|
Anti-smoking Links & Resources At The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids site, you will get an understanding of the most important issues, which concern the present struggle between government and the tobacco industry. These include your State's current use of the $240 billion settlement with Big Tobacco, a report on the new global treaty on tobacco control, now signed by over 170 nations and ratified by 55. You'll also see samples of recent Kool and Camel ads with DJ's, hiphop artists, and youth partying on the cigarette package, and a report on cigarettes with candy flavorings, like Kauai Kolada, Twista Lime, Warm Winter Toffee and Mocha Mint. As of May, 2005, seven States are suing to stop the ad campaigns for these brands, claiming they are targeting youth. At this site, you can also write your member of Congress. Another site to easily lobby lawmakers for smoking bans is www.Smokefree.net. With a just couple of mouse clicks, children and adults alike can send an automated email to key State legislators, and become citizen advocates for local laws banning tobacco. Our favorite part is, legislators will hear the voices of children equally with those of adults. (See Smokescreen Activist Network below.)
At www.Tobacco.org, you can easily research any tobacco question or issue. Their news database contains daily summaries of every news article concerning tobacco, taken from four US newspapers: USA Today, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post and the New York Times. Their database goes back several years, and now contains over 100,000 news articles about tobacco issues. It is very easy to search. To research a subject which interests you, go to Tobacco.org's home page. Then type in keywords in the search box appropriate to your search. Every news article containing those keywords will come up in the results. It's a simple, useful and powerful research tool. The tobacco Daily News is presently produced by Gene Borio and his team, and was financed through a grant from Washington DC's American Legacy Foundation, the national Foundation created with funds from the settlement of the States' lawsuits against the tobacco industry. Search at www.Tobacco.org and you are likely to quickly find the answer to your specific question. Get a free subscription to the Daily Tobacco News Just go to www.tobacco.org. Click on the Subscribe tab near the top of the page. Next, choose whether you want Daily News, Weekly News, or Breaking News. This means you can have the day's news about tobacco emailed to you daily, once a week, or several times a day, should you choose Breaking News. Next, choose the topics you want. To avoid being deluged, we recommend selecting only the Daily Top Stories (4 - 10 stories emailed per day). However, you can still add in local tobacco news from your State. If you prefer, you can subscribe to the daily news by specific topic -- such as addiction, cessation, secondhand smoke, teen smoking, or the tobacco lawsuits. Again, if you're just interested in tobacco issues in general, we recommend starting by subscribing to only the major Daily News stories. International News Follow the steps above, and just check off the countries you want news from. There are 224 nations for which Tobacco.org offers news stories -- breaking, daily, weekly.
FIGHT BACK! www.smokefree.net provides an easy way for you to fight back in the most effective way known -- speaking up to lawmakers. Two or three mouse clicks on their E-Z letters page sends an e-mail in your name to lobby U.S. lawmakers on the most pressing tobacco issues of the moment. Simply click on the issue you care about most, and you'll instantly get a draft of a suggested text (which you can easily modify). Click again and it goes off to exactly the right lawmaker -- because when you first register (this is optional), you type in your zip code. This automatically routes all your future e-mail to your own Congressperson or Senator. This site even tackles current local issues in your city or State.
Your State's Tobacco Control Report Card
JUST THE FAQS Our FAQs page quickly answers Your
idea for a TV ad
Joe Chemo gets laughs! Download this photo or send for a poster. You'll find the Joe Chemo image on our Cool Photos page. The Vancouver-based magazine ADBUSTERS created several hilarious and insightful ads satirizing tobacco advertising. Visit The Media Foundation to see more of their truly ingenious and cutting spoof ads, and to explore the anti-consumerist philosophy which created them. To order a full size Joe Chemo poster or postcards of their ads, call them directly at (800) 663-1243. Prices are reasonable -- and do ask about an ADBUSTERS magazine subscription. To hear Joe's last words, click here.
