Trivia & Politics (more trivia)
Jun. 9th, 2004 10:31 amBig-ass personality review from
mrssshhh:
I looked up my Enneagram result from way back when (9w1), but I didn't know my MBTI type, so did that test first:
Take Free Myers-Briggs Personality Test
Huzzah! So then I could do the personality thing.
Take Free Advanced Big 45 Personality Test
personality tests by similarminds.com Looks like I'm mostly Friendly and Open-Minded. Heh.
Also,
Take Free Personality Disorder Test
Groovy.
While I'm here,
Enough quizzes for now. Hokey news story of the day: Smoking is one of the few pleasures poorer people have access to! OMG we must not rob them of the pleasure of slowly killing themselves and their family. Hey, I understand an adrenaline rush can be quite pleasurable too, let's push them off the top of their council flats, it's one of the few pleasures they have access to.
"What enjoyment does a 21-year-old single mother of three living in a council sink estate get?" asks John Reid, the Health Secretary for the United Kingdom, "The only enjoyment sometimes they have is to have a cigarette." It's quite surprising to see that he's an ex-smoker himself.
The BBC manage to remain fairly unbiased in their reporting, right up to the end where they mention (as if in passing) that "Smoking is the biggest cause of preventable death in the UK, responsible for 120,000 premature deaths a year."
In related news, I voted LibDem in the European and Local Council elections. I did this mostly because they were not the BNP or UKIP.
I looked up my Enneagram result from way back when (9w1), but I didn't know my MBTI type, so did that test first:
| ENTP - "Inventor". Enthusiastic interest in everything and always sensitive to possibilities. Non-conformist and innovative. 3.2% of the total population. |
Huzzah! So then I could do the personality thing.
| Advanced Big 45 Personality Test Results
|
personality tests by similarminds.com
Also,
| Personality Disorder Test Results
|
While I'm here,
|
Enough quizzes for now. Hokey news story of the day: Smoking is one of the few pleasures poorer people have access to! OMG we must not rob them of the pleasure of slowly killing themselves and their family. Hey, I understand an adrenaline rush can be quite pleasurable too, let's push them off the top of their council flats, it's one of the few pleasures they have access to.
"What enjoyment does a 21-year-old single mother of three living in a council sink estate get?" asks John Reid, the Health Secretary for the United Kingdom, "The only enjoyment sometimes they have is to have a cigarette." It's quite surprising to see that he's an ex-smoker himself.
The BBC manage to remain fairly unbiased in their reporting, right up to the end where they mention (as if in passing) that "Smoking is the biggest cause of preventable death in the UK, responsible for 120,000 premature deaths a year."
In related news, I voted LibDem in the European and Local Council elections. I did this mostly because they were not the BNP or UKIP.
no subject
Date: 2004-06-09 02:45 am (UTC)I'm actually quite glad to see someone in government giving a different viewpoint from the usual "smoking is the cause of all ills".
The thing is, passive smoking can affect you if you live with a smoker or if you work in a very smokey environment. Short of these kinds of long-term high exposure, if you live in a city, passive smoking makes fuck all difference to the state of your lungs.
The reason governments and businesses are so keen on demonising smoking is because it's a cheap, easy thing to fix. It's cheaper for an employer to ban smoking on their site than to provide a well-ventilated smoking area with air-conditioning to ensure the smoke doesn't spill out into non-smoking areas. It's cheaper for the government to take measures against smoking than to reduce traffic pollution.
I'm all in favour of education about the dangers of smoking, and I'm all in favour of restricting smoking to particular areas so that the majority of places are smoke-free environments. I'm not in favour of the current trend of exaggerating the negative effects of smoking as compared to other health risks, and I'm not in favour of placing a ban on it.
I quit smoking just over 7 months ago. A ban on smoking in public places would have done nothing to help me. In fact, the persecution of smokers was always something that made me want to smoke more (not that I'm awkward or anything)
no subject
Date: 2004-06-09 02:55 am (UTC)If he'd said "people have a right to choose for themselves" I'd probably have been behind him, but he said "The common people enjoy it!"
no subject
Date: 2004-06-09 03:15 am (UTC)And I don't really think that "The common people enjoy it!" is what he meant. I think his argument was that people have a right to choose for themselves. He was specifically discussing the poor, because government taxes to increase the price of cigarettes may stop poor smokers from being able to afford fags, but won't stop wealthier smokers.
Also, I thought he was implying that it was somewhat unfair for a bunch of people who can afford meals out at posh restaurants (obesity being a health risk), skiiing holidays (potential for broken limbs), expensive wines (alcohol a major health risk) etc etc to be trying to get rid of one of the extravagances that poor people can afford to indulge in.
no subject
Date: 2004-06-09 03:33 am (UTC)I'd also question that anyone can really afford to indulge in smoking, but I know you were talking about finance so I'll let it slide. ;) The counterpoint could still be made, of course, that if they didn't indulge in smoking they'd be able to afford other indulgences...
no subject
Date: 2004-06-09 03:47 am (UTC)However, I thought his real point was that the best way to persuade our single-mum-living-on-council-estate to quit smoking is by educating her about the risks associated with smoking and improving her quality of life so that she has more sources of enjoyment / relaxation to turn to as an alternative to smoking fags, rather than legislating against smoking so that she's deprived of one of the few sources of enjoyment / relaxation available to her. I thought he was saying that we should try to make people want to quit, and try to support them when they're quitting, rather than trying to force them to quit against their will.
And I think smoking is relatively cheap compared to many other indulgences - financially cheap anyway, you pedantic boy ;-)
no subject
Date: 2004-06-09 03:24 am (UTC)I doubt we'll be seeing the US government putting regulations on Coke products anytime soon, despite the fact that they're horrible. Caffiene is a diuretic, and they're purposely putting it in sugar water, this is as bad as when the cigarette companies were adding extra nicotine into cigarettes, and the soda companies are admitting to it.
no subject
Date: 2004-06-09 03:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-06-09 05:02 am (UTC)