To mark the 70th anniversary of the publication of George Orwell's 1984,
Mayor Olivia Nutter today signed an executive order banning cigarette
smoking within the city limits. The ban extends to e-cigs, but not
marijuana.
The mayor exempted new postal zone 19019 - carved out
of Eastwick and Paschall - as a "refuge" where smokers will be forced to
live. It is adjacent to the carcinogenic oil refineries.
Nutter
said "19019 will be known as Tobacco Town," objected to opponents' use
of the term "ghetto" and said ordering smokers to wear a bright yellow
"S" on their clothing was nothing more than a "health warning for
nonsmokers to stay away."
Asked why she didn't simply ban
cigarettes, the mayor said that would be an "infringement of civil
liberties, and besides, we use cigarette-tax money to run the schools
and to fund food stamps for smokers."
Food stamps have been
provided since 2016, when all American cigarette smokers were fired
under the "We Will Make You Healthy or Kill You Act."
Ten years
earlier, Westgate Resorts, the largest private employer in central
Florida, fired employees who smoked. "When I found out it was legal to
discriminate against smokers, I put the policy in place," Westgate
president and CEO David Siegel said.
Other employers followed suit, saying that firing smokers would reduce their health-care costs.
Using
the same rationale, employers then began to fire fat employees,
resulting in a wave of American unemployment and more visas for skinny
foreigners.
The mass firings followed earlier actions banning
smoking in workplaces, restaurants, bars, college dorms and public
housing. The housing ban was attacked as discrimination against the
poor, but it survived court challenges.
Next came smoking bans in
condominiums, with smoker/owners being grandfathered, but prohibiting
sale to smokers. Under the Big Brother Act, potential purchasers were
required to take a urine test to detect nicotine. That led to the
scandal of a black market in clean urine, organized by Lance Armstrong.
Smoking
was considered so pernicious that after banning smoking in cars
carrying children, child-custody laws were rewritten to award custody to
the nonsmoking parent. When both parents were smokers, children were
turned over to the Department of Human Services.
In Philadelphia,
the original author of anti-smoking legislation was Michael Nutter (the
current mayor's father), who banned smoking in workplaces and bars under
the heading of the "Clean Indoor Air Worker-Protection Law."
His
last "smoking" gun was an executive order in 2014 banning smoking in all
city parks, including the 9,200-acre Fairmount Park.
At the time,
he gave three reasons: 1) To protect the environment from cigarette
butts; 2) to protect people from secondhand smoke; 3) to help people
quit.
Critics said that littering was already against the law and
that ashtrays - like trash cans for other litter - could relieve the
butt problem; that the vast expanse of the park system protects people
from secondhand smoke, and that quit-smoking programs (which the city
offers) were better options. But they were easily brushed aside by the
majority.
"It remains legal to discriminate against smokers," Mayor Olivia said. "And Philly will."
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