91 PETER SINGER PROFESSOR OF BIOETHICS, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
Should we ban cigarettes? U
CIGARETTES, NOT GUNS OR BOMBS, ARE THE DEADLIEST ARTEFACTS IN THE HISTORY OF CIVILIZATION
.S. President Barack Obama’s doctor con rmed last year that the president no longer smokes. At the urging of his wife, Michelle Obama, the president rst resolved to stop
smoking in 2006, and has used nicotine replacement therapy to help him. If it took Mr Obama, a man strong-willed enough to aspire to and achieve the U.S. presidency, ve years to kick the habit, it is not surprising that hundreds of millions of smokers nd themselves unable to quit. Although smoking has fallen sharply in the U.S., from about
40 percent of the population in 1970 to only 20 percent today, the proportion of smokers stopped dropping around 2004. There are still 46 million American adult smokers, and smoking kills about 443,000 Americans each year. Worldwide, the number of cigarettes sold – six trillion a year, enough to reach the sun and back – is at an all-time high. Six million people die each year from smoking – more than from AIDS, malaria and traf c accidents combined. Of the 1.3 billion Chinese, more than one in ten will die from smoking. Last year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
announced that it would spend US$600 million (MOP4.8 billion) over ve years to educate the public about the dangers of tobacco use. But Robert Proctor, a historian of science at Stanford University and the author of “Golden Holocaust: Origins of the Cigarette Catastrophe and the Case for Abolition”, argues that to use education as one’s only weapon against a highly addictive and often lethal drug is unpardonably insuf cient. “Tobacco control policy,” Mr Proctor says, “too often
centres on educating the public, when it should be focused on xing or eliminating the product.” He points out that we don’t just educate parents to keep toys painted with lead-based paints away from their children’s mouths; we ban the use of lead-based paint. Similarly, when thalidomide was found to cause major birth defects, we did not just educate women to avoid using the drug when pregnant.
Limit nicotine Proctor calls on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to use its new powers to regulate the contents of cigarette smoke to do two things. First, because cigarettes are designed to create and maintain addiction, the regulator should limit the amount of nicotine that they contain to a level at which they would cease to be addictive. Smokers who want to quit would then nd it easier to do so. Second, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration should bear
history in mind. The rst smokers did not inhale tobacco smoke; that became possible only in the 19th century, when a new way of curing tobacco made the smoke less alkaline. That tragic discovery is already responsible for about 150 million deaths, with many times that toll still to come, unless something drastic is done. The regulator should therefore require that cigarette
smoke be more alkaline, which would make it less easily inhaled, and so make it harder for cigarette smoke to reach the lungs. Much of Mr Proctor’s book is based on a vast archive of
tobacco-industry documents, released during litigation. More than 70 million pages of industry documents are now available online. The documents show that, as early as the 1940s, the
industry had evidence suggesting that smoking causes cancer. In 1953, however, a meeting of the chief executives of major American tobacco companies took a joint decision to deny that cigarettes are harmful. Moreover, once the scienti c evidence that smoking causes cancer became public, the industry tried to create the impression that the science was inconclusive, in much the same way that those who deny that human activities are causing climate change deliberately distort the science today.
Deadlier than guns As Mr Proctor says, cigarettes, not guns or bombs, are the deadliest artefacts in the history of civilization. If we want to save lives and improve health, nothing else that is readily achievable would be as effective as an international ban on the sale of cigarettes. (Eliminating extreme poverty worldwide is about the only strategy that might save more lives, but it would be far more dif cult to accomplish.) For those who recognize the state’s right to ban recreational
drugs like marijuana and ecstasy, a ban on cigarettes should be easy to accept. Tobacco kills far more people than these drugs. Some argue that as long as a drug harms only those who
choose to use it, the state should let individuals make their own decisions, limiting its role to ensuring that users are informed of the risks that they are running. But tobacco is not such a drug, given the dangers posed by second-hand smoke, especially when adults smoke in a home with young children. Even setting aside the harm that smokers in ict on non-
smokers, the free-to-choose argument is unconvincing with a drug as highly addictive as tobacco, and it becomes even more dubious when we consider that most smokers take up the habit as teenagers and later want to quit. Reducing the amount of nicotine in cigarette smoke to a level that was not addictive might meet this objection. The other argument for the status quo is that a ban on
tobacco might result in the same kind of asco as occurred during Prohibition in the United States. That is, like the effort to ban alcohol, prohibiting the sale of tobacco would funnel billions of dollars into organised crime and fuel corruption in law-enforcement agencies, while doing little to reduce smoking. But that may well be a false comparison. After all, many
smokers would actually like to see cigarettes banned because, like Obama, they want to quit.
JANUARY 2012
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