plenty of alcohol. 29. How could you most easily become a close friend of mine? Sitting down, one-on-one, and honestly talking about each other. Probably discussing hangups. 30. What song seems to come close to signifying your life? "Right On Time" by Randy Travis, Songwriters-- Sharon Rice and Al Anderson Lyrics to Right On Time : It's not my nature to be patient I jump every river I cross Not one for following the sensible side And I can't count the times I've been lost. Well, you can't see where you're goin' in the pourin' rain When you're runnin' into walls and feeling no pain We've all done time with the devil and I've done mine It took a while to get here but, I'm right on time. I may still regret some moments But it's just part of a riot I count myself among the fortunate ones Who made it to the other side. Well, you go what you go through to get where you are Lucky for me I didn't go too far I turned around before the end of the line Took a while to get here but, I'm right on time. Well, you can't see where you're goin' in the pourin' rain When you're runnin' into walls and feeling no pain We've all done time with the devil and I've done mine It took a while to get here but, I'm right on time. It took a while to get here but, I'm right on time...

Monday, July 27, 2009

The End of Responsibility?

If everyone cleaned their own doorstep, we’d have a clean world” - Goethe Where does your responsibility end? Have you ever considered the limits you place on being responsible for what is happening right around you every day of their lives? I think every person’s dignity demands that he or she contribute to the freedom and dignity of others. Without getting into a heady philosophical discussion about moral agency and or pinning all responsibility on a divine entity, consider your own reality for a change. Responsibility demands that you place a particular burden of obligation upon yourself that includes the obligations to be reliable and dependable. Journalist Gerald Johnson once said, "No man was ever endowed with a right without being at the same time saddled with a responsibility." Responsibility makes you accountable for your actions and encourages you to live an honorable life. If a burden becomes detachable, it is easily shifted to the shoulders of God, Fate, Fortune, Luck or one's neighbor. You simply deny it. TYPES OF RESPONSIBILITY 1. Moral Responsibility By caring, protecting, and helping, you're being accountable for treating other people justly and fairly, for honoring other living things, and for being environmentally aware. 2. Legal Responsibility By obeying laws and ordinances of your community, state, and country, you live within the accepted rules of a society. If there's a law you believe is outdated, discriminatory, or unfair, you can work to change, improve, or eliminate it. 3. Family Responsibility When you treat your parents, siblings, and other relatives with love and respect, you show your responsibility to family. This could include following your family's rules, and doing chores and duties at home. 4. Community Responsibility As a part of the community, you're responsible for treating others as you want to be treated, for participating in community activities and decisions, and for being an active, contributing citizen. 5. Responsibility to Customs, Traditions, Beliefs, and Rules These responsibilities might come from your family, your community, your heritage, or your faith. 6. Personal Responsibility It's up to you to become a person of good character. Ultimately, no one else is to blame for your shortcomings. ACCEPTING PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY Failing to accept personal responsibility results in negative consequences. This can make you fearful about taking a risk, overly dependent on others for recognition, unable to trust or security with others, and chronically hostile at the way others treat you. James J Messina, PhD, cites the following as things that must be done to accept personal responsibity: 1. Acknowledging that you are solely responsible for the choices in your life. 2. Realizing that you determine your feelings about any events or actions addressed to you, no matter how negative they seem. 3. Recognizing that as you enter adulthood and maturity, you determine how your self-esteem will develop. 4. Not feeling sorry for the "bum deal" you have been handed but taking hold of your life and giving it direction and reason. 5. Letting go of your sense of over responsibility for others. 6. Taking an honest inventory of your strengths, abilities, talents, virtues and positive points. 7. Letting go of blame and anger toward those in your past who did the best they could, given the limitations of their knowledge, background and awareness. 8. Pointing the finger of responsibility back to yourself and away from others when you are discussing the consequences of your actions. Where then, ideally, does your responsibility end? That depends upon the type of person you want to become. No one can control fateful circumstances; however, the devout, dutiful, responsible people will overextend themselves to carry necessary burdens when others won't. Maybe they are not bound to accept all of these obligations, but they sense duty when others choose to ignore it. Pearl Buck once called duty "the other side of rights." Another writer said that duty is "what is expected from others." Duty provides you with liberty. After all, you are a part of the problem and a part of the solution. No person can exist as an island of pure self interest. And, in turn, no person can successfully deny blame by pushing the problem away. The irresponsible believe one person cannot make a difference. This excuse infects the "finger pointers" and the "I told you so's." Before long, a Blame Game Epidemic results as thousands (millions) find an easy scapegoat. Your responsibility must sense no end, only adjust itself to any given situation in which you find yourself. As you breathe, speak, and walk through numbered days, you present your true self, and not a front for others, that encourages everyone you meet to be responsible. Surely, success will follow. God has entrusted you with yourself. Slackers will always be a part of society. Do you complain continually about them or do you find yourself doing your share to correct this as one of your own concerns? A good unattributed quote to remember: "I must do something" always solves more problems than "Something must be done."

