This post was originally published in the Wilson Times Jan. 18, 2020.
Recent news stories about a
deadly vaping illness have reminded me of how much tobacco intertwined with my
newspaper career. I edited newspapers in Wilson and Danville, Va., cities
dependent upon tobacco growers, tobacco warehouses and tobacco factories. Both
cities proclaimed their superiority as tobacco markets. The dominant radio
station in Danville, where I worked 1977-79, was WBTM, “World’s Best Tobacco
Market.” The dominant radio station in Wilson when I arrived in January 1980
was WGTM, “World’s Greatest Tobacco Market.” Tobacco prices during the market
season were front-page news in both cities. The market’s opening was a Big
Event drawing crowds of buyers, growers, politicians and others. President
Jimmy Carter attended the market opening in 1978.
The two editors who preceded
me in Wilson were chain smokers. Newspaper staff members were allowed to smoke
at their desks. “Thank you for not smoking” signs were not found in the
newspaper office or in many other businesses in town.
The 1964 surgeon general’s
scathing report on cigarette smoking and its link to lung cancer marked the
beginning of the slow erosion of tobacco empires, although tobacco and smokers
held on for decades. Congress fought an extended battle over price supports and
Depression-era tobacco allotments (essentially a license to grow and sell
tobacco, which turned into a valuable asset for shrewd investors in farmland).
To counter government
studies linking tobacco to various diseases, the tobacco industry created the
Tobacco Institute, which financed “studies” that cast doubt on the
tobacco-disease links and promoted smoking. The Tobacco Institute was
eliminated in the Master Settlement Agreement that settled lawsuits brought by
46 states against tobacco companies in 1998.
Eventually, messages about
the health hazards of smoking began to take hold. State, federal and local
taxes on cigarettes soared, discouraging (somewhat) sales of cigarettes. But
the addictive power of nicotine in tobacco made it nearly impossible for
smokers to quit. Non-smokers became aware that “secondhand smoke” was affecting
their health, too.
The percentage of adults who
smoked peaked in1954 at 45 percent and is now around 18 percent. That drop
resulted from efforts to curtail tobacco use by limits on advertising, laws
prohibiting tobacco sales to minors, and a long-delayed public recognition that
cigarette smoking is not healthy, sexy or sophisticated.
For more years than I had
realized, I tolerated cigarette smoke at public events, in my office, in
classrooms, in stores and other people’s offices, in restaurants (“smoking or
non-smoking?”) and waiting rooms. Friends with asthma or allergies complained
about smokers invading their space, but it didn’t seem to bother me until
fairly recently. Like many other people, I’ve developed a sensitivity to
cigarette odors.
I can remember when heavy
smokers would come into my office at the newspaper, and the smoky odor would
linger for a long spell after the visitor had left.
The impact of smoking goes
beyond the 440,000 Americans who die from smoking-related illnesses every year,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The litter of
cigarette papers and filters, the ashes (and yucky ashtrays), the accidental
fires, the cigarette smoke odor that permeates clothing, upholstery and
vehicles are also part of tobacco’s history.
Tobacco made many people
filthy rich, from the farmers who knew that tobacco had a greater profit margin
than any other crop they could grow to the tobacco corporations that inundated
television, radio and magazines with costly advertising to promote their
products.
Most Americans,
predominantly non-smokers, will not mourn the decline of the tobacco industry
even as new products aim to hook new generations on vaping products that send a heated mist into
their lungs and emit a cloud that looks a lot like cigarette smoke. Lung
damage, leading to some deaths, have been linked to this new substitute for
cigarettes.
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