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Tobacco products – especially cigarettes – have all the redeeming
qualities of a fence post.
I smoked
a cigarette once when I was at the University of Georgia. I was trying to
be cool. I got such a bad case of heartburn that I never smoked another
one. So much for being cool.
According
to the Communicable Disease Center in Atlanta, cigarette smoking is
responsible for 90 percent of lung cancers among men and 79 percent among
women. People who smoke two or more packs of cigarettes a day have lung
cancer mortality rates 12 to 25 times greater than nonsmokers.
Smoking is responsible for 30 percent of all cancer deaths, as well as a lot
bad breath, stained teeth and smelly clothes.
As
repugnant as it is, however, smoking isn’t against the law. As a matter of
fact, it is perfectly legal. While we can limit where people smoke, we
cannot deny their right to smoke.
That is
why I question the recent jury decision in California that awarded $3
billion to Richard Boeken, a two-pack-a-day smoker. Mr. Boeken—a life-long
smoker – has lung and brain cancer but says he wasn’t aware of the dangers
of smoking until just a few years ago. Not aware of the dangers? Where has
this guy been? On Mars? Maybe the smoke was so thick in his house he
couldn’t see the warning labels that have been on cigarette packages since
1965. Maybe he was too busy sucking nicotine to pay attention to all of the
media reports on the dangers of smoking. Maybe the American Cancer Society
doesn’t have a branch office on Mars.
I have no
sympathy for Philip Morris who got nailed by the jury. The company makes a
dangerous product and deserves a good kick in the pocketbook. Besides,
cigarette manufacturers have a history of being less than forthright about
the hazards of smoking. But Philip Morris didn’t force Mr. Boeken to
buy their product. He did of his own free will. And if the
companies can be sued for making tobacco available for purchase, what about
the tobacco farmers? It is a $150 million business in Georgia.
Why don’t we sue them for growing the stuff in the first place?
The
answer is that too many people – almost 50 million in the U.S. – still want
to smoke and chew and dip. And as long as they do, the nation will continue
to allow tobacco products into the marketplace. Government will continue to
pay subsidies to tobacco farmers who ought to do something responsible for a
change, like grow kumquats. Lawyers will continue to get rich suing
deep-pocketed tobacco companies. Anti-smoking groups will continue to rail
about the dangers of tobacco. But tobacco products are going to be with us
until you and I get fed up and exert enough pressure on Congress to ban the
stinky stuff once and for all. Until then, people will be free to exercise
their legal right to go eyeball-to-eyeball with cancer. It is the American
way.
But I
have a big problem with not taking responsibility for our actions. That
also seems to be the American way these days. A guy smokes two packs of
cigarettes a day for forty years, gets cancer and then says it isn’t his
fault. Philip Morris made him do it. Can’t we ever say, “I made a
mistake?” I goofed? I’m wrong? My fault? Evidently not. It has become a
part of our culture to point the finger at somebody else for our sins. We
drive gas-guzzling SUV’s too fast and then blame the government for high gas
prices. We drink too much, eat too much, fool around too much, and then
wonder who is responsible for a decline in morality. We are afraid to tell
our kids ‘no’ and then we chastise our education system for a lack of
discipline. We cluck about all the inept politicians in Washington and less
than half of us even bother to vote. There seems to be no end to our
abilities to pass the buck for our shortcomings.
Mr.
Boeken blames Philip Morris for giving him cancer. Maybe somebody should
tell him to go look in a mirror. He might see the real culprit. Maybe we
need to take an occasional peek ourselves. |