No it isn't. You made an assertion about why pubs are closing. I think it is only fair that you provide evidence for your assertion. If you have no evidence than this whole thread is just about a guess.
I am not the first, nor will I be the last, to use anecdotes.
What? They all come and talk to you, do they? Of course, a landlord is not going to admit their pub closed because they managed it poorly or were unable to make it attractive for the punters. The smoking ban makes a convenient scapegoat.
Yes I spoke with all the landlords in the pubs that I visited, they knew me by name.
Ah the nostalgia of the smokey carcinogenic pub that left your clothes reading of stale cigarette smoke for the afternoon and journey home.
If you had worked with us, we would have invited you to join us. If you had declined, so be it.
I went in a pub to celebrate a legal drink on my eighteenth birthday - before the smoking ban. A fight broke out between two of the other customers.
We never brawled.
Sounds pretty boring. One of the best bits about going to pubs is having drunken arguments with your mates without realising that everybody is talking bollocks.
Sometimes we put the world to rights, and sometimes we did talk bollocks. We enjoyed both.
That agreeable world was poisoning people.
It was our decision. Those who did not like our world chose to take it from us. They did not have to join us if they did not want to.
To revisit those closed pubs is a strange experience, it is like seeing ghosts of the living. I will always remember those places with fondness.