Murrmurr
SF VIP
- Location
- Sacramento, California
The US gov't supports tobacco companies in that they've taken bribes and passed laws allowing a few of them to have a monopoly and get huge and powerful. I'm guessing it was no different in the UK.I suppose in 100 years’ time, perhaps much sooner, no one will smoke. So we will be back where we were before the 16th century, when adventurers like Raleigh brought the native American habit of smoking tobacco to Europe. It was one of the points on which he intrigued Queen Elizabeth. ‘I can weigh tobacco smoke, Your Majesty.’ ‘Oh no, you can’t, Sir Walter.’ Then he would produce a small pair of scales, weigh a bit of tobacco, smoke it, then weigh the ashes. ‘The difference between the two is the weight of the smoke.’ ‘Well I never, Sir Walter.’
The Queen's successor, James I, hated smoking, he wrote a book, "A Counterblaste to Tobacco," denouncing it, and would have banned it. But that would have meant losing the duties on imported tobacco, so he dropped his plan. It’s odd given that tobacco came from America but it has been the Americans that have led the campaign to end smoking which is now being followed elsewhere, not least, New Zealand. When the first American colonies were founded from England, tobacco was virtually the only crop they learnt how to grow which Europeans wanted to buy. Without it, they could not have survived, and the United States would never have come into existence. Its origins were built on the weed.
Rather bizarrely, tobacco was once seen as good for your health! The Spaniard Nicolas Monardes had written a report into tobacco, translated into English by John Frampton in 1577 and called "Of the Tabaco and of His Greate Vertues," which recommended its use for the relief of toothache, falling fingernails, worms, halitosis and lockjaw. (Got to love the halitosis, smokers breath stink like a stale ashtray.)
I assume tobacco isn't grown in New Zealand and people in power don't profit from it in any way, or any significant way.