For you, that might be true. I don't think you are quite grasping the level of distress that those of us who are
not like you go
through when our neurochemical balance is disrupted.
When you are curled up in a ball, you don't begin to use up all of those 96 square feet. When you are crying your eyes out, and trying to think of the least painful way of committing suicide, you aren't concerned about creature comforts. You don't even want to get up from the bed, much less drive to Walmart to
buy a six-pack.
I still think most people, smokers included, would miss their freedom and their friends and families more than they miss cigarettes. I have a friend who spent about 10 months in a federal prison. He was a PAD+ smoker when he went in, as well as a chronic ......... smoker. He told me about all the things he missed when he was in there, and all the things he hated about prison, if mentioned at all, smoking both
tobacco and ......... were at the bottom of his list. Foremost he missed his freedom and friends, beyond that he was worried about the gangs and not belonging. He started up both tobacco and pot shortly after getting out, then about two years later he managed to give up both cold turkey, after about 13-14 years addicted.
I know I would miss my wife and son more than I would miss nicotine. I would miss the internet and a comfortable bed more than nicotine.
The fact is, when you go to prison, you lose about 99.9% of the privileges you have if you are free. Smoking is one on a list of a million. I can't say that smoking should be allowed in prison. Maybe nic gum or patches, maybe not even those. If you let the smokers smoke, then you have to let the alcoholics have their "right" to drink. Then do you have to let the shopaholics out on weekends to go to Macy's?
I have been/am addicted to nicotine. Not as badly as most. Is it a right? As much as it is a right for the unincarcerated to do their grocery shopping at Walmart at 3 am. In prison, smoking isn't a right.
It would probably be in the prison's best interest to provide a nicotine replacement that doesn't pollute the indoor air like smoking does. Keeping violent criminals from having withdrawal induced meltdowns would likely make prisons safer and saner for everyone including the guards. Even then there are logistical problems. Patches and gum would become forms of currency in prisons like cigarettes were in the past and coffee and sugar are now. Inmates would have to have the funds to purchase them, and those replacements are more expensive than tobacco, making it even more difficult for inmates to afford.