In BADvertising Country, artist Bonnie Vierthaler counters the seduction of tobacco ads by doctoring them up to make them honest. By juxtaposing silly, gross and disgusting images on top of tobacco ads, she jolts people into realizing how tobacco ad imagery is concealing the truth, and manipulating young people into tobacco addiction. Best of all, at this site you can learn How to BADvertise yourself, using scissors and glue or computer and mouse. Click here for a high resolution file of the Crush Proof Box. It will take 2 to 4 minutes to download on a 56 K modem. Artist Bonnie Vierthaler's email is bv@badvertising.org.
Smoking in
Movies and TV
In the 1990's, there was a big upsurge in the amount of smoking in movies and TV. Characters in 90's movies were much more likely to smoke than a person in real life. In this way, movies misled many teens into thinking that smoking was more popular than it really was. Even worse, many stars made smoking look cool to young people, including children attending films. At Tobaccofree.org we do not advocate censorship of the movies. Let's instead deliver a dose of healthy shame to the stars who smoke in films, and make it look cool to our kids. Which stars have been smoking most in films? John Travolta smoked in nearly every film he made in the 1990's. Julia Roberts smoked in several of hers. So did Winona Ryder, Ethan Hawke, Gwenneth Paltrow, and many others. Young people look up to stars and copy them. It's difficult to measure the negative effect these actors have had on younger children. Stars have a responsibility to not lead our kids in a bad direction. Shame on you folks!
In Superman II, woman reporter Lois Lane, who is a nonsmoker in the comics, chain-smoked Marlboros, and the Marlboro brand name appeared some 40 times in the film. Tobacco giant Phillip Morris paid a mere $40,000 to the producers for this cunning promotion. Of course, Lois Lane is a role model for young girls. Sylvester Stallone took a $500,000 payment from one tobacco company to smoke their brand in three of his films. Phillip Morris even placed its products in, astoundingly, Who Framed Roger Rabbit? and The Muppet Movie. Hollywood swears that it has stopped placing cigarette brands in films but we know of one instance in which a tobacco company helped finance a film, and then put its products prominently in it. U.S. Tobacco, which makes most of the chewing tobacco, had a movie production division which made a movie, Pure Country, in which handsome, good-old-boy cowboys chew. Fortunately, it bombed, to the relief of anti-smoking advocates. There have been more recent reports of cigar companies paying to promote cigars in films. Movie stars have done a great deal to help popularize cigars, such as Will Smith and Jeff Goldblum in Independence Day. Arnold Schwartzenegger, Bruce Willis, Demi Moore, and Pierce Brosnan, all appeared on the cover of Cigar Aficionado magazine. These stars' use of cigars makes a powerful statement which is not lost on teens as they browse through the nation's magazine racks. Cigars cause mouth and throat cancer, as well as poisoning the air with extra-strong second hand smoke.
Also
see our page, Anti-smoking issues in TV
and films.
If you just want to find out how much smoking there is in a particular film, whether current releases or past, go to www.screenit.com. They also rate films for violence, language, and more. The well-known movie critic Roger Ebert named ScreenIt as one of the Top Five Most Useful Movie Sites on the Internet. You can actually go to a review of any film at the site and check out the smoking rating for that movie.
