Sunday, April 19, 2026

SATURDAY’S CHILD – Going up in smoke

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SMOKERS are at their last gasp but not the cigarette industry, or “Big Tobacco” as it is called. It is no sense saying that you pay twice for your cigarettes – first when you get them and second when they get you – when the tobacco industry continues to make big bucks despite recessions, punitive taxation, anti-smoking legislation and consumer advocacy.
In February this year, British American Tobacco (BAT), the second-largest tobacco company in the world, and the leading tobacco company by revenue in Europe, reported an increase in profits mainly on sales growth, encouraged by growing salesin developing markets. One of the profit-earning measures was a price increase. 
In the Caribbean, the West Indies Tobacco Company (WITCO) experienced a three per cent increase in profits. 
The question is: “Why in these hard times, people who don’t have money to burn continue to burn money?” BAT itself provided the answer three years ago in 2008 when the company posted a 14 per cent rise in profits.
Given the extent to which cigarette smokers have become pariahs in most countries, one would have thought that Big Tobacco would shrink, shrivel and suffer.  
 
Smoking section
Someone even commented that having a smoking section in a restaurant is like having a peeing section in a swimming pool.  
Yet, none of this seems to work, and in places like China, tobacco consumption is increasing.
Ernest Dichter, a marketing psychologist and adviser to the tobacco industry, summed up the pleasures of smoking in his The Psychology Of Everyday Living: “If we consider all the pleasure and advantages provided . . . by this little white paper roll, we shall understand why it is difficult to destroy its power by means of warnings, threats, or preachings  . . . This pleasure miracle has so much to offer that we can safely predict the cigarette is here to stay.”
I suppose this is why so many of us started smoking – the feeling that we might be missing something. My father was a smoker, the boys and men around me smoked, and it became a rite of passage. 
Before I knew it, and in what seemed to be a relatively short time in my life, I had reached three packs of cigarettes a day. From the occasional one after a drink, I was smoking from the time I woke in the morning until I fell asleep at night, most times with a cigarette. 
I have become an anti-smoking militant like the pilot who told her passengers: “There is no smoking in the cabin on this flight. There is also no smoking in the lavatories. If we see smoke coming from the lavatories, we will assume you are on fire and put you out. This is a free service we provide.  
“There are two smoking sections on this flight, one outside each wing exit. We do have a movie in the smoking sections tonight . . . hold on, let me check what it is . . . Oh, here it is; the movie tonight is Gone With The Wind.”  
A few weeks ago a colleague in the Turks and Caicos Islands gave me a cap that said “Break The Tobacco Markeing Net” and provided a website address: www.who.int/tobacco/wntd. It was part of a WHO (World Health Organisation) marketing campaign on World No Tobacco Day (May 31, 2010) to control the epidemic of tobacco among women. 
While the evidence shows plainly that knowing about the dangers of smoking does not really stop chronic smokers from continuing to spend their money on a habit that will eventually kill them, it is important to make the personal statement and commitment, as I did many years ago, “I will not smoke for the next minute.”  
Eventually the minute turned into an hour and then a day and now 35 years. I don’t want any of my daughters or sons to smoke, but while big tobacco continues to have more money to spend on advertising than those who oppose them, I think the best message for the rest of us is that it is time to get off our butts.
 
Tony Deyal was last seen asking: “What’s the best way to stop someone from smoking in bed?” Get a waterbed and fill it with gasoline.

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