My father died from smoking
I'd like to begin today with a little story. When I was a little boy
of three, my parents were divorced, and I didn't see my Dad again until
I was nine. For six long years, I was wondering where his Dad was. I
didn't have him to hold me in his arms, and I really needed him and
I really missed him. I didn't have him to come to the football game
and say, "You played well -- you're my boy!" He wasn't there
at swim meets to say, "I'm proud of you, son."
So when I was nine, being an enterprising lad, I wrote him a letter.
It said, "Dear Dad, I'm your son, Patrick. Where are you? I want
to meet you." And he was traveling, and my letter was always arriving
the day after he left, but he also would leave a forwarding address.
So the letter was forwarded from place to place, and by some miracle,
it eventually reached him. He opened it, was touched, and he sent for
me.
You can imagine how I felt when we finally met. All those years of
longing, and now I was going to meet him! My Mom had brought me up to
believe that he was wonderful, and he was. When the big moment finally
came, and I was shown into the room where he was, I was stunned and
saddened to find my father lying down, with sandbags on his chest. In
those days sandbags were put on the chest to exercise the lungs.
My only memories of my father, R.J. Reynolds, Jr., are of a man always
short of breath, increasingly sick and frail, and counting the time
that he had left to live. My Dad died from emphysema, the result of
his lifelong cigarette addiction, in 1964, when I was still a boy.
I started smoking myself, as a teen
For many years I didn't consciously make the connection between that
sick, frail man and smoking. When I was in high school, I wanted what
every high school boy wants. I wanted to look older. I wanted to be
hip, to be cool. To hang out with the older kids. So that's why I started
smoking that same year, at 15. My father and mother both smoked, all
of my older brothers smoked -- and, after all, it was the family business
-- so it must be okay, I thought. Also my mother didn't want me to smoke,
and that made it very attractive indeed.
And I was trying to discover my own identity. Like a lot of teenagers,
I was rebelling against authority. It was time for the usual developmental
task of separating from my parents. I was at the age when normal teenagers
begin making more and more of their own decisions. I wanted to express
who I was and find out who I was. So I began smoking.
Tobacco issues most important to me
Cigarettes killed my father, but still I started smoking. That really
impresses on me how strong the lure of cigarettes is to teenagers. The
fact is that a majority of smokers -- sixty percent -- begin smoking
by the age of 14. And ninety percent of all those who smoke become addicted
before reaching their 19th birthday. That means that only one smoker
in ten takes up the habit after age 19.
So almost no one starts smoking after age 19! The sad truth is that
90 percent of those who become addicted to cigarettes are children and
teenagers.
I'm going to quote some figures from an article which appeared in the
May, '95 issue of Scientific American magazine, because this will shed
light on this area.
In 1992, the tobacco industry spent $5 billion on marketing in the
US alone. This expenditure translates to about $75 for every adult US
smoker, or to $4,500 for every US adolescent who became a smoker that
year. This apparently high cost to attract a new smoker is very likely
recouped over the average 15 to 20 years that this teen will smoke.
Tobacco executives have maintained that their advertising is only for
getting established smokers to switch brands. But most public health
advocates agree that cigarette advertising generates new demand, with
adolescents being the primary target.
In 1988, R.J. Reynolds introduced the cartoon "Joe Camel"
ads. One study indicates that the market share of Camel among adolescent
males jumped from 1% prior to the that campaign, to over 13% of adolescent
males just two years after the campaign began. [Update as of May, 2000:
Smoking among teens surged by 73% from 1988 -- the year Joe Camel was
introduced -- through 1998. Since 1998 it has declined slightly. For
the causes of this, please see Mr. Reynolds' Message
to Youth page, and scroll down to the section titled On the Recent Increase in Teen Smoking.]
Around the world, smoking has been dramatically increasing. According
to the Worldwatch Institute in Washington, smoking around the world
increased 73% between 1988 and 1998. [updated in 2007]
Over the three decades starting in 1965, there was a 73% increase in worldwide smoking. The largest increase was in the Third
World and Asia. In China, during the 1990's, cigarette consumption grew
at a rate of about 9% per year. In the US, cigarettes presently account
for about one of every five deaths.
Worldwide smoking now causes two to three million deaths each year.
Around the globe today, one out of three people smoke. Because of skyrocketing
world smoking rates in recent years, the smoking death rate will soon
escalate sharply.
According to the World Health Organization, of the world's 1.2 billion
smokers, before the year 2030 smoking will kill half a billion people
who are now alive -- about 9% of the world's population! And the study
limits deaths counted to those who were already born at the time of
the study.