What Health Care Reform May Hold For Those Who Have Insurance

World Health Organization's 2000 World Health Report, rated 191 countries' medical systems. The United States placed 37th, behind even Morocco, Cyprus, and Costa Rica. Everyone is curious and deeply concerned about the health care reform bills moving through Congress. Current estimates suggest that it would cost close to $1 trillion over 10 years to extend coverage to tens of millions of uninsured Americans. Though costly, most agree that the reform would do a good job of providing coverage for uninsured Americans, but what about the effect of the reform on the far greater number of people who already have insurance? A recent editorial in the New York Times outlined some answers for the insured. Keep in mind, this is an editorial. Read as much as you can about the bills and decide the direction that benefits most. Labeling and stereotyping does nothing to help alleviate the current problems. Knowledge is the key to solving the health care dilemma of cost versus service. I have outlined some of the major points in the editorial for ease of delivery. Please read the entire article on site. ("Health Care Reform and You," July 25 2009, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/26/opinion/26sun1.html?pagewanted=1) 1. Expanding Medicaid would help the poorest of the uninsured. A family of four earning $66,000 to $88,000 would get subsidies to help them buy coverage through new health insurance exchanges, national or state, which would offer a menu of policies from different companies agreeing to provide a specified level of benefits and set premiums at rates more comparable to group rates for big employers than to exorbitant rates charged for individual coverage. 2. A new marketplace, the so-called health insurance exchange would be born. With the creation of so many new subscribers, virtually all major insurers are expected to offer policies through an exchange. 3. All insurance companies would be more tightly regulated. For example, reform would prohibit policies from excluding or charging higher rates to people with pre-existing conditions, bar companies from rescinding policies after people come down with a serious illness, and prohibit insurers from setting annual or lifetime limits on what a policy would pay. 4. In President Obama's proposal, the entire tax burden would be dropped on families earning more than $250,000 or $350,000 or $1 million a year, depending on proposals. There is strong opposition in the Senate, so it seems likely that some burden would fall on the less wealthy. 5. Healthy young people who might prefer not to buy insurance at all will probably be forced to because of a federal mandate. 6. Less clear is what financial burden middle-income Americans would bear when forced to buy coverage. There are concerns that the subsidies ultimately approved by Congress might not be generous enough. 7. Greater security is the main gain for those enrolled in group coverage. When laid off or leaving a job, those people would no longer be faced with exorbitant costs of individually bought insurance; instead, they could buy new policies through the insurance exchanges at affordable rates. 8. President Obama has also pledged that if people like their current insurance, they can keep it. 9. Coverage for the uninsured should greatly reduce the amount of charity care delivered by hospitals and eliminate the need for the hospitals to shift such costs to patients who have private insurance. It is anticipated in the long run, if reform efforts slow the growth of health care costs, then the increase in insurance costs should ease as well. 10. The bills would alter payment incentives in Medicare to reduce needless re-admissions to hospitals. The bills should promote comparative effectiveness research to determine which treatments are best but would not force doctors to use them and call for pilot programs in Medicare to test the best ways for doctors to manage and coordinate a patient’s total care. 11. People over 65 are already covered by Medicare and would seem to have little to gain. But many of the chronically ill elderly who use lots of drugs could save significant money. 12. Prospective losers are likely to include many people enrolled in the private plans that participate in Medicare, known as Medicare Advantage plans. They are heavily subsidized, and to pay for reform, Congress is likely to reduce or do away with those subsidies. President Obama insisted that benefits won’t be reduced, they’ll simply be delivered in more efficient ways, like better coordination of care, elimination of duplicate tests and reliance on treatments known to work best. 13. The AARP, the main lobby for older Americans, has praised the emerging bills. This might suggests that the great majority of Americans — those with insurance and those without — would benefit from health care reform.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Valley High School Reunions

Over the last couple weekends, I have had the privilege of attending a ten year and a fifteen year reunion of classes I taught at Valley High School in Lucasville, Ohio. When I say privilege, I mean just that. I felt very fortunate to have been invited to the events. My favorite part of teaching was instructing all the seniors who attended my school, so I was witness to their final year before graduation, both an end to old dependencies and a beginning to their new, independent lives. Each senior year, the students and I worked our way through classes to prepare them for college and employment. The twenty-seven years of teaching seniors were campaigns of bitter/sweet memories of tough assignments, pleasant interactions, and just normal maturation activities. As each year drew to a close, I felt a great kinship with these students, mainly because of our hard work together, but also because I, too, am a Valley High graduate in the Class of 1969. Every year was unique and every year completed verified more lifelong friendships with an expanding body of individuals baptized in the purple and gold. This summer I was struck with the number of wonderful, caring adults who graduated in these classes. As I talked to many ex-students about their present status and reminisced about our time spent together in high school, I marveled at the tremendous diversity of individuals and their outstanding accomplishments since graduation. I must say I was not only very impressed but also very content in the reality that so many people have already done so much to better themselves and their society. I tried to listen carefully and take in all of the information I could about both classes. I felt so much respect and gratitude in seeing them interact as adults. I got that "old time feeling" of living my life through them. As they renewed old acquaintances, I felt lucky to have been a tiny part of their past and extremely fortunate to be a friend today. And, as these individuals spoke to me, I felt a great confidence in their love for our country and for the respect they held for opportunities they had seized to insure that our values and families will continue to grow ever stronger. The classmates are living testimonies for the positive forces that refuse to let hard times and forecasts of doom ruin their futures. In them, I see success and good fortune. Spending a few hours with the classes was personally uplifting. I wanted to let each of them know how proud I was of their good common instincts and sacrifices. To a teacher, nothing compares. Seeing the positive growth of so many human beings was simply awesome. At times, I found myself speechless as they recounted abilities they had found in high school. Now, I am left with new memories of joy. I have seen the new faces of seniors of long ago, and I have been inspired by new dreams in their lives. How did I become so fortunate? The generosity of my ex-students has allowed me to experience something truly special-- ties that are lasting and meaningful. I want just to thank them for allowing me to remain a teacher in spirit. Nothing in my teaching career is more meaningful than a graduate's compliment. I love them all and I will continue to help them in any way I can. Many of my teachers did the same for me, and I will always treasure them. We are all still working toward a final Graduation. "Through Your Hands" By John Hiatt (Album- "Chronicles" 2005, Universal Music Careers)
You were dreaming on a park bench
'Bout a broad highway somewhere
When the music from the carillon
Seemed to hurl your heart out there
Past the scientific darkness
Past the fireflies that float
To an angel bending down
To wrap you in her warmest coat

(Chorus)
And you ask, "What am I not doing?"
She says "Your voice cannot command.
In time, you will move mountains,
And it will come through your hands."

Still you argue for an option
Still you angle for your case
Like you wouldn't know a burning bush
If it blew up in your face
Yeah, we scheme about the future
And we dream about the past
When just a simple reaching out
Might build a bridge that lasts

(Chorus)
And you ask, "What am I not doing?"
She says "Your voice cannot command.
In time, you will move mountains,
And it will come through your hands."

So whatever your hands find to do
You must do with all your heart
There are thoughts enough
To blow men's minds and tear great worlds apart

There's a healing touch to find you
On that broad highway somewhere
To lift you high
As music flying
Through the angel's hair.

Don't ask what you are not doing
Because your voice cannot command
In time we will move mountains
And it will come through your hands

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

What Are Rights?

