Moving Towards Tobacco Prohibition

Last
week, another bill was passed and signed into law that takes more of our
freedoms and violates the Constitution of the United States. It was, of
course, done for the sake of the children, and in the name of the health of the
citizenry. It’s always the case that when your liberty is seized, it is
seized for your own good. Such is the condescension of Washington.
The
Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act will give sweeping new powers
over tobacco to the FDA. It will require everyone engaged in
manufacturing, preparing, compounding, or processing tobacco to register with
the FDA and be subjected to FDA inspections, which is yet another violation of
the Fourth Amendment. It violates the First Amendment by allowing the FDA
to restrict tobacco advertising in multiple ways, as well as an outright ban on
advertising any cigarettes as light, mild or low-tar. The FDA will have
the power of pre-market reviews of all new tobacco products, and will impose
new user fees, meaning taxes, on manufacturers and importers of tobacco
products. It will even regulate the amount of nicotine in cigarettes.
My
objections to the bill are not an endorsement of tobacco. As a physician
I understand the adverse health effects of this bad habit. And that is
exactly how smoking should be treated – as a bad habit and a personal
choice. The way to combat poor choices is through education and
information. Other than ensuring that tobacco companies do not engage in
force or fraud to market their products, the federal government needs to stay
out of the health habits of free people. Regulations for children should
be at the state level. Unfortunately, government is using its already
overly intrusive financial and regulatory roles in healthcare to establish a
justifiable interest in intervening in your personal lifestyle choices as
well. We all need to anticipate the level of health freedom that will
remain once government manages all health care in this country.
Actions
in Congress such as this tobacco bill are especially disconcerting after we
thought we were beginning to see some progress in drawing down the wrong-headed
and failed war on drugs. A majority of Americans now think marijuana
should be legal, taxed and regulated, according to a recent Zogby poll and over
70 percent are in favor of allowing medicinal use of marijuana.
Bills like this take us down exactly the wrong path. Instead of
gaining more freedom with marijuana, we are moving closer to prohibiting
tobacco. Our prisons are already bursting with non-violent drug
offenders. How long will it be before a black market in tobacco fills the
prisons with non-violent cigarette smokers?
Hemp
and tobacco were staple crops for our founding fathers when our country was
new. It is baffling to see how far removed from real freedom this country
has become since then. Hemp, even for industrial uses, of which there are
many, is illegal to grow at all. Now tobacco will have more layers of
bureaucracy and interference piled on top of it. In this economy it is
extremely upsetting to see this additional squeeze put on an entire
industry. One has to wonder how many smaller farmers will be forced
out of business because of this bill.
Congressman Ron
Paul of
To learn more
about Congressman Ron Paul, visit his Congressional
Home Page.
See Ron Paul's official website regarding his run for President in 2008.
Click here to return to TRA's Issue CXCVII Index.
Learn about Mr. Stolyarov's novel, Eden against the Colossus, here.Read Mr. Stolyarov's new comprehensive treatise, A Rational Cosmology, explicating such terms as the universe, matter, space, time, sound, light, life, consciousness, and volition, here.