Nubs70
Well-Known Member
Point is:But his statistics don't speak to the issue. (I never said that people don't drink or smoke in DC. They're just not smoking in the restaurants and bars.) If banning smoking has had a negative economic impact on a majority of businesses in cities where it has been banned, then please post statistics.
- Smoking rates are no different in DC than other areas.
- Your inferrential observation of increased restaurant population.
Your observation points to the negative of the hypothesis.
Do you have statistics to validate increased restaurant patronage?
Is increased restaurant opening attributable to the smoking bans or some other factor?
Is the connection simply correlative?
I hypothesize that the smoking ban is correlative with the causal factors weighted towards the increase in purchasing power that has grown in the DC/NOVA area.