About a year ago, I filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on behalf of my daughter (then 5) the first of its kind in the nation lawsuit involving secondhand smoke. I sued the owners of the Oakwood apartment complex in Woodland Hills, where she has lived her entire life, to require them to prohibit as a public nuisance smoking in the outdoor common areas of the complex, where even today smokers arrayed around the swimming pool, etc. can make the facilities we pay rent for unusable to her.
The trial court dismissed the suit, and that decision is now on appeal. I am somewhat confident as an attorney that the state court of appeal will reverse the trial court and revive the lawsuit. But the trial judge's decision only underscored -- for about the 300th time in my experience regarding the issue -- the need for a "give no quarter" approach at every legislative level to eliminating the involuntary exposure to secondhand smoke wherever people have a right to gather. Because the flimsy, reflexive justifications for not doing so have become enmeshed in the fabric of American culture. And the mythology (largely employed by ersatz libertarians on the right) that government is controlling your life and denying your freedom when it tells you you can't smoke somewhere still has cachet.
Even a seasoned trial judge viewed the issue through the false prism of competing "rights": those of the smoker and the person that doesn't want to breathe what all credible science has established as the toxic byproduct of that activity. And almost everyone, I would venture to say, has encountered the recalcitrant smoker that refuses to refrain from lighting up with the proffered justification, "I've got a right to smoke here."
But there is no right to smoke -- at least insofar as the term right has legal meaning, and isnt just being used colloquially to mean, "something I want to do whenever and wherever I feel like it."
A right must have a recognized textual source, e.g., a constitution, statute, judicial decision, contract. The test is whether there is a corresponding obligation and limitation on the part of the government to enable you to exercise that right. Now who can cite to a single ruling by any judicial or quasi-judicial body in favor of a smoker challenging a smoking restriction?
The fact is that for decades smokers dictated what everyone else in their vicinity had to put up with, be exposed to, and risk. Needless to say, this socially sanctioned behavior has led to a sense of entitlement in many smokers approaching that of Mitt Romney. It will continue to take the kind of backlash that makes some smokers feel aggrieved to disabuse them of these fallacies -- and embolden non-smokers to stand up for their rights. Far from being time to step back (based on a quirky anecdote at that), it is time to become even more relentless in driving the effects of smoking exclusively into the confines of the smoker's lungs.