The other day I was flying back home and while sitting on the plane, I noticed the \u201cno smoking\u201d signs all over the cabin. This wasn\u2019t a new observation, but I stopped to think about what it was like when smoking was allowed on airplanes. Imagine the guy next to you, sharing your armrest, smoking a half a pack between takeoff and landing. And you couldn\u2019t escape. You just had to deal with it. That\u2019s the way smoking was all over our country not that long ago. Restaurants, grocery stores, taxi cabs, and hotels were filled with smoke.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
And now? Light up within 100 yards of a nonsmoker and you\u2019re treated like you have the plague. The only safe place for smokers to go is out behind a building, standing right next to the dumpster. It is safe to say that our society has grown intolerant of smoking, and those who choose to do it are considered outliers. Smoking still takes place, and consumption levels are still high. There is just a different attitude toward the practice.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
I believe this change over the last decade or so has been accelerated by an extraordinary anti-smoking campaign, called \u201cThe Truth\u201d<\/a>. You have probably seen their commercials, the most famous of which shows a group of activists carrying megaphones lining hundreds of body bags on the street below the offices of tobacco executives. This campaign has been effective in reducing smoking \u2013 especially in young people \u2013 because instead of focusing only on the health reasons, it turns nonsmokers into rebellious youth sticking it to the \u201cman\u201d (tobacco companies). Rebellion has always been a well-received message amongst teens!<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Oh yeah, and you shouldn\u2019t smoke either.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
John Shertzer is a Theta Chi and a graduate of Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. He has worked professionally in higher education as a staff member for Iowa State University, the University of Maryland, and the North American Interfraternity Conference. While at the NIC, John directed their signature programs UIFI, IMPACT, and FuturesQuest. He is now serving Kiwanis International as their Senior Director of Programs. In this position, he oversees all of the Kiwanis service leadership programs for youth and adults. This includes Key Club International and Circle K International. John serves on the board of the Center for the Study of the College Fraternity, and a few local nonprofits. John is also the creator and writer for the blog Fraternal Thoughts<\/a>. He lives in Indianapolis with his wife Ellen and their sons Jack and Luke.
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