Option C: Leave Smokers Alone
The first amendment of the Constitution establishes some basic rights for the
American people. If you continue farther down the path of legislating when and
where people can smoke, where tobacco products are allowed to be advertised,
and what those advertisements can say, you will seriously infringe upon those
freedoms. Aside from the drinking age, there is little legislation on when or
how much one can drink, even though some would argue that drinking has worse
effects on the lives of people and their families than secondhand smoke. The
airwaves are full of beer and wine commercials, and Absolut Vodka ads are
exponentially more popular with teenagers than Joe Camel could ever hope to
be -- yet one hears few complaints about children's exposure to alcohol ads.
Why are the tobacco companies being hounded mercilessly for wrecking peoples'
health while companies producing 151 proof alcohol, cars that can go 150 miles
per hour, and lethally fatty foods seem to escape censure? Smoking is a
personal right that the government should not be able to legislate away. Yes,
smoking is bad for you. But it's not the government's job to play the parent
reprimanding a child for stupid behavior.
Anti-smoking advocates say you should support new and stricter legislation on
cigarette advertising and promotion, along with warnings on ads such as "about
one out of three kids who become smokers will die from their smoking," and
"cigarettes -- a nicotine-delivery device." Maybe they haven't heard that despite
increasingly heavy-handed anti-smoking ad campaigns and regulations, teenage
smoking has increased seven percent in the last four years. The ads and
regulations only make smoking seem like the forbidden fruit.
The anti-smoking lobby complains that smokers are costing society money -- to
support coverage for the expensive diseases that smoking causes. In fact
smokers cover their own medical costs and then some both through the 55 cents a
pack they pay in taxes and, well, because many die before they collect what
they have paid into Social Security and Medicare.
Nonsmokers have the right to smoke-free places. But smokers also have the right
not to be chased out of offices and restaurants. Do not bow to public pressure
to regulate smoking more than it already is. You have other, far more important
issues to concentrate on. Persuading 50 million Americans to give up a bad
habit is not worth your time -- and, besides, like Prohibition, it won't work.
Social pressure, not government regulation, has caused smoking's decline for
many segments of the population. A non-smoker's refusal to sit at one's
table is much more persuasive than anti-smoking ads plastered on
subway cars. The best thing you can do to discourage smoking is to
let society, rather than the government, create an atmosphere in which
smoking becomes less and less desirable.
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