California Is Forcing Smokers To Buy More Dangerous Products
Banning less harmful tobacco alternatives is not a way to improve public health.

I consider myself a rational person, someone who is swayed by solid data and persuasive arguments, yet every afternoon after my work is done, I jump on my three-cylinder Triumph motorcycle and take an exhilarating ride along country roads, city streets and freeways. The statistics suggest that this is a very bad idea.
Based on vehicle miles traveled, motorcyclists are 37 times more likely to die in a collision than the occupants of passenger vehicles, according to National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data. Those are sobering numbers. Even air-bagged vehicles pose a significant risk. Around 39,000 Americans die each year in car and light-truck crashes.
On a personal level, I have three ways of dealing with the incongruity between my love of riding and its dangers. First, I can stop riding, which will dramatically increase my odds. Second, I can refuse to worry about it—and make besides-the-point excuses to justify my choice. Did you know that 400,000 Americans die each year because of unhealthy eating?
Finally, I can embrace a policy of "harm reduction." In other words, I can minimize my risks through training, careful riding (no intoxicating substances or speeding) and, of course, wearing serious protective gear. The government has taken this approach by mandating motorcycle helmets and automobile airbags rather than, say, forbidding the use of dangerously fast vehicles.
From a policy standpoint, the government can embrace one of two public-health approaches in all areas—Prohibition or harm reduction. The former got a bad rap from 1920 to 1933, when the feds embraced an insane policy—pushed by religious zealots and progressive up-lifters—that tried to force Americans to give up booze.
The latter has become popular in the context of prostitution and drug use, which still are subject to government prohibitions. "While harm reductionists may differ on the extent to which stopping illicit behavior should be the goal of the interventions, most focus on client-centered efforts, such as needle exchange…that meet clients 'where they are at,'" according to the Open Society Institute.
California's progressive lawmakers have been on the cutting edge of such efforts. Instead of treating prostitution mainly as a law-enforcement matter, they've tried to help sex workers embrace safe-sex practices and get tested for HIV. The thinking is sound. It acknowledges that we're unlikely to end the "world's oldest profession"—so it's better to limit the spread of disease.
In 2019, the state passed the California Harm Reduction Initiative, which earmarks $15 million toward supporting local syringe exchange programs, so that people who use drugs can do so in a way that limits overdoses and hepatitis. The latest efforts involve pilot programs where people inject themselves at a "safe injection site." Drug use is destructive, but this might reduce its ill effects.
Love these ideas or hate them, but it's clear that our political leaders have embraced harm reduction and rejected prohibition. Voters largely are aligned on those points. In 1996, they approved Proposition 215, which legalized medical marijuana (with a doctor's note), and in 2016 approved Proposition 64 legalizing recreational cannabis.
Prop. 64 hasn't lived up to its promises (ending illicit sales and reducing harm by assuring oversight of the supply) largely because California imposed so many new regulations, fines and taxes that it was easier to keep buying weed from a neighbor or cousin. Nevertheless, it signified a move forward. You're not going to find any major California Democrats calling for a return to prohibitionist marijuana policies.
But at the same time that our politicians are championing their forward-thinking approaches to these matters—and chastening red states that prefer to sic cops on drug users and sex workers—they are going all in on another form of prohibition. That involves tobacco use. In 2020, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Senate Bill 793, which imposes a ban on the sale of flavored-tobacco products.
The federal Centers for Disease Control reports that, "Cigarette smoking remains the leading cause of preventable death and disability in the United States, despite a significant decline in the number of people who smoke." It attributes 40,000 deaths annually in California alone to cigarette smoking—multitudes more than die by driving.
Flavored tobacco includes vaping products, snus and non-tobacco pouches that contain pharmaceutical-grade nicotine. Virtually all of those products have added flavors. The go-to statistic, from the top British healthcare agency, is vaping is 95-percent safer than combustible cigarettes. Sweden has the lowest cancer rate in Europe because snus is the nicotine-delivery device of choice.
Unless voters overturn that rule in a referendum in November, California's smokers will no longer be free to buy reduced harm products—but can still buy the most dangerous ones. It's like the government allowing me to ride a motorcycle but forbidding me from wearing a helmet. If state officials insist on being nannies, they at least should promote rules that won't kill us.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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Smokin’ hot picture.
It would be one thing if what happens in California stays in California but unfortunately it doesn’t - usually spreads like a cancer, first through other blue states and eventually most of the rest of the country. Some red states push back, but usually over retarded issues like non-gendered bathrooms and ratting out abortion seekers.
"Flavored tobacco includes vaping products, snus and non-tobacco pouches that contain pharmaceutical-grade nicotine."
Read that.
Read it again.
Where is the department of disinformation?
Only in the mind of a fascist can "non-tobacco pouches" be "flavored tobacco".
The funny part: nicotine isn’t the dangerous component of tobacco.
100% correct. But yet trying to explain that to anyone is impossible. I have had so many conversations with reasonable, rational, and usually incredibly smart people...and yet there is nothing I can say to convince them that the problem with nicotine is the delivery system (cigarettes)...not nicotine itself. They are convinced that something like Velo (synthetic nicotine pouches) is just as bad if not worse than cigarettes.
