Uh oh, the faux pas N-word!
In linguistics, I tend to favor a descriptivist approach, as opposed to the prescriptivist bent of "language control".
Prescriptivists prescribe and sometimes proscribe, emphasising rules and guidelines based on the conservation of customs (and sometimes a mythical ideal of correctness), and on judging what is or isn’t acceptable.
http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=3516
The N-word has entered the common vernacular, regardless of any conceived bad taste. This is the nature of language, trying to "fight" change by using hypercorrection will only lead to general resentment - a quick look to the unintended results of speaking PC, although its aim was indeed noble, to elicit a sensitivity for the community as a whole, it is now in most cases universally derided, and that's because it snowballs into an unyielding rigidity, even in ridiculous circumstances.
The Oxford English Dictionary has got it right, they always include words as they're used by the people, because language is not just some abstract concept, language is people, we form the language by how we use it, it is in a continual mutation, there's no stopping the alterations, if there was, we'd all still be speaking like Chaucer!
OED:
Nazi n. 2.b. hyperbolically. A person who is perceived to be authoritarian, autocratic, or inflexible; one who seeks to impose his or her views upon others. Usu. derogatory.
...and on a brighter note,
I think if you have enough smokers you should stage some sort of demonstration. Nothing violent, don't kidnap the president. But make it known you don't want your rights messed with. I am fed up with people, like our Mayor Bloomberg, whose preoccupation is to make policies that they have decided are good for other people. And then they don't follow those policies themselves. We have a lot of busybodies in this country.
foggy is right!
Hell, it worked for New Amsterdam...
In 1647, the Burghers of New Amsterdam (now New York City) held what has been known as the Smoker's Rebellion. Peter Stuyvesant, the Governor of the settlement, had ordered an edict forbidding pipe smoking by the Dutch Colonists in Public. The burghers were so roused by the edict that a huge party was organized and visited the governor's home. Great clouds of smoke were seen by the citizens of the then small colony. Their point was made and the Governor withdrew his order.
A great quick read here:
http://briarfiles.blogspot.com/2008/06/featured-pipe-smoker-smokers-rebellion.html