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Snuffing Out Smoking

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Although the origins of smoking are unknown, it was first seen among Native Americans, who used tobacco for both spiritual and medicinal purposes. In the late 15th century, sailors returning from the Americas began to introduce tobacco to Europe, where it was soon regarded as an almost universal curative. Ironically, some claimed that it was an effective treatment for cancer. Tobacco use quickly spread, and by the early 17th century, the plant was being grown in India, China, Japan, the Middle East, and parts of Africa. Some two centuries later, smoking had become an established ritual throughout the world—a development much aided by the mass production of cigarettes in the 1880s.

However, not all were in favor of lighting up. James I, who ruled England from 1603 to 1625, called smoking “a custom loathsome to the eye, hateful to the nose, harmful to the brain, dangerous to the lungs.” Ottoman Sultan Murad IV declared that smoking was a capital offense, and in Russia those caught smoking would have their noses cut off. The American Anti-Tobacco Society was established in 1849, and in the late 19th century the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union called for a cigarette prohibition in the U.S. Several states adopted such bans, though by the late 1920s all had been repealed. Smoking also ran afoul of various religions. Several popes issued papal bulls excommunicating anyone who used snuff in church, and in 1855 the Seventh-day Adventist Church initiated an antitobacco campaign, calling tobacco use a “filthy, health-destroying, God-dishonoring practice.”

While these efforts had little effect, the antismoking movement gained new momentum in the mid-20th century. Adolf Hitler condemned smoking, and under his direction Germany initiated important research into its health effects. In 1950 the first notable study linked lung cancer with smoking. Other research later showed that smoking contributed to strokes, heart disease, and emphysema, among other ailments. In addition, cigarettes were found to be addictive.

In 1962 the Royal College of Physicians in the U.K. released a report about the health risks of smoking, and two years later the U.S. surgeon general’s advisory committee issued its own study. In 1965 the U.S. became the first country to put warning labels on cigarette packs. (One optimistic tobacco company thought that such labels might actually encourage some teenagers to smoke.) Numerous other countries adopted the practice, with some adding pictures of diseased lungs or other graphic images. Later efforts included smoking bans in workplaces and certain public areas and limits on cigarette advertising and sponsorship.

Cigarette companies, however, adamantly denied the various health risks. Although many privately accepted much of the research—which their own scientists confirmed—publicly they sought to undermine the negative findings. Companies often funded studies that typically concluded that any health risks were “statistically unproven.” As one PR firm noted, the goal was to “stop public panic.”

As early as the 1950s, the companies began to face legal challenges—most notably in the U.S.—as individuals and their families started to file liability suits. While such early cases were unsuccessful, in 1998 the tobacco companies reached a landmark settlement with 46 U.S. states, agreeing to pay more than $350 billion. The following year the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) filed its own lawsuit, alleging that the tobacco industry had “engaged in a decades-long conspiracy” to mislead people about the health risks of smoking and secondhand smoke as well as to deny the addictiveness of nicotine, among other allegations. The tobacco companies countered that they were protected by the First Amendment. In 2006 a federal court disagreed, ruling in favor of the DOJ. However, the court refused the DOJ’s request that the companies forfeit previous profits.

While antismoking efforts have had success in North America and Western Europe—where the number of smokers has dramatically dropped—much of the world continues to light up. In 2016 it was estimated that some one billion people smoked, with nearly half of all men using cigarettes. The majority of smokers are found in developing countries, where tobacco companies have focused their efforts. In addition to running extensive advertising campaigns, they have aggressively fought stricter restrictions. In Indonesia, one of the world’s largest markets for cigarettes, there are almost no regulations on smoking. Some 60 percent of men light up, and children are allowed to purchase cigarettes. Against this background, it is perhaps not surprising that cigarette sales are increasing by approximately 2 percent annually.