RIGHTS DEFINED Rights structure the forms of governments, the contents of laws, and the shape of morality as humans PERCEIVE THEM. To accept a set of rights is to approve a distribution of freedom and authority, and so to endorse a certain view of what may, must, and must not be done. (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) Rights are entitlements, usually of a legal or moral nature, (not) to perform certain actions or be in certain states, or entitlements that others (not) perform certain actions or be in certain states. The key to understanding the nature of a right is human perception. Disagreement is bound to occur as people base their understanding of rights on perceptions of their own time and place. For example, at one time slavery was both legal and considered moral treatment of blacks in the American South. Southerners had the rights to own slaves and even abuse them as property of genetic inferiority, not the obligation to respect them as human beings. Plantation owners perceived the right to own slaves as an accepted part of a thriving business and economic system. These businessmen endorsed slavery as vital to their survival as an entitlement of class. HUMAN RIGHTS Human rights refer to the "basic rights and freedoms to which all humans are ENTITLED." Examples of rights and freedoms which have come to be commonly thought of as human rights include civil and political rights, such as the right to life and liberty, freedom of expression, and equality before the law; and economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to participate in culture, the right to food, the right to work, and the right to education. (Houghton Miffin Company, 2006) Specific enumeration of rights accorded humans has historically differed greatly across space and time. Many times, the system of rights defined and accepted by one group has come into sharp and bitter conflict with that of other groups. In politics, where rights have historically been an important issue, the issuance of rights is normally addressed by the constitutions of the respective nations. The enforcement of international human rights law is the responsibility of the different Nation States (sovereign territorial units), and it's the primary responsibility of the State to make human rights a reality. There is currently no international court that upholds human rights law. Human rights laws are difficult to legally enforce due to absence of consensus , the lack of relevant national legislation or of bodies empowered to take legal action to enforce them. SOME HISTORY OF RIGHTS The history of human rights possibly began with Hammurabi's code about 4000 years ago and extended into laws of ancient Greece, where the concept of human rights began to take a greater meaning than the prevention of arbitrary persecution. Early human rights became synonymous with natural rights, or laws that reflect the natural order of the universe, essentially the will of the gods who control nature. Throughout most early history, the concepts of rights have been authoritarian and classified according to various criteria into successive levels in which different people get different rights, some more and some less than others. For example, the divine right of kings to hold absolute power over their subjects did not leave room for many rights to be granted to the subjects themselves. In the Middle Ages and later the Renaissance, the decline in power of the church led society to place more of an emphasis on the individual. This focus, in turn, caused the shift away from feudal and monarchist societies, letting individual expression flourish. (thinkquest.org) A COUPLE OF PARTICULAR VIEWS Jeremy Bentham Jeremy Bentham and the philosophy of utilitarianism (18th Century) argued that rights should be set on policy that would cause "the greatest good for the greatest number of people," or the principle of utility. Utilitarianism evaluates actions based upon their consequences. The relevant consequences, in particular, are the overall happiness created for everyone affected by the action. Bentham wrote in The Principles of Morals and Legislation:
"Nature has placed mankind under the governance of two sovereign masters, pain and pleasure. It is for them alone to point out what we ought to do, as well as to determine what we shall do. On the one hand the standard of right and wrong, on the other the chain of causes and effects, are fastened to their throne. They govern us in all we do, in all we say, in all we think." (Bentham, Jeremy, The Principles of Morals and Legislation (1789) Ch I, p. 1)
John Stuart Mills Bentham's philosophy on rights were expanded upon in John Stuart Mill's ideas. The overall aim of his philosophy is to develop a positive view of the universe and the place of humans in it, one which contributes to the progress of human knowledge, individual freedom and human well-being. Mill's On Liberty addresses the nature and limits of the power that can be legitimately exercised by society over the individual. One argument that Mill develops further than any previous philosopher is the harm principle that holds each individual has the right to act as he wants, so long as these actions do not harm others. According to Mill, "If the action is self-regarding, that is, if it only directly affects the person undertaking the action, then society has no right to intervene, even if it feels the actor is harming himself."( Mill, John Stuart "On Liberty" Penguin Classics, 2006, pages 90-91) He does argue, however, that individuals are prevented from doing lasting, serious harm to themselves or their property by the harm principle. Because no-one exists in isolation, harm done to oneself also harms others, and destroying property deprives the community as well as oneself. RIGHTS TODAY Governments, laws enacted by governments, and morality of societies differ greatly in their respect to certain rights. Even today, no universal agreement among citizens of the world exists. Bodies such as the United Nations set global guidelines and policies, but what may be "one man's justice" is "another man's injustice." The United Nations does not always succeed in correcting problems. Resistance to changing old policies and practices is great while interference between cultures is often discouraged. Rights, then, according to governing bodies, depend upon different accepted norms and the rationale of the times.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Everyone in the United States likes to think of personal rights as absolute. Not all personal rights afforded to those in the country are absolute. Actually, rights can be categorized according to their privilege. Absolute Rights First of all, people have some rights so basic that few would deny they must be absolute. They have the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. But, just as soon as one loses these rights, so does everyone else. Infringement upon one person's absolute rights essentially means the rights are negated to all. Drawing an analogy to the obligation affording these rights is the saying, "No one is free unless we are all free." If all species respond to any command that one simple command is to survive. Every individual has the right to survive, but every individual is faced with the possibility that even supreme rights are not absolute unless he/she is willing to fight for them. Therein lies a personal obligation to oppose tyranny to insure the existence of "absolute" status. The most agreed upon absolute right is the right of survival. Yet, in all those cases in which the law is either too slow, or too feeble to stay the hand of violence, survival may be taken away. Homicide is justifiable in every case in which it is rendered necessary in self-defense, against the person who comes to commit a known felony with force against one's person, or habitation, or property, or against the person or property of those who stand in near domestic relations. The absolute right of survival supersedes murder charges in such cases. However, were other people's natural rights defended by the United Nations during the genocide in Rwanda? This case-study demonstrates that absolute rights, which have an impressive pedigree in legal and philosophical scholarship, may be nothing more than theoretical ideals—they are non-existent in certain practice. This is, indeed, a sad state of affairs when concern for national interests overrides global pleas for help to provide basic absolute rights. Constitutional Rights This category of rights seems to draw the most attention from those who claim the government is taking away the rights of the individual. To the immature, these rights are natural, but actually they are not. Almost all Constitutional rights can be restricted given a sufficient governmental interest. After all, the government of the United States is based on principles "of the people, by the people, and for the people." All of the citizens of this country will never unanimously agree on Constitutional rights. First, the legal rights provided by the Constitution define the relationship between the government and the individual and not between individuals. However, the Constitution can be amended, or in case the government was ever overthrown, it could be discarded. Legal rights are created by law and thus are subject to law. If the law changes, so can the rights. For example, Freedom of Speech restricts the government's interference with the freedom of speech, but the freedom does not restrict an employer (private person) from such interference. Even the government can restrict Freedom of Speech given a compelling interest. Or, consider the Right to Bear Arms. The government may take this right away from felons, persons with certain mental problems, or others subject to certain court orders. And, a person with a demented mental state is not given the right to decide if they want to be locked up for treatment. ... So their Constitutional rights are not absolute to them at that time. Student’s Constitutional rights are not always guaranteed when they are in school. ... Another Constitutional right that is infringed upon in schools is the searching of lockers and students; this is a violation of personal privacy. In fact, the Constitution can be amended, or in case the government was ever overthrown, it could be discarded. Legal rights are created by law and thus are subject to law. If the law changes, so can the rights. Where are absolute Constitutional rights? Natural Rights Some people believe in something call "natural rights." Such "rights," they believe, come from God or are somehow inherent in one's status as a human being. Such "rights" are simply their beliefs. They may not be enforceable and may not provide justification for, nor restriction of, any action. Simply put, they are not rights but beliefs, and they are not necessarily absolute. Really, since man is a part of nature, is anything created by man therefore natural? For example, since people do not live in a vacuum, consider thievery. Does someone have a right to pick an apple and eat it if someone else owns the tree? What if that is the only source of food and he will die without it? Theft out of necessity breaks the belief that people should not steal. Yet, is this natural right absolute? The belief that people, as creatures of nature and God, should live their lives and organize their society on the basis of rules and precepts laid down by nature or God are often deemed natural rights. Ancient Greeks argued in support of the existence of natural rights that belonged equally to all men (notice- men, not women at the time) at birth and could not be taken away. However, not all men chose to live within the confines of the natural laws and presented threats to the liberties of the others. At this stage man entered into a social contract (compact) in which a state (government) was formed to guarantee the rights of the members of society. Should unorthodox natural rights such as religious belief in neglect of medical treatment be absolute? Some religious sects handle snakes and drink poison based on beliefs they interpret from the Bible. Should these rights be deemed absolute when a child is forced or coerced to practice such dangerous behavior? Those who believe in pure natural rights, in particular, consider these rights beyond the authority of any government or international body to dismiss. Rights, like ice cream, come in different flavors or forms. Whether man-given or God-given, the right is constantly under scrutiny depending upon circumstances of its application. Some would argue the American citizen has no absolute rights. These people say rights are never absolute because they change consistently throughout the course of time. Others don't think there is any right which can be reasonably made absolute without negating the right of another. Absolute covers a lot of territory.

