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posted by janrinok on Friday February 16 2018, @05:07AM   Printer-friendly
from the all-those-in-favour,-please-cough dept.

Austria has one of the highest rates of smoking and youth smoking among high income countries, and that might not be changing anytime soon:

Many Western countries have banned smoking in bars and restaurants, but Austria is bucking that trend. Under a law passed in 2015, Austria was due to bring in a total ban this May, but now its new government of the conservatives and the far-right Freedom Party have scrapped the plans.

The move was spearheaded by the leader of the Freedom Party, Austria's Vice Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache, himself a smoker, who told parliament last month that it was about freedom of choice. He said restaurants should be free to decide if they want to have smoking sections, where "a citizen has the possibility to decide perhaps to enjoy a cigarette or a pipe or a cigar with their coffee".

The move has horrified Austria's medical establishment. Dr Manfred Neuberger, professor emeritus at the Medical University of Vienna, says it is "a public health disaster".

"The decision is irresponsible. It was a victory for the tobacco industry. The new government made Austria into the ashtray of Europe."

Meanwhile, the country is considering buying more jet fighters, recruiting more police, defunding its public broadcaster, and examining its past.


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  • (Score: 2) by Anal Pumpernickel on Saturday February 17 2018, @05:16AM

    by Anal Pumpernickel (776) on Saturday February 17 2018, @05:16AM (#639220)

    Are you also uncomfortable with the government making laws about attending public events nude?

    Absolutely. Why should the government force people to wear clothing just because some people are offended by nudity? You posed this question without even once stopping to think if the laws you're referencing are valid to begin with, as if you just implicitly accept the status quo. Wearing particular articles of clothing is an act of expression, so I don't see how wearing no clothing is not. Prohibitions on public nudity violate the first amendment and basic ethical principles.

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