INTERNATIONAL In 2007, Michael R. Bloomberg, philanthropist and Mayor of New York City, launched a $125 million initiative to combat tobacco use in low and middle-income countries, where more than two-thirds of the world's smokers live. As part of this, the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids in Washington DC has established an International Resource Center to support governments and non-governmental organizations around the world in promoting, adopting, and implementing new government policies to regulate smoking and the tobacco industry. The Grants section of the group's web site includes information about how to apply for a grant. Also as part of this initiative, the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease has joined the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids to provide grants to governments and non-governmental organizations in low and middle-income countries to accelerate progress in tobacco control. International Resource Center +1 (202)296-5469 more GLOBALink is the International Tobacco-Control Network. Operated by the International Union Against Cancer, Globalink relays information and discussions on international tobacco-control developments, including news articles, analysis, updates on U.S. developments, and reports from tobacco control advocates around the world. More information is available from http://www.globalink.org/globdemo/. A selection of GLOBALink News Bulletins and resources is available on http://www.globalink.org/tobacco/ Access is free of charge, but password protected. To join GLOBALink, visit: http://join.globalink.org/ or email hq@globalink.org. www.Tobacco.org offers a great free email subscription to the Daily Tobacco News from 224 nations. You may select among them, and get the news daily or weekly, from only the nations you choose. See the Tobacco.org instructions, close to the top of this page. Sadly, as of November 2002, the Bush Administration is continuing to thwart a new global treaty to limit tobacco advertising. This article tells the story, which says, "'The future of Philip Morris lies in the developing world,' said Ross Hammond, an activist affiliated with the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids... More importantly, the company has showered Republican politicians with money to get its point across. According to public records, Philip Morris contributed $2.7 million to Republican causes in the most recent election cycle, compared with a risk-hedging $538,000 handed to the Democrats. Since 1989, the company has lavished no less than $14.3 million on its Republican friends, making it one of the the party's largest donors. " Click here for the full story. Another good resource is Robert Weissman's mailing list. To subscribe,
send an e-mail message to listproc@essential.org with the following all in one line: subscribe intl-tobacco <your
name> Put this line in both the subject and in the text of
your e-mail message. You may also e-mail, write or telephone the
following to receive it: ASH, 6 Fitzhardinge Street, London W1H
9PL UK Tel: 0171-224 0743 Fax: 0171-224 0471 www.prevention.ch is overseen by Jean Charles Rielle, a leading Swiss tobaccofree activist. Mostly in French, the site offers links to top international tobacco control resources.
![]() Courtesy of The American
Cancer Society
Chewing Tobacco The
best website on chewing tobacco is The
Patchproject -- check it out. It includes terrific quitting
tips and plenty of truly horrendous photos of disease caused by
dip. At this site we also include an eye-opening section on chewing
tobacco, on our Message to Youth page.
There we reveal that the tobacco industry pays convenience
stores and supermarkets up to $100 per month per display, sometimes
more, to place those displays on or behind countertops (according
to State law) --whether or not the products are actually selling.
These tobacco displays make tobacco look like a normal American
product, and when they were first introduced, they deceived many
teens into believing chewing tobacco was more popular than it
really was. These displays are often placed right alongside the
candy, which catches the eyes of children. Finally, these tobacco
displays often face away from the cashier, where they are easy
for kids to shoplift -- and all the tobacco industry has to do
is wait until our teens become addicted. SEAN
MARSEE'S SAD STORY
Photos courtesy of The American Cancer Society and the Marsee family
At our Message to Youth page, we also tell the moving story of Sean Marsee, a high school athlete who had won 28 medals in track competitions. He chewed tobacco and, with his athletic prowess and excellent health, never thought he would get cancer. But he did. He then endured three operations, which first removed his tongue, and finally much of his jaw and many of his neck muscles. Sean died at age 19, sad and disfigured, and in unspeakable pain. These photos are his legacy and his gift to those who are experimenting with, or already addicted to, these deadly products. A USA Today column wrote of our presentation of Sean's story, "This was probably the most effective argument I found online." For Sean's story, see our Message to Youth page.
THE BRIAN CURTIS STORY Bryan Curtis, age 33, of St Petersburg,Florida, holds his son Bryan Jr., 2, in this March 29, 1999 photo. The photo below was taken just two months later. [Photo: Curtis Family] June 3, 1999 -- the day of Bryan's death. Bryan's
wife Bobbie and son Bryan For the full story, visit the Brian
Curtis page at WhyQuit.com.