Monday, July 20, 2009

American Legion Magazine Features

I decided to go straight to the source for some answers to the Legion stand on smoking. The Legion publishes a monthly magazine full of information vital to the members with a motto of "For God and Country Since 1919." I just wanted to see what may be relevant to the discussion of smoking in the publication. Here are excerpts from the August, 2009 American Legion Magazine: 1. In the article, "Attention, Couch Potatoes," physiologist Richard Cotton urges sedentary men ages 45 and older and women ages 55 and older or "anyone with two or more heart-disease risk factors (obesity, smoking, high blood pressure, diabetes, or family history of heart disease) should see a doctor. 2. In a health article, "Top Tips For Healthy Eyes," one of the tips is "Quit smoking. Smoking is harmful to the eyes and, even if you don't smoke, it is advisable to stay away from smoky environments." 3. The issue contained numerous advertisements in the for legal help with mesothelioma and lung cancer damages. 4. The issue contained an advertisement for a battery-powered, continuous flow oxygen concentrator. Of course, people with oxygen devices must not be close to flame, to fire, or to smoking. 5. The issue featured an advertisement tor Daduet, medication for elevated blood pressure and cholesterol. The American Diabetes Association reports that smoking increases cholesterol levels and the levels of some other fats in your blood as well as increasing blood pressure. 6. The issue had numerous advertisements for erectile dysfunction such as Vacurect, Viagra, Levitra, and Cialis. The American Diabetes Association reports that smoking can cause impotence. 7. The issue displayed a deluxe, full page advertisement for TheraSeed, a minimally invasive outpatient treatment for those with a prostate cancer diagnosis. Men with heavy smoking exposure also face a 60 percent increased risk of prostate cancer overall relative to nonsmokers. Compared to nonsmokers, current smokers experienced a 40 percent increase in the risk of prostate cancer. (Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention. July, 2003) 8. The article in the Living Well section of the issue was entitled, "How To Thrive In Spite of Diabetes." The article warns about taking care of high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and eye health in very specific terms. Needless to say, smoking for those with diabetes is very dangerous. According to The Diabetes Monitor, smoking and diabetes together make a person 11 times more likely to die of a heart attack or stroke. Smoking one cigarette cuts the body's ability to use insulin by 15%. People are twice as likely to have circulation and wound healing problem leading to leg and foot enfections, sometimes requiring amputation. And, smokerss with diabetes are more likely to develop nerve damage. 9. And, in the Commander's Message from National Commander David K. Rehbein, a quote stated: "As a new school year begins, I implore my fellow Legionnaires to make themselves available to schools, church groups and extracuricular programs for young children." I'm sure all of these activities are placing Legionnaires in smoke-free environments with American children. I have the issue of the magazine on hand for those who wish to verify its contents. I wonder when we are going to listen to our own instructions about the warnings of smoking. More troubling to me, when are smokers going to put the health and welfare of others above their own personal preferences? I think greed and personal inconsideration are vital avenues to explore for the answer.
The post "Smoking At the American Legion" generated tons of opinions. I thought I would share the comments with you. I have included all comments in an attempt to avoid any personal bias. Some very good points were considered in these comments. I hope only to provide information in an attempt to enlighten the public about smoking in public or private establishments. The choice to follow State law, inevitably, rests with the owners of these businesses. One thing is clear-- evidently enforcement is lacking.
If it's anything like Kentucky, the bar is only fined if someone reports the bar. Down here, they aren't patrolling for it. Although I do know one bar did get in trouble...they were selling $1 disposable ashtrays, and all the proceeds went towards the inevitable fine they would be getting. Pretty enterprising, but the officials down here were having none of it.
Personally I love it, it is nice to be able to go out and have a drink without smelling like a cigarette. If people need to smoke they can go outside. Also there are so many issues that have arisen from second hand and even third hand smoke. Such a great law. If I walk into a place that is not abiding then I just simply leave. I smoked for over 25 years until I gave it up a year ago this month. No way will the militay be smoke free in my lifetime. I believe 1/3 of the force smokes today and they've been trying to reduce those numbers for years. You take cig's away from a combat soldier and you'll create an animal. It is difficult enough trying to quit in the calmness of your home, it would be virtually impossible if someone is shooting at you. Like it or not, believe it or not, cig's are addicting and it's very difficult quitting. They've already made it difficult to smoke on base and bans are already in place in all facilities and have been for years.The price of cig's are just about the same as off base establishments. It is true at one time you could purchase cig's a lot cheaper at the Commissary but that changed in the 90s. Depending on the brand, you may or may not save a buck or two by purchasing on base. I do believe in smoke free environments though. I always tried to stay away from nonsmokers when I lit up. So far most establishments here in Columbus are doing fine with it. Most have a place to smoke out doors, covered patios with heaters in the winter, etc. Outside it doesn't bother me, inside it does. I too hate smelling like a cigarette when going out. I quite 13 years ago for a reason... (I am) waiting for the electric cigarette to catch on. saw it this weekend...its smokeless..no second hand smoke...,no junk going in your lungs...yet still has the nicotine for the cravings. can be smoked anywhere including airplanes...someone is about to be a bazillionaire... I get kinda mad when I see someone not following the smoking ban, and the fact that its not being enforced even makes me more furious. While one can argue that its their choice to smoke and they should be able to do it where they want to. There comes an issue of public health, safety and our constitutional right of the pursuit of happiness. There is a proven health risk to both smokers and none smokers especially when they are in an enclosure like a bar or restaurant. Not only is it unhealthy but it stinks, ruins that eating experience and stains the floors, ceilings, walls, and the clothing of all the people. Not to mention the constant exposure to the employees. If the smoking ban is not being enforced does that mean that its not safe for pregnant woman to go to these public places or is it that businesses don't care about the health