 "Young adult smokers are the only source of replacement smokers. If younger adults turn away from smoking, the industry must decline..." – RJ Reynolds More.
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Big Tobacco Facts
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Want to fight Big Tobacco with us? You will need the tools. So get the facts to spread the truth about the dangers of tobacco use.
Big Tobacco
Montana
Big Tobacco Facts & Quotes
Big Tobacco
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Nationally, tobacco caused nearly 1 in 5 deaths, an estimated 440,000 deaths per year, during 1997-2001.
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Smoking is responsible for nearly $167 billion in annual health-related economic cost.
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Almost 90% of adult smokers began at or before age 18.
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Spit tobacco users are up to 50 times more likely to get oral cancer than non-users.
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A can of spit tobacco can be more addictive than a pack of cigarettes because it contains more nicotine. One can holds as much nicotine as 60 cigarettes.
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Every year, an estimated 3,000 non-smokers die from lung cancer due to secondhand smoke. Approximately 35,000 will die from heart disease from breathing in secondhand smoke.
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Children and adolescents who smoke are less physically fit and have more respiratory illnesses than their non-smoking peers.
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Smoking hurts young people’s physical fitness in terms of both performance and endurance – even among young people trained in competitive running.
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Montana
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According to Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids, Montana’s youth buy or smoke about 3.9 million packs of cigarettes each year.
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In Montana, 17% of all adults smoke cigarettes and 12% use spit tobacco – an estimated total of 175,053 tobacco users.
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Approximately four Montanans die prematurely from smoking related diseases every day. That adds up to more than 1,500 people annually.
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Tobacco-related health care costs in Montana total over $200 million per year.
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The prevalence of cigarette smoking among American Indian adults in Montana is about twice that of Montanans overall.
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Approximately 39% of American Indian Adults are current smokers.
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Approximately 28% of 12th grade boys in Montana use spit tobacco.
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The Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids estimates that more Montanans die each year from smoking than from car accidents, alcohol, drugs, AIDS, suicide and murders combined.
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Big Tobacco Facts & Quotes
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“The base of our business is the high school student.” – Lorillard Tobacco
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“Cherry Skoal is for someone who likes the taste of
candy, if you know what I mean.” –U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Representative
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“…if our company is to survive and prosper over the long term, we must get our share of the youth market….this will require new brands tailored to the youth market.” – R. J. Reynolds
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“Students are tremendously loyal. If you catch them, they’ll stick with you like glue.” – 1950, Phillip Morris Memo
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In 1999, an R. J. Reynolds focus group described Joe Camel as “a good role model.”
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“The teenage years are the most important, because those are the years which most smokers begin to smoke, the years in which initial brand selections are made, and the period in the life cycle in which conformity to peer group norm is greatest.” – 1975, Phillip Morris Report
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Big tobacco once compared the addictiveness of cigarettes to M&M’s.
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“If younger adults turn away from smoking, the industry will decline, just as a population which does not give birth will eventually dwindle.” – R. J. Reynolds researcher, 1984
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In 1996, Charles Harper, R. J. Reynolds Chairman said, “If children don’t like to be in a smoky room, they’ll leave.” When asked by a shareholder about infants, who can’t leave a smoky room, Harper stated, “At some point they begin to crawl.”
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“Children love cartoons and these can be incorporated into the purchasing of cartons/packets of Camel cigarettes.” – Tobacco Executive
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A tobacco company considered adding honey to cigarettes because teenagers like sweet products.
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Published research studies have found that kids are twice as sensitive to tobacco advertising as adults and are more likely to be influenced to smoke by cigarette marketing than by peer pressure.
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In 2006, a court found that tobacco companies manipulate nicotine levels to keep smokers addicted.
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In 1985, a tobacco industry brainstorming session came up with the idea of reaching their ‘younger adult smokers’ in candy stores.
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It is estimated that the tobacco industry spends $13.4 billion on marketing annually.
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One tobacco company supplied their product to be used in the 1979 G-rated film The Muppet Movie.
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Tobacco companies have been known to place in-store advertising signs at child’s eye-level.
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One tobacco company brainstormed reaching potential smokers in school bathrooms, playgrounds, YMCAs and city parks.
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