Great Free Quitting Resources Also at our Quitting Tips page, you'll learn the classic, Boilerplate Points found in the best quit smoking programs, and you'll read about and see links to several of the best, proven smoking cessation programs. You may think you don't need a program, but a recent CDC study shows that 95% of quitters who stop smoking without using any program are smoking again within one year. Another recent study comparing the patch and Zyban notes that after one year, users of the nicotine patch have a 15% success rate, and users of the anti-depressant Zyban (by prescription) have double the success rate -- 30%. In a separate study, one doctor used both the patch and Zyban simultaneously, and claimed a better than 35% success rate. Even with Zyban, users still have a 70% failure rate -- so this is not simply a matter of taking a magic pill or wearing a patch. There are several very important boilerplate points for quitters to know about. Here's a thought about using a program: the fact is, people who succeed best at life tend to get help. For example, a successful businessperson gets lots of help -- a lawyer to write the contracts, an ad agency to handle the advertising, an accountant to do the accounting, and so on. So people who succeed in reaching their goals get help, and plenty of it. Yes, real men do ask directions! And good students ask questions, too. So check out our Quitting Tips and learn a little more about the basics of quitting. We also point you to several excellent programs out there, with no benefit to our group. Our Quitting Tips will be an invaluable tool, empowering you and helping you learn a bit more, so you will stop successfully this time. Free Live Phone Support Whether you are ready to quit or just thinking about it, call 1-800-QUIT NOW for free support with a trained counselor. When you call, a friendly staff person will offer a choice of free services, including mailed self-help literature, a referral list of other programs in your community, and one-one-counseling over the phone. Another quit line is the the National Cancer Institute's Smoking Quitline, 1-877-44U-Quit, which also offers proactive counseling by trained personnel.
"Re-learn life without cigarettes." That's the motto of a new bilingual website championed by former US Surgeon General Koop in 2008 that aims to help smokers kick the habit for good. At BecomeAnEX.org, smokers can create free, personalized quit plans while tracking the "triggers" that lead them to light up (i.e., stress, alcohol, parties, or a "jerk-face" boss). And when those cravings start to mount, a live virtual support group will be there to help.
This December, 2008 US News and World Report article begins, "Never mind cancer or heart disease for a moment. Here are some non-obvious reasons to snub cigarettes."
Boilerplate Points for Quitting
It's not enough simply to use a product. Counseling, and as well as utilizing the classic, boilerplate points for quitting, are critical to succeeding. Our Quitting Tips page includes a useful guide to these critically important boilerplate points. These will empower you with valuable techniques, and will also strengthen your motivation and resolve.
cool youth sites
http://www.questionit.com
Brace yourself, and then check out this incredibly moving photo of a 34 year old man dying from smoking-caused lung cancer, posted at this excellent site. In this powerful photo, published in the St Petersburg (Florida) Times, Brian Lee Curtis is gravely ill. His wife cries during her bedside vigil, as she holds their young son in her arms. WhyQuit.com is a great site, full of reasons to avoid starting to smoke.
More FAQs
What can I do
if someone I love smokes? The best way to ask loved ones to quit will be found on this site's Message to Youth page, a little more than half way down the page, under the title in red, What Can I Do If My Parents Smoke? We strongly suggest that you not nag loved ones every day, or even every month, to stop. Ask them gently and briefly, no more than three or four times a year. However, you may speak up as often as you like about second hand smoke. Nagging a loved one about their addiction will probably make them angry, and further entrench them in their habit, as a way of expressing their anger (if a foolish way!) Remember, when you're angry, speak up about it, instead of hurting yourself out of your anger. Second hand smoke poisons you, and that is your business. In conclusion, there's an important difference between nagging someone about their smoking habit, and speaking up about air that harms you. Ask smokers in your home to take it outdoors, no matter what!
What can parents
can do
to motivate their kids not to start? In our Message to Youth, a little more than halfway down the page, look for a section titled, What Parents Can Do. It offers great advice to parents on how to more effectively motivate children and teens to stay smokefree.