and comfort of their clients. The law came here (Florida) about 5 years ago..it killed the hospitality industry...all the bar/restaurants had to build outside venues to accommodate. Several restaurants went out of business because they lost the smokers who stay longer and drink more. Pregnant women should not be in bars anyway..see above....There were a lot of rule breakers when it first started, but now everyone follows the rules. This is an Ohio state law. You can file a complaint by calling 1-866-559-6446 or email NoSmoke@odh.ohio.gov One question about pregnant woman in bars, why shouldn't they be there, it is there right to be a DD or hang out with friends if they want to, being at a bar does not mean you have to drink, second if the bar is to violent and not safe for her the cops should be called anyway. The smoking ban did shut down restaurants or bars, if so they where not being ran right, smoking should not determine the businesses profitability, the quality of products and services should keep the customers their spending money. Plus bars and restaurants are not required to provide a place for people to smoke it is the owners choice to make that investment. In reality that puts more money into the construction supply and labor sector of the economy.That has always bothered me. Being a Vet I don't see how that is being very supportive to us. One it harms our health and two there are much better things that money could be spent on to show us support. I think the legion should be smoke free just as a hospital is. The legion does many great things for those who serve and should be a safe healthy environment for volunteers and members to go and celebrate and support our Vets and serving members, not to mention their families. (I) was in a bar my last trip up there. There were four of us in the bar. Three of them smoked, including the bartender. No one seems to be enforcing it unless there is a grudge against the owners and the so many feet from the entrance is definitely not being enforced. I see people smoking right next to the door. Funny, I don't see any smokers commenting....I personally hate it and don not allow it in my house or car,haven't for years.I think most smokers are inconsiderate people and I think anyone smoking in a car with little kids should be arrested just like drunk driving. Poor babies can't breathe or even tell anyone how they feel.And if you are pregnant and smoke,shame on you. Give the baby to someone who thinks babies are more important than that nasty thing in your hand. I know someone will come on here and say something about drinking.Yes, I drink when I go out but I am not forcing someone sitting beside me to drink.In fact, half the friends at our regular table don't drink and none of them smoke.If my drink was taking someone's breath away, I would not do it. And I will not drive and drink.Though there are some people who can't drive and never drink a drop. And sleepy drivers are as bad as drunk drivers. I could never marry (or date) a smoker. Though I married one the first time around and was pregnant but luckily he was smart enough to not smoke around me. It just is not cool anymore. Wake up people. And you young girls out there that think it's cool, you are sooooo wrong. Guys do not like girls who smoke. Just ask them.... Smoking endangers everyone in the room, not just the smoker; drinking only endangers other people when the drinker drives or operates machinery, and that can be stopped-------big difference I hate cigarette smoke, and that's putting it lightly. Why should we suffer from second hand smoke because of other's choices? I was having my nails done two weeks ago, and the shop owner was going to let a client light up since there were just a few of us there. I was definitely going to say something, but the client's ride picked her up. People are entitled to whatever lifestyle they so choose, but shouldn't infringe on others in doing so. My opinion :) Oh,you just don't want to get ME started. I could go on and on. I HATE CIGARETTE SMOKE. I can sniff out a cigarette a mile away. People try to come in the store where I work with one in their pocket that they have pinched to put out and save. Well,it doesn't stop the smell and I tell them. Take it out of the store. No Smoking in here. Or they will lay one on the ledge of a brick outside the door to save it while they pick up their prescription. I go out and smash it while they are in the store and they probably wonder WTF. But,the smoke rolls right in the door and I hate it. Not to mention the ones who smoke and smell like they've been eating cigarettes. I know I'm gonna make some people mad here but geez, you stink and your fingers and nails are yellowed. And if you don't take a bath everyday and wash your clothes, man, you really stink and trust me, I will be spraying air freshener as soon as you leave. Smoke stinks but put that with not bathing and wearing clean clothes and OMG, you WILL make me sick. I don't know that smoking decreases stress levels but I do know that being placed in stressful situations increases the urge to smoke. It took several months to overcome the urge when feeling stressed. Like you, I agree, why have laws on the books and not enforce them. It's unfortunate but the dollar is a factor in almost any decision being made today. Even our clubs on base are now smoke free. They have very nice smoking areas outdoors but no smoking inside. Maybe some sort of compromise can occur. If not, I would gather up all the nonsmokers and find an establishment that wants your business. You don't even want to get me started on dirty people. What does it take to wash yourself every day? I mean really. Does your nose not work anymore? Do you not smell that nasty dirty man hair smell that reeks from you? Do you not feel the tobacco juice running down your chin and onto your shirt? Did you p__ or s__ your pants 5 days ago and haven't had a bath yet? And you want to hand me money from way down in your dirty pants pocket? And when was the last time you brushed your teeth? I know my breath is not sweet every second of the day but I do brush and floss and I worry about it. Some people just don't care and they are the ones that want to get right in your face....Oh, stop me here. I could go on all day but I think I'll go take a shower and brush my teeth and USE DEODORANT... Wow! Okay, I'll be the one lone smoker to add my two cents.. . I do smoke BUT I hate smelling like smoke, having it right in my face, etc. I agree with the ban actually. I don't mind going outside to smoke, I even go outside at home. Personally, I think all the whining about having to go outside is just laziness, drag your butt off your bar stool and think of the walk outside as your big chance at exercise. :) I'm all for the smoking ban but I'm not sure anyone is getting fined. If you want to smoke that's up to you but I don't want to smoke so I should have the same consideration, right? It's not a ban on smoking just a ban on smoking inside. I'm sick of hearing smokers whining about their rights being violated. You don't have a right to blow chemicals down my throat! I also am sick and tired of a certain smoker preaching to people about the dangers of white bread and sugar!!!!!WTF

