moki
el Presidente
Tell her that you don't like the look of her face, and then offer her $100 towards facial reconstruction surgery 

This is actually a very valid point and not just pertaining to cigars. These people who have a sense of entitlement are like toddlers and need to have inappropriate behavior discouraged. If you allow them to have their way they will simply expect more.I fail to see why giving in to the single complaint in a "cigar friendly" establishment was the right thing to do. So many of the overly restrictive, nanny state, done for our own good laws passed are because one person did not like it and complained. The type of person who wants to project their view of the world and their will on all others around them are the type of people who are getting these "you cannot smoke outside on your own properrty" laws passed. You just gave power to that person's unreasonable opinions and belief that everyone should bow to their will. The fact that she actually felt compelled to ask you to put it out is galling to me.
While you took a very civil approach to her request it would have been just as civil to tell her that the club allowed smoking and that if she did not like it she could either sit somewhere else or leave. Or politely say "No thanks".
Of course there is no reason to brag about the cost of the cigars. And ... maybe you made an impression on her. Maybe she later told her friends about the really polite cigar smokers who moved when they were asked. Well ... maybe not. Those types are not happy unless you do what they want. She probably still bitched and moaned that she could still smell it and that those gross cigar smokers spoiled the entire evening and there ought to be a law .... here we go.
My .02
This is actually a very valid point and not just pertaining to cigars. These people who have a sense of entitlement are like toddlers and need to have inappropriate behavior discouraged. If you allow them to have their way they will simply expect more.I fail to see why giving in to the single complaint in a "cigar friendly" establishment was the right thing to do. So many of the overly restrictive, nanny state, done for our own good laws passed are because one person did not like it and complained. The type of person who wants to project their view of the world and their will on all others around them are the type of people who are getting these "you cannot smoke outside on your own properrty" laws passed. You just gave power to that person's unreasonable opinions and belief that everyone should bow to their will. The fact that she actually felt compelled to ask you to put it out is galling to me.
While you took a very civil approach to her request it would have been just as civil to tell her that the club allowed smoking and that if she did not like it she could either sit somewhere else or leave. Or politely say "No thanks".
Of course there is no reason to brag about the cost of the cigars. And ... maybe you made an impression on her. Maybe she later told her friends about the really polite cigar smokers who moved when they were asked. Well ... maybe not. Those types are not happy unless you do what they want. She probably still bitched and moaned that she could still smell it and that those gross cigar smokers spoiled the entire evening and there ought to be a law .... here we go.
My .02
As the post pointed out, it was a cigar friendly bar........and as the post also pointed out, there were other seats available.....why didn't she and her friend try to find a solution which did not involve inconveniencing someone else?
Why is discrimination okay in some cases and not others? This is really no different than walking up to a black person and saying "my friend and I don't really like black people, would you mind leaving or sitting where we can't see you"