Originally posted by: DonVito
How is that a double standard? In both cases your hypothetical "liberals" are arguing for more taxes. I think you need some rest.
As to your first (ridiculous) argument, smokers don't just drop - they die slow, painful deaths from cancer and emphesema, requiring tremendous amounts of costly medical care along the way. The annual
Medicaid cost (which you help pay for, assuming you're a taxpayer) for tobacco-related medical care is more than $75,000,000,000, and about 14 percent of all Medicaid costs are attributable to smoking. The annual cost for lost productivity thanks to tobacco use is more than $80,000,000,000.
CDC estimates that the total cost to the public of each pack of cigarettes smoked is $7.18, as a result of the enormous toll smoking takes on our tax load and economy.
From my perspective, taxing the hell out of cigarettes fulfills a number of important things: it has been shown to significantly reduce smoking, particularly among teenagers, it brings in revenue that helps balance out the tremendous costs I mentioned above, and it cuts into the profits of the tobacco industry,
who are in the business of selling death.
As it happens I agree with PART of what you're saying - I am a live-and-let-live person, and don't genereally agree with "blue laws" that restrict personal freedoms unnecessarily. I do think, though, that where the tobacco industry is hawking such a lethal product, and the public is effectively paying the price for it, we deserve to get some of that money back.
I would have no problem with cigarettes costing, say, $10 a pack.