Pubdate: Fri, 02 May 2003
Source: Dartmouth, The (NH Edu)
Copyright: 2003, The Dartmouth, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.thedartmouth.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2724
Author: Elise Dunphe

KOOP: 'REAL TERRORISTS' IN TOBACCO INDUSTRY

Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop '37 does not discriminate between 
drug lords and executives of tobacco companies when it comes to fostering 
the disease of addiction.

He called the tobacco companies "the largest concentration of evil 
masquerading as big business on this planet," and said that they are 
equally evil as the dealers of illicit drugs such as heroin and cocaine.

"In my opinion, they are all evil," Koop said. "I would spend the rest of 
my life bringing them to their knees. These are the real terrorists."

Koop has been fighting to end smoking for almost 25 years. An anti-tobacco 
campaign was the cornerstone of his work during his time as Surgeon General.

Koop spoke yesterday on the general subject of addiction as a starting 
point for further dialogue on the subject in the Hanover area, including a 
town meeting that will take place at Hanover High School on May 6.

He called for compassion for those people who are addicted, whether it be 
to tobacco, alcohol or illegal substances, and for easier access to 
treatment for these addictions. He expressed hope that public health would 
step up to the need of both preventing and treating addiction.

"Addiction should be treated with the notion that it is a public health 
problem," he said. "Why haven't we ever had a drug czar that ever 
understood the burden of legal drugs like tobacco and alcohol?"

Easy procurement of addictive substances is a driving force leading to the 
statistics that directly correlate illness and mortality to the consumption 
of those products, he said.

"It's very easy to purchase addicting drugs, but not very easy to get 
treatment," he said, recalling a man who was able to purchase cocaine 
within 20 minutes of arriving in Denver.

Koop compared the public's view of addiction to the view of AIDS in the 
1980s -- it was at first viewed as a problem limited to a specific social 
group that did not deserve compassion or help because victims had brought 
their problem on themselves -- but echoed Ronald Reagan in saying that we 
are now fighting the disease, not those who have it.

The tobacco companies target children and adolescents, Koop said, adding 
that addiction during adolescence is not the same as choosing to abuse your 
body as an adult.

"Adolescents are like congressmen -- they know very little about addiction."
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