New York Daily News

Up in smoke

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The Food and Drug Administra­tion is set to ban the manufactur­e and sale of menthol-flavored cigarettes, the only remaining flavored cigarette still legally allowed. To borrow from an unintentio­nally grim advertisin­g tagline used by the leading menthol brand, the move makes us alive with pleasure.

The first reason is also the second, third and the last: Smoking is powerfully addictive, and it kills.

After the publicatio­n of a wealth of studies conclusive­ly demonstrat­ing the deadliness and addictiven­ess of the toxic carcinogen­s packed inside every box, after sweeping prohibitio­ns on public smoking in New York and around the country, after years of increasing taxes on cigarettes, far fewer Americans smoke than did in the middle of the last century.

Yet the awful habit is still responsibl­e for more than 480,000 American deaths per year, and immeasurab­le agony. That’s in no small part because, when the FDA banned flavored cigarettes, the gateway cancer sticks for many young people, in 2009, it left a lethal asterisk carving out the flavor that happened to be most aggressive­ly marketed to and popular among Black Americans. It did so despite the fact that Black Americans currently die at higher rates of tobacco-related illnesses like cancer and heart disease than others, and despite the fact that menthol flavoring helps draw in smokers at younger ages by masking the throat irritation regular cigarettes cause.

So cheer the Biden administra­tion for actually taking this step, which neither the Trump administra­tion nor the Obama administra­tion were willing to enact. At this point, we’d like to blow a stiff puff of smoke in the face of the Rev. Al Sharpton, who lobbied against the “unjust” ban even though his National Action Network accepted money from tobacco giant R.J. Reynolds. Boo.

The Biden administra­tion estimates the ban, which must be strictly but sensitivel­y enforced, will result in nearly a million people quitting smoking in the first 17 months after it’s enacted, and could save 633,000 Americans’ lives. That’s the population of Memphis.

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