Source: Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Pubdate: Sun, 11 Apr 1998 Author: Carl T. Rowan BAN TOBACCO LIKE MARIJUANA AND COCAINE THE local drug pusher cornered the president of the United States at a fund-raiser and said: "Cocaine has been good. We paid for our mansion off cocaine. We educated our kids off cocaine. We paved our old driveway with blacktop off cocaine. We pay our property taxes. We pay the preacher on Sunday morning. We overhaul our vehicles, and we buy tires. We pay our insurance. And we pay our mules and runners, and give them Social Security and Medicare. And we just try to live right and do right off cocaine." Replace the word "cocaine" with "tobacco" and you pretty much have the emotional speech that tobacco farmer Mattie Mack gave to President Clinton in Brandenburg, Ky., Thursday. "Aw, come on," you say, "tobacco is legal and cocaine is not, and you can't compare the two." That's my point. I can compare them in terms of the damage they do to their addicted users, but I can't compare their legal status. Yet I know that there will be no solution to the curse of tobacco in this society until it is banned just like marijuana and cocaine are, and there probably won't be a solution even then. I never believed last summer that the tobacco companies would pay $368.5 billion and accept the terms of the state attorneys general, of the president and Congress, and of the health-care industry just to stay in business with curtailed prosperity. Tobacco is such a golden goose that I knew the industry would find some excuse ... like Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., raising the payment to $516 billion over 25 years ... to say that it would rather fight than switch. Clinton said in Kentucky Thursday, "I do not want to put the tobacco companies out of business. I do want to put them out of the business of selling cigarettes to teen-agers." The tobacco tycoons have always known that if they can't sell cigarettes to teen-agers, they are putting themselves out of business. A 14-year-old who reaches 24 without smoking is very unlikely to take up the filthy, killing habit. That is why tobacco industry leaders have lied to America for generations about the deliberate boosting of nicotine levels, the ad campaigns targeted at teen-agers, the special lures for minority members. The tobacco industry knows where survival and prosperity lie. And that is why the tobacco bosses have brazenly declared war on legislation that would increase the cost of cigarettes sharply by raising taxes on tobacco products; would give the Food and Drug Administration power to regulate the levels of addictive nicotine in tobacco products; and restrict drastically the advertising and marketing practices of tobacco companies. Big Tobacco has taken a colossal gamble that farmers like Mack, the millions of people who already are hooked on nicotine and the Republican Party will rise up and help them to maintain something close to the status quo. The tobacco moguls seem to think that handing out a few billion dollars in campaign contributions and sugar-coated bribes will provide more protection than any $516 billion settlement. But recent exposes of perfidy by the tobacco industry, and revelations of the health tragedies caused by tobacco, have made it politically impossible for Republicans to provide the shelter that the tobacco industry expects. So there will be legislation. But it probably won't be the "new Prohibition." It will be tough enough to make a lot of farmers think of growing collard greens, and force a lot of tobacco company employees to look for work elsewhere. But it won't put tobacco in the same pipe with cocaine. So a semi-black market for tobacco will arise, the health problems will endure, and our politicians will wring their hands and give more speeches. And all the hopes of protecting teen-agers, and of using tobacco settlement money for noble causes, will go up in schoolyard smoke. Rowan is a syndicated columnist based in Washington, D.C.