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Smoking In the Military

Bobby McCarter, a retired veteran who served 20 years in the Navy, expresses his opposition to a complete ban on smoking in the armed services. McCarter says, “They need that cigarette break for stress relief. I’m totally against that, and I think the Pentagon should leave it alone.”

A tobacco ban would confront a military culture, in which "the image of the battle-weary soldier in fatigues and helmet, fighting for his country, has frequently included his lit cigarette."

True, troops worn out by repeated deployments often rely on cigarettes as a so-called "stress reliever." A study requested by the VA and Pentagon and conducted by the Institute of Medicine found that tobacco use in the military has increased after the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan began. Military deployment is associated with smoking initiation and, more strongly, with smoking recidivism, particularly among those with prolonged deployments, multiple deployments, or combat exposures.

The Defense Department already restricts smoking on military installations, much in the same way airports and other public buildings set aside designated smoking areas. However, restriction does not keep the addicted soldier from smoking.

Tobacco use costs the Pentagon $846 million a year in medical care and lost productivity, says the report, which used older data. The Department of Veterans Affairs spends up to $6 billion in treatments for tobacco-related illnesses, the study reports. The bill also represents 80 percent of the $5 billion annual cost of treating pulmonary disease among military retirees as directly attributable to smoking.

If the monetary costs of smoking don’t get the attention of the Pentagon officials, the report also identifies what it says is a “strong association between tobacco addiction and mental-health problems, among them mood disorders, schizophrenia and substance abuse” — not ideal states of health for military candidates.

The bottom line, the study says, is that while the Pentagon and the VA have made strides toward reducing smoking and chewing, “tobacco use continues to impair military readiness.”

Along with a phased-in ban, the report recommends requiring new officers and enlisted personnel to be tobacco-free, eliminating tobacco use on military installations, ships and aircraft, expanding treatment programs and eliminating the sale of tobacco on military property. "Any tobacco use while in uniform should be prohibited," the study says. Actual implementation of these requirements is expected to take many years.

But smoking in the military remains much more common than in the general public, the report finds — smokers have dropped to only about one in five Americans overall, but they make up more than one in three service members.

Smoking and Stress

In reality, people who smoke to reduce stress are only adding to their stress, according to a new review of psychological studies in the American Psychological Association's American Psychologist. Psychologist Andy Parrott, Ph.D., of the University of East London says the evidence shows that the apparent relaxant effect of smoking only reflects the reversal of the tension and irritability that develop during nicotine depletion. Far from acting as an aid for mood control, nicotine dependency seems to increase stress. An increase in anxiety results. Smoking and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder According to a study published on the British Medical Journal website, a threefold increase in new cases of self-reported post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms among combat-exposed military personnel since 2001 has occurred. New onset post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms or diagnosis is reported by up to 87 per 1000 combat-deployed personnel and up to 21 per 1000 non-combat deployed personnel.

VA officials say treating PTSD and getting veterans to stop smoking are both important health issues. One study finds that people who are dependent on nicotine are twice as likely to develop PTSD following exposure to a traumatic event.

Also, the Department of Defense Center for Deployment Health Research (Naval Health Research Center, San Diego, California 2008) finds prevention programs should focus on the prevention of smoking relapse during or after deployment.

Combat exposure has been critically assessed and new onset post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms have been measured using recognized criteria. Other information, such as cigarette smoking and problem alcohol drinking, have also been recorded in the research. Findings include: (1) New onset symptoms are proportionately higher among participants who are female, divorced, enlisted, and in those who report being a current smoker or problem drinker at baseline. (2) For military women, stress associated with being a woman in the military is predictive of illicit drug use and cigarette use. (3) More effective stress management strategies may need to be implemented for military men to reduce the link between stress and heavy alcohol use, illicit drug use, and smoking. (The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 1999) According to a current report on MSNBC, reaching for a cigarette to cope with a flashback is all too common among sufferers of post-traumatic stress disorder. The nicotine hit may feel good but scientists say its brain action probably makes their PTSD worse in the long run. Although PTSD patients say a cigarette helps their mood when they're having symptoms, the extra attention may be reinforcing bad memories.

"If you think about your traumatic event and you smoke your cigarette, you can think about it even better," explains the VA's Beckham. PTSD specialist Dr. Jean Beckham, a psychologist at the Durham, N.C., Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

Certainly, quitting the smoking habit will help PTSD sufferers, not make their pain worse. According to studies (American Journal of Psychiatry 162:1311-1319, July 2005) stopping smoking is not associated with worsening symptoms of PTSD.

Some Curious Current Policy

"The military complicates attempts to curb tobacco use by subsidizing tobacco products for troops who buy them at base exchanges and commissaries," says Kenneth Kizer, a committee member and architect of California's anti-tobacco program.

Seventy percent of profits from tobacco sales — $88 million in 2005 — pays for recreation and family support programs, according to a study by Kizer.

Conclusions

Does smoking contribute to the performance of an active service person or to the elimination of stress for either an active service person or a military veteran? In other words, is Bobby McCarter correct in saying that smoking gives the armed services needed stress relief? If you answer "yes," you must believe that a cigarette is the best means of delivering nicotine and the least intrusive method of that delivery. Remember, all people react differently under stress. We must not infringe on non-smokers who stress when those around them smoke.

