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[Closed] Smoking while pregnant.

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[#7146534]

Simple one really: following on from the "would you bollock a RLJer". Just passed a heavily pregnant woman smoking. I dallied and she went into a shop.

Wanted to say something, didn't.

Would you?


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 10:30 am
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No


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 10:32 am
 DrP
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No.
It's completely wrong and irresponsible, and is likely to harm the baby, but in the street I wouldn't say anything as it's not 'our place'.
In surgery, then yes, I'd chirp up.
I do the same for obese people too.

DrP


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 10:34 am
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I'd give her the 'look'

Same as the mums who smoke to and from school pick up walking with their kids....


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 10:34 am
 DezB
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It's sad, cos there's a certain "look" that children of smokers have. It affects their facial features. My nurse girlfriend can actually spot them.
Poor kid.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 10:35 am
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Would you "have a word" with any other smoker?


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 10:36 am
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Some women do get more attractive during motherhood, they develop a shinny rosy glow....as for them actually smoking a cigarette, if they are that stupid a balanced and reasoned conversation with them in public will probably not go down well.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 10:36 am
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No.

Had the misfortune to catch one of those "benefits Britain" programmes the other week - mum with 9 week old baby on her shoulder while she stood there smoking and two toddlers with coke in their sipping cups ๐Ÿ™


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 10:55 am
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only if i was absolutely certain that i was as perfect a human being as i could be, without a stain on my character either in the past present or future. so ,yes. ๐Ÿ˜€


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 10:59 am
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there's a certain "look" that children of smokers have. It affects their facial features.

*looks in mirror*

I'm intrigued. Any clue as to which features become altered...?


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:04 am
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It's sad, cos there's a certain "look" that children of smokers have. It affects their facial features. My nurse girlfriend can actually spot them.

do you mean alcohol foetal syndrome?


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:06 am
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Could we just draw up a list of the behavior we disaprove of, particularly when undertaken by a member of the underclass, and for some reason think we have a right to tell people they can't do? Then we can asign a sliding scale of ways to show our lofty Blairite, Nu Labour, Islingtonite style disaproval, running from:

a) A tut, with a barely perceptable shake of the head

to

z) The full on intervention of social services to have their children removed, forced sterilisation, and being forced to read the Lifesyle section of the Guardian. Even the bits on vegan cooking, recipes for placenta's and the beneficial effects of yoga, until they've seen the error of their ways


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:11 am
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only if i was absolutely certain that i was as perfect a human being as i could be, without a stain on my character either in the past present or future. so ,yes.

Should totally have done it, then ๐Ÿ˜‰

do you mean alcohol foetal syndrom

Do you mean "fetal alcohol syndrome" ๐Ÿ˜‰ ๐Ÿ˜‰

Would you "have a word" with any other smoker?

No*. I guess in this case I kinda decided I shouldn't, but it did make me think.

*Although as an occasional smoker myself I have had many discussions about it being bad and stupid and have encouraged/helped others to quit.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:14 am
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by a member of the underclass, and for some reason think we have a right to tell people they can't do?

How do you know she wasn't just hopping out of a Range Rover? [no she wasn't]

Interesting though, I mean, if I had said something along the lines of "you really shouldn't do that, it's very bad for your child and they don't have a choice in it"

She might have said :
"**** off"

or

"I actually didn't know"

or

"I feel so bad, it was only one and I haven't had one in months and I don't think I'll have another"

Or just ignored me and thought about it to a similar effect.

Interesting.....


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:20 am
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I'm going to guess on the first answer. With the possiblity of esculation into full on Def Con Leave It Darren, He's Not Worth It


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:22 am
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DezB - Member
It's sad, cos there's a certain "look" that children of smokers have. It affects their facial features.

bobbins

foetal alcohol syndrome, yes, smoking, no


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:30 am
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so two members of my family smoked whilst pregnant.

it was a bit chavy of one: she is a bit chavy.

the other one 'managed the risks': she is a doctor.

people judged them on completely different set of rules; which had nothing to do with science and everything to do with class; how british!


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:31 am
 DezB
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[i]Do you mean "foetal alcohol syndrome" [/i]

Oh probably, close though eh. I never listen to her anyway. (So she tells me)


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:39 am
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[looks like i can't be spellin anywayz]


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:40 am
 hels
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Binners - what makes you think she was a member of the underclass ? Your prejudices are showing a bit there. Reading the OP he says nothing about her wearing a pink track suit and humming Britney Spears songs.

She could have been a company director of a successful internet business on quick break and doing her own shopping ??


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:42 am
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the other one 'managed the risks': she is a doctor.

How did she do that then?


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:47 am
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[i]Wanted to say something, didn't.[/i]

what/how other people do/say/behave is NONE of your business.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:54 am
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I wouldn't say anything - everyone is entitled to their own (legal) choices, no matter what you or anyone else thinks.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 11:56 am
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people judged them on completely different set of rules; which had nothing to do with science and everything to do with class; how british!

That's what makes this country so great!


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:02 pm
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what/how other people do/say/behave is NONE of your business

That can't be true. Well, it can be, but would you ignore someone stealing a bike?

Anyway, as I said I didn't speak, I just wanted-to. Are you sure you wouldn't want to [even if you decide not to]. Further, for some people it is their business - Child Protection, for example.

At least the next post mentioned the legality of it being relevant.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:02 pm
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Surprised no one has advocated a Hoof-in-the-slats?.

Is disappointed...


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:05 pm
 DezB
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[i]Binners - what makes you think she was a member of the underclass ?[/i]

Only people on benefits can afford fags these days.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:08 pm
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That can't be true. Well, it can be, but would you ignore someone stealing a bike?