The Mandate for Regulation
and Oversight
Who is to blame? First, we can point to the tobacco companies, especially
for their predatory marketing campaigns in underdeveloped countries,
where people often know little of the dangers of smoking. In some of
these nations, cigarette warning labels are often weak or nonexistent.
And the strong desire of many Third World peoples for Western cigarettes
makes them vulnerable targets indeed.
Second, even more than the tobacco industry, we should blame the governments
of the world for their poor regulation of cigarettes. If it's legal,
for example, for R.J. Reynolds to use cartoon characters to attract
adolescents, then it's legal for Philip Morris to do the same. The buck
stops with government -- it's up to them to regulate, and not to stand
passively by as a new generation of our youth becomes hooked on cigarettes.
Now the tobacco industry spin doctors say, "We don't need more
government in our lives!" They have attempted to portray tobacco
regulations as an intrusion on our personal freedoms. But let us remember
that there is no freedom in the slavery to nicotine addiction, and tobacco
is a health issue, not a freedoms issue.
Even children wonder
why cigarette ads are permitted if smoking is so bad for health.
Three Important Actions Governments Should
Take
Therefore, today, on World No Tobacco Day, I would like to take this
opportunity to publicly deliver to the leaders of the world a special
three point message. When you return to your many homelands, please
ask your governments to do the following:
Ban Tobacco Advertising
First, I urge those nations who have not done so already to ban cigarette
advertising altogether. There is a clear moral, ethical and legal mandate
for all nations to stop the tobacco companies from continuing to associate
smoking with positive images of health, sports, success, and romance.
The tobacco industry can no longer use the old freedom of speech defense,
if we separate private and political speech from commercial speech.
Private and political speech is -- and should be -- protected by the
First Amendment right of Freedom of Speech. But commercial speech, or
advertising, must tell the public the truth. Tobacco ads are outrageous
lies, and therein lies one new legal basis for banning tobacco advertising
in nations all around the world.
Also, as the US Supreme Court ruled briefly before reversing itself,
tobacco is an exceptionally hazardous product, and only children and
adolescents become addicted to it. So we need exceptional guidelines
to regulate this product -- the only product in the world which when
used as intended by the manufacturer causes death, disease and intense
addiction. [Update: in 1996, the Supreme Court upheld the City of Baltimore's
right to drastically curtail tobacco advertising, on the grounds that
tobacco is an unusual hazard to the health of out children. Freedom
of Speech defenses were overruled. However, the Court reversed itself
shortly thereafter, with Conservative Justices upholding the tobacco
industry's right to advertise.]
The attractive models up on cigarette billboards are role models which
the world's children see daily and look up to. Our children see them
everywhere, and grow up believing that smoking is cool, socially acceptable
and much more prevalent than it actually is. This sets the stage for
them to take up the habit later, before they find out the truth. Sadly,
by the time they do, it's too late -- they're addicted, often for life.
By their early 20's, most come to realize that smoking is not very prevalent
or socially acceptable -- and it's anything but cool. Tobacco advertising
had misled them during their vulnerable teenage years. [Update as of
March, 1999: the States' settlement agreement provides for a complete
ban of cigarette billboards. Tobacco may be advertised in magazines
with less than 20% youth readership.]
Sadly, in recent years the tobacco industry has been on an unprecedented
worldwide advertising binge. I congratulate the 40 nations who have
had the moral courage to totally ban or strongly limit tobacco advertising.
These include France and Canada, and more recently, Russia and China.
I urge those nations who have banned advertising, but still permit ads
for tobacco promotional products, to ban this form of cigarette advertising
as well. It is a tremendous loophole which enables tobacco companies
to continue advertising at nearly full throttle.
In short, tobacco advertising is the most enormous abuse of freedom
of speech in history, and I urge the leaders of the world to ban it
altogether.
Raise Tobacco Taxes
Second, I urge world governments to raise their cigarette taxes, particularly
because studies indicate that higher cigarette taxes motivate people
to quit, and will substantially reduce future addiction among our youth.
I congratulate nations who have imposed the higher cigarette taxes,
like Denmark at US $4 per pack, or England, at US $3.24 per pack. With
a recent study informing us that the direct medical costs of smoking
are over US $2 per pack, a $2 tax on cigarettes is the very minimum
which should now be considered by the world's governments.
