Update on yesterday's post.
Following a report in the Sunday Times Scotland that featured calls for smoking to be banned in the home, with the emphasis on social housing, the Herald asked Forest to comment.
Here's our full response:
"Banning smoking in any home would be a gross invasion of people's privacy.
"Targeting social housing is particularly obnoxious because it penalises unfairly those who can't afford to buy their own home.
"Prohibiting smoking at home would be almost impossible to enforce but it could create a snooper's charter encouraging people to snitch on neighbours they don't like.
"What happens if someone is caught and prosecuted? The consequences, including possible eviction, are out of all proportion to the alleged offence.
"The puritanical health lobby needs to get a grip and realise there are far worse things in the world than smoking.
"If campaigners really want to reduce children's exposure to tobacco smoke at home they should lobby government to allow separate smoking rooms in pubs and clubs.
"Tobacco is a legal product and adults must to be allowed to smoke somewhere without constant harassment and discrimination."
A substantial part of that quote is featured in today's paper under the headline, 'Smokers fuming over plan to ban tenants from lighting up at home'. If and when the report goes online I'll add a link.
We subsequently sent a press release to other Scottish media with the result that Forest has also been quoted in the Daily Record and Scottish Daily Mail.
Interestingly the Record (which supports most anti-smoking legislation) has also published a leader urging caution – Smoking ban in people's private homes is a step too far – but we must educate on dangers to kids' health.
Meanwhile the Herald quotes a Scottish Government spokesman who says:
"We have no plans to ban smoking in people's homes. We'll continue to explore other ways to support out ambition of creating a tobacco-free generation by 2034."
Ironically ASH Scotland is employing the 'choice' argument. Instead of joining calls for a blanket ban on smoking in the home (a policy that even the Record describes as 'Big Brother legislation'), CEO Sheila Duffy talks of giving tenants a "choice" of smoking or non-smoking accommodation.
"We would like people to have the choice to live in smoke free accommodation. At the moment there's not an option."
This is so disingenuous I don't know where to begin but it reminds me of those anti-smoking campaigners who, 20 years ago, said they wanted to give people a choice of smoking or non-smoking areas in pubs and restaurants.
I had no problem with that, nor did I have a problem with giving people a choice of smoking and non-smoking pubs.
Eventually however the same people who began by calling for choice demanded the eradication of smoking in every single pub and club in the country.
In fact, as soon as legislation was introduced everyone was denied choice – even belligerent anti-smokers – because if there's only one option the state has made the choice for us.
Imagine a one-party state where you can vote but there's only one party to vote for. There's a word for that.
Likewise, when tobacco control campaigners talk about "choice", what they mean is the complete opposite. In their mad, bad, authoritarian world, "choice" means no choice at all.
Everywhere – workplace, the home – has to be non-smoking in order to give non-smokers a "choice".
But what about the nine million people who smoke, one in six of the adult population? Should they be denied choice, even in their own homes?
Increasingly tobacco control campaigners are behaving like autocrats and dictators, bending even the language to suit their smoke-free agenda.
The good news is, when even the Daily Record recognises the danger ('This Big Brother legislation on lighting up would take the power of the state into living rooms.'), there's a glimmer of hope we can turn the tide against this aggressive, oppressive lobbying.
Update: You can read the Herald report here (Should smoking be banned in the home?). Rather chuffed that it features my full quote including:
"The puritanical health lobby needs to get a grip and realise there are far worse things in the world than smoking.
"Tobacco is a legal product and adults must to be allowed to smoke somewhere without constant harassment and discrimination."