If they were stealing their own bike, yes. Because thats the analogy here. You're allowed to do pretty much what you want to yourself. Which, unless we've recently become some bible belt, holier-than-thou state of the midwest, includes any temporary passangers you're carrying.

Would you carry this protection of the unborn through to banning abortions? Or are we just stopping at smoking? How about the odd glass of chardonnay? Imprisonable offence?

You may not like that, but thats the way it is. You're entitled to employ that most English of secret weapons though - you can tut all you like ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:14 pm
 DrP
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the other one 'managed the risks': she is a doctor.
...How did she do that then?

Her options may have been
a - fags
or
b - injectable 'fun time', booze, and ropey tattoos.

Ergo, a is lower risk.

DrP


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:14 pm
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I think that smoking while pregnant is tantamount to child abuse and should be treated as such.

Though I also now think it should be illegal to smoke within X meters of a child (where X is a distance scientifically determined to be out of range of passive smoke in still conditions) or to smoke within a private residence where children live or reside regularly in the same way it is illegal to smoke in a car with a child.

Im an ex-smoker so not anti-smoking however I am very anti inflicting it on children.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:19 pm
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Where do the middle class, NCT red wine drinkng breast feeders fit in to this situation?

There's so much information about the negative affects of smoking whilst pregnant is one more voice going to make a difference?


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:21 pm
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Would you carry this protection of the unborn through to banning abortions? Or are we just stopping at smoking? How about the odd glass of chardonnay? Imprisonable offence?

As with the terrible case of the Women recently who suffered an assault and lost her child-to-be the accused has been charged with crime of 'child destruction'

I think once you pass the point of abortion (24 weeks) then child abuse of a child-to-be should be a crime as you have past the point of no return then and barring accidents or incidents etc that child will be born.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:24 pm
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You're entitled to employ that most English of secret weapons though - you can tut all you like

If that fails a letter to the Mail should do the trick.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:44 pm
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OK binners/nickc how about if they were hitting the child? I mean injuring it in some way, not just a spanked arse.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:44 pm
 DezB
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[i]how about if they were hitting the child? I mean injuring it in some way, not just a spanked arse.[/i]

What? In the womb?


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:48 pm
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I think that smoking while pregnant is tantamount to child abuse and should be treated as such.

What... give them their own TV series and a knighthood?

Though I also now think it should be illegal to smoke within X meters of a child (where X is a distance scientifically determined to be out of range of passive smoke in still conditions) or to smoke within a private residence where children live or reside regularly in the same way it is illegal to smoke in a car with a child.

๐Ÿ˜ฏ

Blimey fella! I also have to say one_happy_hippy, that you don't sound very hippyish. Or indeed very happy. Your vision of what people should and shouldn't be allowed to do, and what they are subsequently punished for, wouldn't be out of place in North Korea.

If you're doing something to your own unborn child, then surely its you who has to deal with the fallout from that, every day, for the rest of your life. Nobody else. So as such, its nobody elses business!

*awaits predictble argument about state support*


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:48 pm
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state support

You called?


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:57 pm
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What? In the womb?

Can be done. But I was talking about a child that had been born.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 12:58 pm
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If you're doing something to your own unborn child, then surely its you who has to deal with the fallout from that, every day, for the rest of your life. Nobody else. So as such, its nobody elses business!

How is it different to say walking up to your own child and dousing them in acid or exposing them to a substance that could cause long term illness as you as the parent has to deal with it every day for the rest of your life, until they are 18 when the poor child has to deal with it for the rest its life?


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 1:09 pm
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Are you actually asking me to explan the difference between having a crafty fag, and dousing a child in acid?

Hang on a minute? Are you Ian Duncan Smith?


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 1:13 pm
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Crikey back in the 50s all our mums were puffing away at work at home in pregnancy. It didn't do me any harm. Cough, cough.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 1:19 pm
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It's a sliding scale of harm, but drinking heavily, smoking or doing drugs whilst pregnant in this day and age is just plain f&ckwitt skanky and is the preserve of the same type of people who let their dog's crap on playing fields, or drive without a license or insurance.

I don't subscribe to the ethos of let people become as fat, or lazy or skanky as they want, as it's their business - the end result often means the rest of society have to pick up the bill, either financially or otherwise.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 1:32 pm
 DezB
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[i]Blimey fella! I also have to say one_happy_hippy, that you don't sound very hippyish. Or indeed very happy[/i]

and there's 2 of him ๐Ÿ˜†


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 1:36 pm
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[quote=thomthumb ]so two members of my family smoked whilst pregnant.
it was a bit chavy of one: she is a bit chavy.
the other one 'managed the risks': she is a doctor.
people judged them on completely different set of rules; which had nothing to do with science and everything to do with class; how british!

I presume from the way you phrase it that people judged them in the opposite way I would - I'm struggling to comprehend the mentality of somebody with medical training deciding to "manage it", but tempted to give the other the benefit of the doubt of not really understanding the issue.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 1:38 pm
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I don't subscribe to the ethos of let people become as fat, or lazy or skanky as they want, as it's their business - the end result often means the rest of society have to pick up the bill, either financially or otherwise.

Presumably you'll be rsponsible for writing all the new rules then, telling everyone what you deem it is that they now can and can't do, and ruthlessly enforcing your new code?

Have you thought of moving to Syria? I believe there's a group over there who share your opinions on freedom of choice. Pop on a flight to Turkey and its just a quick hop over the border. Make sure you don't indulge in any behavior that anyone else disaproves of though. You might find yourself in a spot of bother.


 
Posted : 22/06/2015 1:39 pm
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