The butts in the park

They make me so sick the butts in the playground. I can't understand it, really. Neither that you are a smoker, nor that you think that when children touch the crap they get immunized, there is no possible justification for that humming. I hope this is banned soon and that measures are taken to ensure that it is enforced.

The other day I went down to the park with a friend's son while she was at the doctor. The child is a year and a half. He is adorable, playful and curious. Of those children who touch everything and everything they want to experience. I, sitting in the sand with him, tried to mediate so that all the toys we had come down would not be lost and no one would give a blow for fighting for them. Normally, that doesn't bother me.

The moms, there, looking sideways at most, chatting about their things. And give it to you with the smoking. In the middle of the little park, and on top throwing the cigarette butts in the sand where their own children played with little supervision. To two of them, of the smallest ones, I removed cigarette butts from their hands when they were ready to take them to their mouths.

And they didn't even look. And in the end my desire to park was removed and also to tell them nothing, I'm afraid it's useless and besides, I was so angry to see how they used the ashtray park I wouldn't have been able to say anything nice.

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In the end I ended up as fed up as when I was going down with my son. I do not get it. Surely in their homes they pass the mop daily and scold children if they throw a crumb on the floor. But in a public space they continue with the cigar in their mouths in the children's area and they throw the butts to the sand with which the children are playing.

Can someone explain to me how to make people understand that butts should not be thrown to the ground and less to the sand of the playground?

In Babies and more | Smoking will be banned in playgrounds, Smoking will be banned in playgrounds and in cars with children, Passive smoking causes 165,000 deaths annually in children, according to WHO