SOME tobacco companies lied for years about the dangers of smoking. They were known as the Big Five, but are now down to the Big Three. That is Phillip Morris (Marlboro cigarettes) RJ Reynolds (Camel cigarettes) and Lorillard (Newport cigarettes). Those three companies together have nearly 90% of the cigarette market. Marlboro alone has over 50% of the market.
Each tobacco companies has had to pay money to either the states in which they sell their product, or maintain and add to a sum of money in an escrow account depending on where and how much the sell, since the passage of the Master Settlement Agreement in 1998.
So now, the states have become dependent on tobacco dollars, as well as on tobacco tax dollars.
If you want to talk morals, we should also consider these states that get 100 million a year from tobacco companies and spend not one penny educating their youth about smoking, or helping their citizens break the habit. Tennessee has literally not spent one dime of the tobacco dollars toward lessening smoking.
So now, it is in the best interests of the states and of the federal government to keep people smoking. That should be your moral question.
SCHIP is entirely funded off tobacco taxes. Yes, tobacco pays for children's health insurance.
The farmers buyout is entirely funded off added tobacco taxes. Yes, tobacco pays for farmers to NOT grow tobacco so the manufacturers have to buy the bulk of their tobacco from overseas.
I could go on forever, but what it all boils down to is that smoking is a personal, adult choice.
The surgeon general declared smoking hazardous to your health in 1964. That is 46 years ago. If anyone out there doesn't know the risks of smoking, they likely don't have the brain power to smoke anyway.
Finally, there are no advertisements making smoking look glamorous. Cigarette advertising of that sort has been banned since the 70's.