How do I ask
a parent or friend
not to smoke? You'll find a very specific answer to this on our Message to Youth page. It's very near the top of the page; look for a title in red that says, If Cigarette Ads Told the Truth About Smoking. Right under the Utter FOOL poster is the answer. This info is useful for more than saying no to tobacco. You can use this formula for just about anything you wish to say no to. Check it out!
THE FOUNDATION FOR A SMOKEFREE AMERICA was founded in 1989 by Patrick Reynolds, the tobacco-free advocate and grandson of RJ Reynolds. Its mission is to educate people of all ages about smoking and tobacco use. Goals include establishing in-house programs to fight smoking at the local, regional and national levels; educating children through smoking prevention programs; and enacting peer teaching programs designed to empower youth to defend themselves against the onslaught of cigarette advertising and peer pressure. At
present, the organization is seeking grants and major gifts to
develop and implement its programs. Founder Patrick Reynolds'
motivational talk, Message to Youth,
has had impact on many thousands of middle school students and
teens in high school.
Or mail your tax-deductible
gift to
NO BUTTS, NO LITTER, PLEASE! Nobutz.com is a resource for anyone who's tired of seeing cigarette butts littering up the sidewalk and landscape. In addition, there you can buy hats and T-shirts with various no butz messages.
![]() For Kindergarten through 2nd grade The Tale of Samantha Skunk This excellent do-it-yourself program captivates young children. "The tale of Samantha Skunk: Why Smoking Stinks" is a program that brings peer student leaders to classrooms as lovable magenta skunks. They connect with the children by reading to them from a jumbo-sized book, dressed as Samantha Skunk. This unique program is one of the first to bring preschool and primary school children an anti-smoking message they can easily remember. Samantha's creator Bill Scott will provide the purple skunk costume, and an oversized book and tape to train the young presenters. The costume and materials can be rented for two weeks for $200, or purchased outright for $1000.
More Cool Youth Sites
Tips
for Teens and
Bullying, Sexual Assault, Peer Pressure, Alcohol Abuse, Domestic violence, Date rape, Gangs, Youth violence, Drugs. This site for teens, based in Chattanooga, TN, has real appeal. Here's a great online source for tobacco intervention and cessation programs for teens. Their tobacco intervention and cessation curricula meets CDC guidelines, is research based, and is award winning.
The
Lawsuits Recently we’ve seen multi-million dollar awards to single smokers, a $200 billion settlement with 46 States, and a new Federal lawsuit under consideration. Key question: shouldn't smokers be accountable for the disease they bring on themselves by smoking? Mr. Reynolds responds, "Of course they should. But does that mean we should let the tobacco industry go unaccountable for its part in the problem? "Even
before the damaging documents provided by the whistleblowers came
to light, one court held the smoker 60% responsible and the tobacco
company being sued 40% liable. When solid evidence was introduced
that the tobacco industry knew all along that its products were
addictive and caused death, and were targeting youth in their
ads, the balance of liability shifted toward Big Tobacco." Your
potential lawsuit against the tobacco industry Potential plaintiffs may contact the Tobacco Trial Lawyers Association, which has a national network of lawyers who represent plaintiffs in tobacco litigation. Their website is www.ttlaonline.com. Another resource is the Tobacco Control Resource Center (TCRC), located in Massachusetts, 617-373-2026. This center has a litigation referral section that specializes in linking plaintiffs with tobacco law attorneys, based on location and other needs. The litigation section on TCRC's website is www.tobacco.neu.edu/litigation/referrals.htm.
Another great research resource is the University of California San Francisco's Galen II Knowledge Management Library. The following link takes you to a list of scholarly (but easy to comprehend) research on numerous tobacco issues, including the effect of the tobacco industry's campaign contributions on politicians in several States. This is a most impressive and valuable research resource. http://www.library.ucsf.edu/tobacco/
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||