The general misconception of smoking is that a cigarette helps in calming calm people down. Stress in not reduced due to smoking. On the contrary, smoking a cigarette maintains the reducing level of nicotine in the blood that makes people feel relieved. Why doesn't a nicotine patch or gum work the same way? Maybe a nicotine injection or drink would deliver this relief to those who are addicted. Does the service provide spitoons for those who chew tobacco or take snuff?

Strong leadership could make the military tobacco-free in five to 10 years, according to Kenneth Kizer. President Obama, he says, could set an example for the military by ending his own smoking habit once and for all. Last month, Obama said he is "95% cured" but "there are times when I mess up" and smoke.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Smoking at the American Legion

Sometimes issues can get so confusing. I would love to give you a little background on one for this blog entry. My dad sold cigarettes for R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company for thirty years. I grew up with a family of smokers: my dad, my mother, and my brother (Dad is deceased, and both Mom and Brother have quit smoking.) When I was very young, my dad had me promise him I would not smoke until I was at least 21 years old. I didn't and never have smoked, and I am now 58.

I also am a member of a local American Legion Post that banned smoking when a new Ohio law went into effect. I was very proud of our post for committing to the stand, but just recently (due to loss of revenue) the post started smoking despite the ban. I must admit I have some selfish reasons for my stand, but I hate the smoke: health concerns, eye irritation, odor on clothes, lack of mannerly consideration for others. Let me take you through the issue.

Ohio voters approved the indoor smoking ban in November 2006, making Ohio the first Midwestern state and the first tobacco-growing state to enact such a ban. Under certain conditions, private residences; family-owned businesses without non-family employees; certain areas of nursing homes; outdoor patios; and some retail tobacco stores are exempt. By low, all other establishments must obey the ban.

The penalties for breaking the law follow. Businesses: Warning letter, first violation; $100, second violation; $500, third violation; $1,000, fourth violation; and $2,500, fifth and subsequent violations. Note: fines may be doubled for intentional violations at the discretion of the enforcement entity and may be assessed on a daily basis for continuing violations. Individuals: Warning letter; first violation; $100, second and subsequent violations. The retaliation against the Complainant is outlined: Warning letter, first violation; $1,000, second violation; $2,500 third and subsequent violations.

The proprietors' obligations under the smoking ban are essentially threefold: (1) prohibit smoking, (2) remove all ashtrays and other smoking receptacles, and (3) post No-Smoking signs with the toll-free enforcement number 1-866-559-OHIO (6446).

Many people complain that Issue 5 was written so ambiguously that many people became confused and voted contrary to their will in 2006. Although public attention to the issue was hammered months before the election, evidently, some did not understand the far-reaching effects of the smoking ban. I have never heard of another issue turned law refuted with ignorance.

According to legion officials where I attend, the ban is costing them business and quite frankly intruding on their ability to run their own business and their own post. Many legion members feel that since they fought for the freedoms of all, only to come home to the slow but steady erosion of their own freedoms, they should be able to smoke in their own clubs. In fact, many were introduced to smoking in the service and actually blame the government for their habit. Maybe some angry veterans should tilt with federal, not state, government policy.

Would it surprise people to know that currently the U.S. military is handing out a sample pack of cigarettes to Iraqis. The packs contain a phone number citizens can use to report on terrorist activities. No brand or source of the cigarettes was mentioned. And, the long-standing military tradition of cheap cigarettes in military stores persists because of politics in the U.S. military sales system and tobacco industry pressures, according to ABC Television and a new UCSF study. Researchers Ruth Malone, RN, PhD, and Elizabeth Smith, PhD, say a big part of the problem is the cheap cigarettes made available to our service men and women.

One legion member put the smoking ban rather bluntly: "The handwriting is on the wall. This is knee-jerk anti-smokers who never paid the price to belong here." The underlying intent is "Let them go somewhere else," a comment especially pointed at members of the Sons of the American Legion and the Ladies Auxiliary, two legion service groups that did not enter actual service. "The price" refers to smoking American Legion card holders per se.

Reportedly, the legion bar I attend is losing considerable money to other establishments across town that refuse to enforce the smoking ban. Many of these people are gamblers and smokers who play Ohio Keno and buy instant rip tickets from the establishment. They can easily enter another legion in town that has never enforced the ban and do their gambling, smoking, and drinking.

In fact, most other clubs in the area have defied the smoking ban. At my legion, until recently, smoking had been allowed only outside the building, but recently that policy changed. The board decided to allow smoking again in the bar as a necessity to continue operations. People continue to smoke unless the facility opens events to serve meals (during certain hours) to the general public. They are not allowed to use regular ashtrays, but pay $1.00 for a can to dispose of their ashes. Evidently, ashtrays are too incriminating to display. Rather odd logic -- defy the law with conditions? Shame on them a lot and us a little?

Public health groups like SmokeFree Ohio and the Ohio Restaurant Association -- the latter a vociferous opponent of the 2006 ban -- remain united in opposition to Senate Bill 346, a measure backed by some veteran's groups, bar owners and others that would allow smoking in some family owned businesses and private clubs. A similar measure in the state House of Representatives would also provide an exemption for stand-alone bars.

Why isn't enforcement happening? Let me give you one Ohio County's dilemma as a possible answer. In Hamilton County, the first several months of enforcement required investigation of more than 300 complaints. Between visits and paperwork, the county spent more than 400 man-hours enforcing the ban, yet only three bars were fined for a total of $300. The returns of enforcement were pretty fruitless.

A Few Simple Facts That Should Be Considered in This Volatile Issue:

1. According to statistician Stanton Glantz, for ten years an Associate Editor of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, a recent California study revealed a six-month ban on smoking in all public places slashed the number of heart attacks in a US town by almost a half. The researchers attribute the dramatic drop to the "near elimination" of harmful effects of "second-hand" smoke - passive smoking.

2. "This striking finding suggests that protecting people from toxins in second-hand smoke not only makes life more pleasant, it immediately starts saving lives," Glantz says. The researchers claim the study is the first to show that smoke-free policies rapidly reduce heart attacks, as well as having long-term benefits.

