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CRA Membership

CRA Member

CRA Membership

Well Folks, I’m posting this a little late, but I finally got around to getting my CRA membership at the end of January and posted the pic above for the contest and actually won! I won an awesome CRA t-shirt! Thanks to Brian and the people over at CRA! You should definitely get involved with this great organization who is fighting for your right to smoke. The MAN is after our wonderful brother and sisterhood of cigar lovers nationwide! Join now and Fight for your Rights!
Visit http://www.cigarrights.org to join and enter my member number as your reference (211238) and you’ll receive two free cigars! Get on board for this great cause and protect our rights as Americans to live free and enjoy the fruits of labor!

Happy Smoking!
Jorgie

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Outdoor Smoking Bans: The Next Frontier for the Nannies

Nanny State

CRA News Alert – February 12, 2010
By: Glynn Loope, CRA Executive Director
As appeared in the Jan/Feb Issue of Cigar Snob Magazine

On November 29, 2009 Parade Magazine ran a piece on outdoor smoking bans. It posed an opinion poll to their readership on whether outdoor bans should be enacted. In its traditionally biased fashion, Parade notes the growth in such bans, pending legislation on outdoor smoking, and the proverbial citation of the regurgitated 2006 Surgeon General’s Report.

But a funny thing happened on the way to the polling place. Cigar Rights of America disseminated the poll to its members, Facebook and Twitter community and related mediums. Other like-minded organizations jumped in, and within days, what was to be a lopsided poll turned from being against cigar enthusiasts, into a 69% to 31% victory for the cause, against the imposition of outdoor bans.

Of course this occurs months after the most famous outdoor smoking incident of 2009 — and perhaps ever. When basketball great (and cigar enthusiast) Michael Jordan was cited for enjoying cigars during the President’s Cup golf practice round in San Francisco’s Harding Park, local officials contacted the PGA to warn of $100 fines and local “rules,” on no smoking on county golf courses.

The very language of the news accounts indicate what the modern cigar enthusiast is confronting. The media stated Jordan was “caught” with a cigar, and that local officials “sprang into action.” In my neck of the woods, that’s what local officials do for meth labs, not cigars.

However, there is now a sweeping tide by the health care ‘non-profit’ organizations to press for outdoor smoking bans. State and local governments across the nation are drafting legislation that will seek to ban the outdoor use of perfectly legal tobacco products.

For over a year, Cigar Rights of America has been involved in the fight regarding an outdoor smoking ban in the City of Los Angeles . In a plot that never seems to end, a current proposal would ban outdoor smoking at Los Angeles restaurants, but could leave the window open for those establishments that “morph” into a nightclub type setting. From Casper , Wyoming to the shores of Maine , outdoor smoking bans have become the new battleground. It is beginning with ordinances on property controlled by the local governments, such as parks and government buildings. But that’s only the first step. They then want to evolve into outdoor dining and bar areas, again trying to control legal activity, on private property.

So that they can trump Boston with their outdoor smoking ban, the City of San Francisco this month announced pending legislation to also ban outdoor smoking at dining, coffee and bar settings. The local golf course just isn’t enough.

Others pending in Asheville, North Carolina, and Burlington, Vermont are probably to be expected given the local political environment, but the New York City proposal seems to be running against the grain of their local public opinion, with a vigorous effort to defeat it being planned. Then there is Santa Cruz , California which is having local police issue citations for outdoor smoking on Pacific Avenue , where they average “a ticket a day for $20″ according to local news reports. Amazing.

It’s time to fight back on these measures. What a local government does with regard to property under its domain is one thing, and many governing bodies are split on such rules for public parks and beaches. However, when it comes to private property, vigorous efforts should be initiated to fight such ordinances and legislation. Here are some approaches:

Build coalitions with supportive merchant, chamber of commerce, restaurant and tavern associations. Make the argument about business, jobs, and property rights.

1.) Launch a letter to the editor campaign with your brethren cigar enthusiasts and local tobacconist patrons.

2.) Meet with local (or state) elected officials to let your opinion known. Political complacency is not an option. They need to know how many passionate cigar enthusiasts are out there — that vote.

3.) Give testimony at local hearings on such ordinances. If ‘we’ don’t show up, they only hear from the opposition.

4.) The official smoking ban playbook for the health care community promotes ‘no compromises’ — we can. Offer alternatives that protect your ability to enjoy a cigar outdoors.

5.) Note that the science is dubious and inconclusive regarding these matters, and that a vocal minority in the form of the health care non-profit community, shouldn’t be allowed to dictate public policy, and private property use for a legal activity.

Earlier in December, the City of Great Falls, Montana voted 4-1 to repeal its outdoor smoking ban due to the adverse impact on local businesses, with the support of the Montana Tavern Association. Local tavern owner Doug Palagi said that will enable him to expand his business to accommodate local and visiting patrons. That’s the way it’s supposed to work.

Let’s all join the fight!
Jorgie

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ICRS (Independent Cigar Rating System)

ICRS (Independent Cigar Rating System)

After joining the CRA (Cigar Rights of America) and beginning my training for my CCT (Certified Consumer Tobacconist), I decided it was time to change the way I was rating cigars. I was so used to reading Cigar Aficionado’s 100 point scale that I complicated myself by giving the ratings such a broad spectrum. Cigars are too subjective for a 100 point scale, and there’s too much room for error using that system, so I was referred to the ICRS download page by Jorge Armenteros and found this to be quite useful in my reviews of cigars.

By using the ICRS, you critically examine all aspects of a cigar, gaining a broader understanding of the various components of that particular cigar. The evaluations made can be used to keep track of what you liked and disliked about the cigar. Quoting Colin Ganley, “Cigar magazines use their own systems and the ICRS is an alternative. I believe this is a very good alternative and in some cases, a much better one.”

I agree. Check out the ICRS yourself and you’ll see how much easier it is to properly review and understand what you have come to love, cigars! From now on, this is what I’ll be using, so stay tuned for some more great reviews!

Here is the rating system in a 1-10 point scale:

1 – Unpleasant Flavor
2 – Contains Bad Flavors
3 – Seriously Flawed
4 – Slightly Flawed
5 – Acceptable
6 – Good
7 – Very Good
8 – Excellent
9 – Nearly Perfect
10 – Best Cigar Ever

Happy Smoking!
Jorgie

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