No. As Dennis Leary once said (I'm paraphrasing), you could put cigarettes in a black box with a skull and crossbones on it and people will still buy it.
People smoke despite being fully aware of the risks.
But graphic images are more repulsive than a skull and crossbones. Skulls and crossbones evoke glorified images of pirates from the 1600s. Pictures of horribly scarred lungs are pretty hard to put a positive spin on. From what I understand Australia is the leading example in the effectiveness of this, and Camikaze seems to indicate so as well.
I want to see some piece of scientific work that says tobacco is always harmful. Over the course of my life, I've probably smoked about two dozen cigarettes. What harm did I do to my body, and what are my odds of contracting lung cancer?
That's such a small amount that you could probably do a lot more harm worrying about it than the cigarettes themselves would actually cause. Tobacco, nicotine, and the like tend to have cumulative effects. A single cigarette does do some harm, but it's when people some hundreds or thousands of cigarettes a year that the bad effects really start to add up.
This is ridiculous. People know smoking is harmful, they CHOOSE to do it anyway. The government did its job, the knowledge is out there, this is just them being overbearing.
If the government really wants to discourage smoking, they should make it a disqualifier for health insurance, both public and private. Then the only people it will hurt are those choosing to smoke with full knowledge of consequences.
If smoking could
only harm the smoker, that would be an interesting approach, but secondhand smoke is dangerous, too, especially in countries where the smoking rate is high (Greece, Russia, France, China, etc.). And even in countries where the smoking rate isn't especially high, public smoking bans make it easier to avoid secondhand smoke (I've seen this myself as public smoking bans come into effect throughout the U.S.).
The disqualifier for health insurance is interesting, though. I know private insurance companies (at least in the U.S.) do charge smokers more than nonsmokers due to the obvious risks, but I don't know how public health insurance plans typically cover that. It does seem like there should be some type of surcharge for smokers on public health insurance plans. I'm not sure I'd go so far as a complete disqualifier, but charging the same rate certainly wouldn't make sense.
The point isn't so much to get people who have been smoking for eons to finally give it up, but to discourage newer smokers, those who do not have such an entrenched habit.
Indeed. And thus it will both take awhile to see the effect of this change (people won't give up smoking overnight, if at all), and the young people where be where the change is likely to be readily evident first.