www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/
jemma-wayne/smoking-ban-uk-_b_4895623.html
This is about as extreme as it gets. Note the invocation of THS ("third hand smoke") and the assumption that there is also third-hand-vapor.
Sleight-of-hand? Sure, but if Glantz can do that in a peer-reviewed JAMA paper (see yesterday's news roundup), then we should give the good author her justly-earned props. The fine art of propaganda requires no doctorate. Just sit back, relax, and enjoy the rhetorical artistry
I'm guessing that the writer mainly wishes to promote her new book - the title and publication date of which are helpfully displaed above the piece. We're bombarded with so many different media sources in today's world, that you gotta hand it to someone who can so adroitly explore the outer limits of what can be published in a major outlet.
Most of us are not likely to come face-to-face with a terrorist, a bank robber, or a child molester. But we all meet smokers (and vapers) every day. The joy of looking down upon, deriding, and even hating someone else in person, -- along with the knowledge that they deserve it, and we're all doing them a big favor (plus protecting children to boot) -- just couldn't be more gratifying.
Who says "hate is not a family value?" It's delicious. It's helping to make the world a better place. And it just feels so-o good!
That said, I think she's saying what many folks genuinely do believe - namely that smoking and anything that "looks like smoking" is and ought to be regarded as both immoral and threatening by society at large. The analogy to drunk driving is extremely shrewd: it goes far, but not "too" far, and grabs the reader by the subconscous.
Remember that name: Jemma Wayne. She's got what it takes to go far. "Brilliant" doesn't even begin to describe this.
jemma-wayne/smoking-ban-uk-_b_4895623.html
This is about as extreme as it gets. Note the invocation of THS ("third hand smoke") and the assumption that there is also third-hand-vapor.
Sleight-of-hand? Sure, but if Glantz can do that in a peer-reviewed JAMA paper (see yesterday's news roundup), then we should give the good author her justly-earned props. The fine art of propaganda requires no doctorate. Just sit back, relax, and enjoy the rhetorical artistry
I'm guessing that the writer mainly wishes to promote her new book - the title and publication date of which are helpfully displaed above the piece. We're bombarded with so many different media sources in today's world, that you gotta hand it to someone who can so adroitly explore the outer limits of what can be published in a major outlet.
Most of us are not likely to come face-to-face with a terrorist, a bank robber, or a child molester. But we all meet smokers (and vapers) every day. The joy of looking down upon, deriding, and even hating someone else in person, -- along with the knowledge that they deserve it, and we're all doing them a big favor (plus protecting children to boot) -- just couldn't be more gratifying.
Who says "hate is not a family value?" It's delicious. It's helping to make the world a better place. And it just feels so-o good!
That said, I think she's saying what many folks genuinely do believe - namely that smoking and anything that "looks like smoking" is and ought to be regarded as both immoral and threatening by society at large. The analogy to drunk driving is extremely shrewd: it goes far, but not "too" far, and grabs the reader by the subconscous.
Remember that name: Jemma Wayne. She's got what it takes to go far. "Brilliant" doesn't even begin to describe this.
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