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Smoke signal

THE number of places a cigarette smoker can light up in was made even smaller this week.

THE number of places a cigarette smoker can light up in was made even smaller this week. Legislation has previously chased smokers from beaches, bus shelters, playing fields and anywhere within six metres of someone's door; now they are also unwelcome in regional parks.

We support Metro Vancouver's decision, even though littering and second-hand smoke - outdoors - are probably overstated concerns. The real motive behind banning smoking in an ever-increasing number of locations is social engineering. The more of a hassle it is to smoke, and the more smokers risk paying fines, the less they'll smoke. It works; smoking numbers are at historic lows and still falling. This is a good thing for smokers and for taxpayers.

But it does make one wonder why we haven't taken a similar incremental approach with another weed that people occasionally smoke. Tobacco is known to kill people, and yet we have rejected an outright ban on it. A tobacco ban might seem like a much more efficient way of reducing smoking, but it's a heavy-handed policy that would be impossible to enforce and would hand the money we currently collect as taxes over to organized crime.

Yet that hugely expensive, heavyhanded, unenforceable and ineffective approach is the one we take towards marijuana.

Prohibition is a clearly failed policy, and it has been for years. Our approach to tobacco has been far less costly in terms of tax dollars collected versus those spent on enforcement and healthcare. Unlike our war on pot, our tobacco policy has actually succeeded in reducing smoking.