Tony Wartooth said:
Biosophilogical said:
I think it should never have been legal in the first place (as it is, it's addictive, common-place and considered socially cool by a lot of teenagers, so before they are responsible enough to make life-changing decisions they go and get themselves addicted to a substance that is detrimental to your health, your social life and your wallet). However, given how much opposition it would face, I don't think it should be made illegal, the financial and political backlash would be immense. But the fact is, it is like crack or cocaine in slow motion; you get addicted, it messes with your organs, it costs you shit-tonnes of money, but it just takes a lot longer than other drugs, however, because it's legal a lot of people get addicted because those who put peer pressure on them to smoke have such easy access to it.
I propose a middle ground, heavily tax it, meaning it will be less accessible, the health industry gets an added boost to its income, it won't sell as well, less people become addicted, people looking to quit are given a 'nudge in the right direction' and it becomes less ingrained in our society, meaning we won't have to make it illegal and therefore impose upon rights, because the increased price will push the entire smoking industry to kill itself.
I don't know if you've payed attention to cig prices, but they have gone up drastically. It started becoming huge when Clinton passed a bill that let tobacco farmers only grow tobacco on 1/4th or so of their land. With every democratic president, it goes up more and more also as they tend to tax "luxury" items more. Increased prices won't change anything, people will just be less wealthy than they already are. Cigs are 10 dollars a pack in Tampa, FL and also NYC. People still buy them, and bums still scrounge through places for enough. If anything it just makes people more desperate.
Hmmm, then I need to think of an alternative alternative, because I'd really prefer to have the government influence society into fixing itself, rather than letting them flat out control it. So, now to think of a middle ground, one where cigarettes aren't so easily accessed that society as a whole collapses into an addicted mosh-pit but at the same time, where the decline of smoking is due to increased common sense and integrity rather than government control.
Education? It might work ... okay it probably wouldn't work. Restricting smoking areas to private property, and any private venue must advertise that it is a smoking venue in plain sight? That way, smokers could only smoke at home or at specific venues, which would limit the appeal socially, promoting quitting. Alternatively, it would make places everywhere be completely smoker friendly, putting more social pressure on non-smokers to fit in.
Damn it this is hard.
Increase the minimum smoking age to 25? (at this point most people have completely developed both mentally and physically, it would also make it harder for minors to get smokes) However, I don't think this would completely fix the problem, and you'd probably have to increase the active duty age to 25 for the military for the same reason, or else face people going 'Well, if they are young enough to die they are young enough to smoke'.