Question Author
Squad, I've said this on here before, more than once, but just for you, here goes. In 1949, 81% of the male population were smokers. 62% of the female population were smokers. Both my parents were smokers. My mother carried me and two other siblings through pregnancy whilst being a smoker. We were born into the world of inescapable passive smoking, because of smoking aunts, uncles, grandparents, teachers, public transport and other public venues. We had to endure long, cold winters of heavy smogs; rationing and austerity.
Where is the legacy of all that? It wasn't just for 2 or 3 years. It was from birth until the Clean Air Act with smogs, and much later with passive smoking. Hardly any fresh fruit until 1954 when rationing ended. That was lucky wasn't it? We are going to live longer than any previous generation and be a burden on the NHS, but if passive smoking is so dangerous and harmful, why are us "Baby Boomers" going to live longer? Has passive smoking only become harmful in recent years just because that nutcase Roy Castle said so? What about everyone else who worked in pubs and nightclubs? Apart from that, everything's fine thanks!