3. Richard Hurt, an internist who heads the Mayo Clinic's Nicotine Dependence Center, has conducted research showing that bans decrease the overall number of cigarettes people smoke and in some cases, actually result in people quitting. "If you're in a place where smoking is allowed, your outside world is hooked to the receptors in your brain through your senses: your sight, smell, the smoke from someone else's tobacco smoke or cigarette. That reminds the receptors about the pleasure of smoking to that individual, and that's what produces the cravings and urges to smoke," Hurt explains. A smoke-free environment encourages smokers to reduce smoking or quit altogether. 4. Hurt adds that bans help decrease the urge to smoke in another way: They de-normalize it. For example, where smoking is considered the "norm" — as it was in so many countries in Europe for so long — more people smoke. In places where smoking is no longer the "norm"— in California, for example — there are fewer smokers. 5. Additionally, a survey conducted in August 2008 by SmokeFreeOhio shows that voters knew exactly what they were voting for by approving Issue 5. Ninety-seven percent of Ohioans who supported the law were confident they knew what they were voting for. Furthermore, 72% of voters agree that employees in private clubs should be protected from secondhand smoke in their workplace. Two years after the Smoke Free Workplace Act went into effect, nearly seven out of 10 voters approve of Ohio’s smoke-free law. Across party and gender lines, more voters support the law today than voted for the law. 6. Very simply, going against voters' wishes makes a mockery of the voting process. 7. If business is as bad as establishments claim, perhaps it's because they haven't reached out and promoted their establishments to nonsmokers. 8. Smokers have an addiction and some are vindictive. If they don't get their way, they tend to punish others. How about the veteran legion members who want to attend a club but who suffer from emphysema, who are cancer survivors, who suffer from heart damage, who suffer from cataracts or eye irritation, or who are currently on oxygen machines? Ramps and other safe access for handicapped veterans are legislated measures, yet many could care less about second-hand and third-hand smoke damage. 9. Some people will try to smoke in bars when they are intoxicated because alcohol obviously lowers consideration for social norms and laws. This can cause serious problems that will lead to a lot of confrontations and disorderly conduct. Many say they crave a cigarette most when drinking alcohol. It's kind of like enforcing a peeing and non-peeing area in the local swimming pool. Smoke has no boundaries and goes where it can, along with all of its deadly chemicals. Ventilation systems cannot take out all of the harmful substances completely and it is estimated that the workers in smoking environments are 4-6 times more likely to develop cancer than workers who work in smoke-free work places. 10. Various studies have shown some of the hidden benefits to businesses with smoking bans include reduced employee absenteeism, reduced insurance costs, and reduced cleaning and maintenance costs.

11. Consistency is lacking in a national legion policy on smoking. In one state instance, current law requires clubs with paid employees to obtain a "yes" vote from a majority of its ENTIRE MEMBERSHIP before smoking can be allowed. 12. Most interesting, the American Legion supports many youth programs, specifically a program that identifies and encourages young people not to experiment with so-called Gateway Drugs. Yet, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, facts show that most drug users begin with alcohol and nicotine before marijuana -- usually before they are of legal age." (2007, National Survey on Drug Use and Health) The survey continues, "People who abuse drugs are also likely to be cigarette smokers. More than two-thirds of drug abusers are regular tobacco smokers, a rate more than double that of the rest of the population." "In 2007, among recent initiates aged 12 to 49, the average age of first cigarette use was 16.9 years, similar to the average in 2006 (17.1 years). In 2007, the rate of current illicit drug use was almost 9 times higher among youths aged 12 to 17 who smoked cigarettes in the past month (47.3 percent) than it was among youths who did not smoke cigarettes in the past month (5.4 percent)." (2007, National Survey on Drug Use and Health) 13. Some false logic has been applied to appease smokers: "The smoking ban is taking away our freedom, because the government is putting limitations on where we can use a legal substance," they say. Yet, Jack Daniels is a legal substance but the government doesn't allow a person to drink it in excess and drive a car. Conceal and carry of firearms is legal but most public facilities ban firearms regardless of a permit. Freedom of speech is legal, but a person can't incite a riot by yelling "Fire!" in a crowded building. 14. To assess whether the El Paso smoking ban affected restaurant and bar revenues, the Texas Department of Health (TDH) and CDC analyzed sales tax and mixed-beverage tax data during the 12 years preceding and 1 year after a smoking ban was implemented. The report determined that no statistically significant changes in restaurant and bar revenues occurred after the smoking ban took effect.

15. Ohio allows employees and members, smoking and nonsmoking, their legal rights. The Ohio law states that “No person or employer shall discharge, refuse to hire, or in any manner retaliate against an individual for exercising any right, including reporting a violation, or performing any obligation under this chapter.” Because this language gives employees enforceable legal rights, it effectively creates a new employee cause of action for discrimination. Accordingly, an employee or applicant who is treated differently because he insists on a smoke-free workplace environment is entitled to his day in court. With economics and people being what they are, lawsuits are going to be filed. (Incidentally, I was just told the other night by a patron that if I wanted to continue DJing, I should not complain about smoking in the club.)

16. And lest anyone think that the no-smoking ban has created a cottage industry of tattletales, here’s reality: Since May 2007, there have been a mere 541 complaints filed in Mahoning County, Ohio. Indeed, the number has tapered off over time to an average of one or two a week — and most are from a few places. People who report smoking ban violations are not criminals or tattletales. The reality is that nothing is being done. What does this say for the competency of the Public Health Officials?

Local health departments do not have the option of turning a blind eye to the complaints filed. Warning letters are meant to encourage business owners to voluntarily end illegal smoking. But once they’re on the health department’s radar screen, there should be no doubt about what will happen next.

Smoking related illnesses are a substantial health problem and second-hand smoke represents a significant public health hazard. There is no such thing as inhaling just a little bit of secondhand smoke without risk. As a result, the current smoking ban appropriately puts the health of Ohioans above all else.

But, in truth, this issue is not about health at all. It is a MONEY issue. Mom and pop clubs are crying now with loss of revenue and hard times. The only answer to the problem is SACRIFICE. Didn't the mom and pop retail businesses complain about the Walmart explosion? Is smoking a service the American Legion should PROVIDE at a significant cost to others? The answer is found in the ALMIGHTY DOLLAR.

Last thoughts from CNN News and the Department of Veterans Affairs:

A new study commissioned by the Pentagon and the Department of Veterans Affairs recommends a complete ban on tobacco, which would end tobacco sales on military bases and prohibit smoking by anyone in uniform, not even combat troops in the thick of battle.

According to the study, tobacco use impairs military readiness in the short term. Over the long term, it can cause serious health problems, including lung cancer and cardiovascular disease. The study also says smokeless tobacco use can lead to oral and pancreatic cancer.