As I said earlier, the nation with the very lowest cigarette tax in
the entire the industrialized world is the US -- proof that the tobacco
companies and the millions they have given to US officials have far
too much influence over government policy. In the US, the average tax
on cigarettes is only 56 cents per pack! [UPDATE: This has changed considerably since this speech was given in 1995, as the States and Congress have since raised tobacco taxes.] This is [was] a national disgrace!
Limit Youth Access to
Tobacco
Third, I urge world leaders to limit youth access to tobacco. It's
a sad reality that most of the world's children today can easily purchase
cigarettes. In fact, 60% of smokers actually start by age 14, and 90%
of those who smoke are addicted before reaching age 19. This means that
almost no one starts smoking after 19.
It is for this reason that I advocate licensing merchants who sell
tobacco and also raising the age at which minors can purchase cigarettes
to 21 -- as was long ago done with alcohol. A portion of the licensing
fees paid by merchants would go to pay for sting operations -- sending
minors of 16 and 17, under agent supervision, into convenience stores
to try to purchase cigarettes. Merchants and clerks caught selling to
minors would pay increasing fines with the first two offenses, and would
lose their license to sell tobacco on the third offense for at least
two years. Word would very quickly spread around the merchant community
not to sell to minors, and to require a photo ID.
Cigarette vending machines should be banned, because that is how most
children easily buy cigarettes. But in the US, only nine states have
banned vending machines. And tobacco education should begin early in
our schools.
To repeat, almost no one starts smoking after age 19. If we can keep
our youth off cigarettes until age 21, it is very unlikely they will
start after that age.
In summary, I am asking the governments of the world to ban cigarette
advertising, raise cigarette taxes to at least US $2 per pack, and to
take strong measures to limit youth access to cigarettes.
With false innocence, the tobacco companies ask, "Why single out
tobacco for more regulations?" The answer is simple -- as I said
once already, cigarettes are the only products which, when used as intended,
cause widespread addiction, disease and death. Other products, like
alcohol, are not necessarily harmful, when used as intended. But cigarettes
definitely are -- and that's why tobacco should be singled out and regulated
much more tightly.
Now, like my family did at first, you are probably wondering how it
is that a grandson of R.J. Reynolds became a smokefree advocate. That's
a good question. As I said, my father's death made a deep impression
on me, as did the mounting medical evidence.
Then in 1986 I found myself in Washington DC, in a chance meeting with
Senator Robert Packwood. Hearing that I believed cigarette taxes should
be higher, he immediately invited me to testify before a Senate subcommittee
that same day. I said no, but I realized for the first time that maybe
I could be a voice -- a voice to wake people up to the dangers of smoking.
So, back home in Los Angeles, I began to look into the tobacco industry.
I didn't know much about it, because no family member had worked in
a position of importance there in decades. The more I learned about
the tobacco companies, the more disturbed I became. I agreed to testify
before a Congressional hearing a few months later on whether to ban
tobacco advertising.
When I did, on July 18, 1986, my testimony was widely reported in the
media, and I was besieged with requests for speaking engagements and
news interviews. I was catapulted overnight into a position of leadership.
I began to answer the call, campaigning for cigarette tax increases
in Florida, California, Colorado, Arizona and other States. I spoke
two additional times before Congress (once to help bring about the initial
airline smoking ban). And I spoke before dozens of State legislatures
in favor of laws limiting secondhand smoke, which were then sweeping
the nation [in the late 80's].
As I worked on various political campaigns, I became increasingly knowledgeable
about -- and devoted to -- the fight against tobacco. And in Los Angeles
in 1989, I founded The Foundation for a Smokefree America. I'm committed
to this work, and will answer the call for the rest of my life.
All of this is not to say that I am a major figure in this fight --
in fact, that is simply not the case. There are numerous persons whose
efforts have exceeded my own many times over, many whose influence is
greater than mine, and many who have been far more selfless than I have
been. Thousands of people have worked tirelessly to bring about the
changes in recent years. I am glad to be counted among them. It's all
of us working together that has made such a difference. I'll come back
to this shortly, at the end of my talk.
My Foundation is now seeking funding to send me on a goodwill world
speaking tour, warning children of the dangers of cigarettes, and at
the same time urging the world's leaders to enact the three point plan
I have outlined. I believe I will be able to bring a vitally important
message to millions of children around the world, and with luck influence
world leaders as well. [Update as of March 1999: the Foundation for
a Smokefree America has instead decided to seek grants for a much needed
Tobaccofree Speakers Bureau, and a new study to determine whether the
current pessimism documented among today's teens has played a role in
the tremendous 73% increase in the teen smoking rate since 1988. Other
grant proposals are also now being prepared.]