“I, Smoker”: Fighting the Politics of Fear
By
Kevin Mulvina
We
live in strange times. In the forefront of conventional wisdom is the following
notion: smokers are weak and dependent. Reality reveals however they may be the
only ones in society not lead by the principles of fear. We looked at the risks
and walked right through them. The impression we get nothing in return is
absurd. We are the one group in society to be feared, even our opinions are
shunned as connected to some industry which feeds only” flaw “. The
supply of a product which is entirely legal to purchase and use.
The
nanny nation comprised of the truly coddled and weak now fear even our scent. It
prefers the smell and safety of burning oil products. It covets air miles cards
and pays daily tithes to the banks. It seeks out chances to buy a prized
product which sparks excitement because it includes the name “new”. A nation
composed of people led to believe they will never die or succumb to disease if
they yield to the sum of all fears.
The
hopelessly naïve, by their own choosing, follow the hopelessly greedy. Those
who demand we live as frightened mice. A measure of their lack of integrity is
seen in their back door campaigns too fearful to ban tobacco in spite of an
ability to easily do so. Far better to sell alternatively addictive gateway
products and increase the overall market. Sold with endorsements from the state
purse and of the very charity groups who created the science of smoker hatred.
Cowards intent to sneak around creating science equating risk to cause and
trendy phrases to undermine our dominance.
While
we laughed at their tactics, they were able to grow in popularity by conning
others into supporting their vision of weak begetting weaker, as if that could
make them stronger or more resilient.. Society battering itself until all that
remains is a watered down version of what it once was: strong and audacious,
brave and passionate. Canadians watch, with little voice and less recognition
of their own humanity, while the new prohibitionists stumble around fighting
over what will be restricted next. The measures of real risk, or reductions of real
risk, are debates which remain out of bounds, less we start to see some cracks
in the statocratic stats. Much better to maintain the more dangerous illusions
allowing us to die off in silence, protecting only the science that can make us
believe.
Smokers
have among them the most inventive, the most creative and the most dynamic of
personalities. Without them we would not have the art, music, literature,
or philosophy that is the soul to society’s sinews. Those who chose to smoke
seemed always to be challenging established norms and tore right through
superstition and common belief. The aging process may well cut our longevity
due to our choice but that is a choice we assume for ourselves. No one has a
right to protect those who do not seek that protection. Helping little old
ladies across the street can be seen as noble, unless that is not where she
wanted to go, which could be defined as something much less than noble.
When
we lived rejecting fear, life was a much more enjoyable ride. Living fast and
dying young has its advantages. Those are choices freedom affords us all. And
as Simone Weil has written, “
Once
smokers were a majority, now we are not. This constriction parallels the
expansion of collectivist thinking. Our individual weaknesses seek comfort in
communal “norms”. A mindset that has often been the precursor to the downfall
of great civilizations. Few in our society see little to oppose today. A
prelude to the loss of all hope.
We
are a dependant and weak people. Our leaders rise to the top by saying little
and doing less. Running between the raindrops garnering status and privilege.
Relying on the efficiencies of advertising that have now become the greatest
threat to the consequence of our individuality. Power brokers grow their
influence through slogans and soundbites. They want
to be the will and the way. “We are all doomed by green house gases if we
don’t change their ways”. ”Globalization is inevitable”. “We don’t live in silos”.In fact we live in self-constructed cages of the
mind imprisoning our states of consciousness. We fear speech, thought even
assembly. People are encouraged to turn on each other for the slightest mater
of “political incorrectness”. Subliminal Stalinism triumphant.
We
smokers chose to live outside the rules of fear the illusionists sell. Smokers total
numbers haven’t declined, only our prevalence in society has changed. The total
population numbers have risen but our numbers have stayed constant. Surprised?
Don’t be. This is just another reality check challenging ongoing CW. A real inconvenient
truth.
Society
is taught to rage against those who smoke, embracing traditional hatreds
against non-conformists. But we make our own fun. We date the best people. We don’t
live in fear. We live full and productive lives. The cowards dread every
morning. The risk takers awake to seek out new challenges. Many among us have
been robbed of dignity and honor being conditioned by deliberate government
social engineering.We are told we are less than what
we are. Spoken about as a disease which needs to be cured. The power of mass
media often leads society to fight many straw men. Today we need to rage
against the real enemy. Those leaders of coercive greed and their manipulative campaigns
that imprison us in the politics of fear.