Surprise! Tobacco products get their butts kicked

Did YOU know there were large numbers of people just itching to put more restrictions on cigarettes?

Not just any people, mind you, but federal legislators and the President, too. No wonder it took so little time for Congress to pass and President Obama to sign the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act in June.

Proponents of more tobacco restrictions, who had been evidently itching for this law for years, said, Whew. The rest of us said, Huh? Smokers are already relegated to hanging out in alleys and on sidewalks thanks to bans on smoking in most public buildings, including bars and casinos. I don’t even smoke, but I mean, come on. It’s almost like taking hot dogs out of ballparks.

Even if you like the idea of new restrictions on tobacco, it seems unfortunate that the law dumps all these new chores in the lap of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. This is a bad idea. With FDA undertaking significant new activities in several areas, including food safety, drug safety, imports of all kinds, and other issues, this isn’t the time to hand them this, from a resources point of view, if nothing else.

But cigarettes are rather undeniably associated with a range of serious health problems, so they present a somewhat unique tension between freedom of choice and public health protection. Congress has evidently decided it’s time to restrict cigarettes more than they already are in order to reduce the numbers of new young smokers and to try to make cigarettes themselves safer.

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