Pubdate: Sun, 17 May 1998 Source: Calgary Sun (Canada) Contact: http://www.canoe.ca/CalgarySun/ Author: Ted Byfield -- Financial Post TIME TO END SOCIETY'S SMOKOPHOBIA It occurred to me last week, as I watched the guilt-ridden huddle of persecuted untouchables puffing away outside our office, that there's an urgent need for somebody to discover a smoker's gene. I mean an inherited quality in the compound of the individual that decrees from youth onward he or she will be hopelessly addicted to tobacco smoke. They can't help smoking; it's part of their make-up; they were born that way. To blame them for smoking would be like blaming them for the color of their eyes or size of their feet. The vicious discrimination against them could then be denounced as intolerance and attributed to the bias and bigotry of health-crazed generation, clinging to the scientifically-repudiated notion that second-hand smoke is injurious. It isn't. Then, with a proper education campaign in the public schools and the firm resolve of the human rights commissions, this unreasoning prejudice against the helpless smoker could be eradicated. Smokers could be invited into the schools to solicit sympathy and support for their condition, to urge acceptance for students who demonstrate this inclination, and to explain the beauty and virtue of the smoker's way of life. Health courses would urge "inclusiveness" for smokers and explain various smoking techniques -- pipes, cigarettes, cigars -- the economics of smoking and the need to shun those who demonstrate any sign of smokophobia. Social studies courses would also be brought into line -- smoking in Europe, smoking in India, the African smoker and intolerance of the Christian missions. In the history books, there would be photos of the little huddles outside offices under headlines that read: "Nicotine Ghettos in the '90s -- These People Were Made Outcasts Because of a Genetic Condition." True, smokers would continue to die of lung cancer, but not in the disreputable way they die now, when some British doctors have refused to treat heart patients who smoke because they brought it on themselves. Instead there would be special hospices for lung cancer victims, mournful articles on its "ravages," and loud demands from the Nicotine Lobby for more funding. Huge concerts would be held where big-name artists lend their names to the cause and tens of thousands would bow their heads in silent tribute to all the wonderful people who have died from lung cancer. In the meantime, other smoking myths would have been laid to rest. The smoker, for instance, would by then have become the hero of the health system and the salvation of the federal treasury. It would have been realized that by dying early he saves the country billions of dollars in Canada Pension costs. Neither does he linger about year after year into his late 90s in old folks' homes and hospitals, draining infinite sums out of the system. He dies young and fast like a responsible citizen. Not as responsible a citizen, true enough, as the homosexual who also saves vast sums for the CPP. His life expectancy is something around 40 and the chance of his getting HIV is over one in two, where the smoker's chance of getting lung cancer is only one in 10. Which raises a question in the mind of writer Mark Steyn. In the April 18 edition of the British magazine, The Spectator, he notes: "What no government official is prepared to suggest is that gays, like smokers, ought to try cutting down." "The risk of cancer from 'passive smoking' is statistically insignificant by all standard scientific epidemiological methods, but nonetheless legislatures across America have felt it necessary to exile smokers from the typing pool and make them enjoy their cigarettes in a pariahs' huddle on the street outside. "By contrast, if you're the wife of a bisexual man, the risk of AIDS from 'passive promiscuity' is highly significant, yet no one is suggesting gays should be made to go and stand outside." But then of course, nobody has to. Many of them are outside already, judging by the evidence left in certain parks. Anyway, let's find that gene and end forever this smokophobia. - ---