ok. i'm sure i'm up now.
15 hours of sleep.
you
want to argue this isn't affecting my quality of life, my enjoyment of
the property and, ultimately, my health? despite popular misconceptions
to the contrary, the law is on my side here; i have all of the rights,
all of the rules and all of the social norms on my side. smoking is not a
right; that's an insult to the concept of rights.
it
doesn't matter if you "believe" in rights or not. it matters what a
judge rules. laws are not subject to personal beliefs, they're objective
rules that everybody has to follow. and, it doesn't matter if you
"believe" in the science underlying the action or not, either.
i don't believe in beliefs.
it's
far easier for me to go after the property owners than it is to go
after this woman, who appears to be a legit fucking dunce, but if i
don't win the case against the landlord, i'm going to have to take her
to the human rights board, directly. that's going to be time consuming,
and it's going to drag on for a long time. but, somebody needs to
compensate me for this rights infringement.
my
understanding of the law is that there's two layers, here: the
tenant-landlord layer & the human rights layer. i believe that the
way the law is meant to operate on the tenant-landlord level is for me
to sue the landlord, and for the landlord to recover costs by suing the
other tenant, in turn (perhaps in small claims court, for negligence).
but, if that fails, i'm absolutely planning to take her to human rights
court and making her pay for her behaviour.
smoking
inside an apartment building is no longer acceptable behaviour in the
21st century, and we all need to stand up for our rights to ensure
people aren't getting away with it. i'd encourage everybody to utilize
the tools available to them to crack down on inside smoking and get
smokers out of residential areas and into the bars, where they belong.