Religiosity is a hard dragon to slay. Nicotine has long been associated with cigarettes, so it will always be viewed as dangerous in most people’s minds and you can’t convince them otherwise.
A bit OT:
"I jump on my three-cylinder Triumph motorcycle and take an exhilarating ride along country roads, city streets and freeways. The statistics suggest that this is a very bad idea."
Around my town I see a surge of e-bike riders, many on rigs that could pass for lightweight motorbikes (at least from a few decades ago), and many on types 2 or 3, and zipping along at 25-30 mph. Quite a few have a kid or two as passengers. I just wonder how many of these people would never ride a motorcycle because it is "too dangerous".
I see the same. LOTS of kids on electric bikes, too. The kind you have to pedal while they move.
They don't wear much in the way of protective gear and many of the ones on the e-bikes, which are 30mph motorcycles with pedals, often do annoying bicyclist things things like run stop signs.
Trust me, going down at 30mph hurts. I've done do at less than 30mph and my leathers got hot enough to leave a burn on my knee.
It's hilarious how transparent Reason is about trying to just be part of the "cool" crowd.
Yuppies/hipsters love vaping, so Reason obsesses over it.
Meanwhile, Reason supports excise taxes on cigs and pushes anti individual choice propaganda against smoking.
Go fuck yourself, Reason.
So you've gone full troll now? Good to hear it. Now, there is no need to keep you unmuted.
"From a policy standpoint, the government can embrace one of two public-health approaches in all areas—Prohibition or harm reduction."
Uh, no. The government can (even if it never occurs to most officials) embrace one of two public health approaches: interfere or mind your own business. The fact that even on Reason pseudo-libertarians assume a meddling role for government is depressing.
The California progressives are some of the worst people in the country
Greenhut's assertion that California, of all places, has embraced a harm reduction strategy toward prostitution is ignoring the entire Kamala/Backpage debacle... and probably more, besides: I admit I don't keep up with all the latest horribles in that statist haven.
His claims about weed and sex work are risible, as one would expect. The greenhut/rak venn diagram is starting to look more like a single circle with each piece reason buys from the blowhard.
You know, I woke up this morning and I said to myself: Self, I really need another article about smoking in California. And here it is!
It’s taking up valuable space that could be used a by another story about abortions!
Or fascists creating a federal group of unelected bureaucrats to define what is true and what is not true?
If there's a common sense policy for something, you can count on California to enact the opposite.
The fuck?! From the examples you've given, it's clear that they've embraced harm reduction along with prohibition! They still prohibit prostitution and narcotics, there doesn't seem to be any ground they're giving there, but they add these harm reduction methods to soften the blow. This is not a rejection of prohibitions, this is an acceptance that prohibitions have bad results which can be slightly mitigated.
There's no harm reduction there. That's just the abolition of prohibitions. Can you even tell the difference?
Yeah; the harm is taxes and regulations, and they just keep on increasing!
If you're "swayed" and "persuaded," you're not a rational person.
"California Prohibits Relatively Safer Products"? Can Reason of all places be more careful about using the word "force"?
"Nevertheless, it signified a move forward. You're not going to find any major California Democrats calling for a return to prohibitionist marijuana policies."
This right here is the issue. They passed the law but made the new law irrelevant. Politicians have been doing this for a century.
The goal isn't to change the law but to make it look like they did. This gets their constituents all happy while the pol has an excuse for his detractors. They get to play both sides.
This has a secondary benefit to pols. It creates confusion which means there are MORE busts and they get to steal MORE property by "making something legal".
State level pot legalization is a honey trap to catch gun owners. Stay the hell away from it.
It never was about ?health?...
It has always been about POWER!
The Power to Dictate 'those' people in self-fulfilling ego's of superiority.
And now that the US Nazi(National Socialist)-Regime Empire is built; it's all about which Nazi-Gang gets to dictate 'those' others.
JUST like Germany in the early 1900s...
Remember when the USA was about Individual Liberty & Justice for all?
They care about Johnny Junkie because he could die of a fentanyl overdose, so they deploy gun-toting goons in bulletproof vests to intimidate him into living as healthier lifestyle. But if he fights back like a man to defend himself, and manages to capture the enemy officer's gun as a prize of war and uses it to settle the matter out of court, they openly hate him so much, they want him to die of a Sodium Pentothal overdose. How dare he put his unalienable right to liberty above their sacred rule of law?
The best solution would be leaving people alone. On 14 February 1997, a smoker refused to extinguish a cigarette when the taxi driver in Manchester NH told it to do so, and the driver drew a Glock 9 mm and extinguished the smoker. Sometimes that's what it takes. Smokers respected signs and laws about as much as some bullies respected mask requirements during the COVID pandemic. Meanwhile, smokers were killing thousands of humans a year with second-hand smoke. "No smoking" obviously didn't get through that smoker's head, but a bullet sure did.
Guess what? The bureaucrats found the human guilty of "murder" and threw him in prison.
What are you supposed to do, let them poison you wherever they find you, even in your own car?