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Geoffrey Alderman

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Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

A chilling logic and an ill wind

February 21, 2014 12:50
2 min read

As we all know, the road to hell is paved with good intentions. In the past week, two stories broke which, I fear, may reinforce the depressing truth of this axiom. But my purpose in retelling them is not to indulge in intellectual banter or philosophical argument. It is, rather, to issue a warning.

On February 10, the House of Commons, in a free vote, agreed overwhelmingly to support a proposal that at some future date a ban be instituted on smoking in cars when children are present. This decision marked the successful culmination of a campaign spearheaded by Jewish MP Luciana Berger, who is Labour’s Shadow Public Health Minister. The relevant amendment to the Children and Families Bill is not quite the end of the story, because the government will now have to consult on precisely how the ban is to be enforced. But the principle has been agreed. It is not one which I support.

I am a lifelong non-smoker and, at home, my family and I do not permit smoking of any description. I believe tobacco smoking to be a grubby habit as well as an often fatal addiction. But a home, like a car, is a private space. More to the point, the care of children is primarily a parental responsibility. In pushing for a ban on smoking in cars when children are present, Ms Berger and her allies have spat in the face of that responsibility, and effectively repudiated it.

It’s not the car ban itself that worries me. It’s the ramifications – the slippery slope that she has now impenitently propelled us down. For if I am to be judged criminally liable because I permit my child to travel in a car in which there are active smokers, why should I not be similarly condemned, and punished, if I permit smoking in my home, which is also my child’s home? And if I am to be punished for permitting smoking in my home, why not extend the punishment to other activities which, some argue, are harmful to my children? Eating junk food? Watching unsuitable TV programmes? Practising and enforcing a certain religious code? Even carrying out a brit milah? The logic is chilling.

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