Repeal Day Lessons for Tobacco Prohibitionists
Today’s nicotine prohibitionists may do well to take a few moments to contemplate their anti-alcohol predecessors.

On this date in 1933, Americans ratified the Twenty-First Amendment to the Constitution, officially repealing the Eighteenth Amendment that had ushered in Prohibition of alcohol just 14 years prior. Many of us will toast the occasion the same way Americans did in 1933: with a good drink. If you're so inclined, you may also want to light up a smoke while you still can. Ninety years after the end of one era of Prohibition, we are gradually creeping into a new one forbidding the sale of tobacco and/or nicotine. And just as in that previous era, these laws are encouraging illicit markets, forcing consumers to buy more dangerous products, and leading to the arrest and prosecution of sellers.
Like the temperance movement of the previous century, the movement to eradicate tobacco and nicotine is global in scope. In the United Kingdom, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is pushing to implement the world's first nationwide "smoke-free generation" law, which would make it illegal for Brits currently aged 14 and under to ever purchase combustible tobacco for their entire lives. A similar law was passed and nearly enacted in New Zealand but will be reversed by the election of a new government.
Starting in 2024, Australia's already strict laws against vaping will be tightened even further, banning the personal importation of all kinds of vape devices. Nicotine e-cigarettes will be legally available only by prescription and penalties for mere possession of illicit e-cigs or nicotine liquid range from fines of more than $20,000 to imprisonment.
Despite recent assurances from federal health minister Mark Butler that law enforcement will focus on importers and sellers, one 49-year-old man caught by police in Western Australia with vaping liquid in his car has reportedly been charged with possessing a Schedule Four poison, a crime punishable by up to two years in prison. (Conventional cigarettes, which unlike vapes actually do kill millions of people every year, are not classified as poison under Australian law.)
In total, more than 40 countries have implemented bans on the sale of e-cigarettes, from oppressive states such as North Korea, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela to more liberal democracies such as Argentina, India, and Japan. Thailand threatens some of the harshest punishments, with threats of imprisonment and high-profile cases of police extorting foreign vapers for bribes.
By comparison, the United States remains a relatively free country when it comes to smoking and vaping, but prohibitionist policies are advancing. Five states and nearly 400 localities have passed some form of flavor ban. Massachusetts, the first state to comprehensively ban both flavored tobacco and flavored nicotine liquids, has seen a surging black market as a result; authorities are seizing so many illicit cigarettes and vapes that they are running out of room to store them.
As predicted by civil liberties advocates, flavor bans are also leading to arrests and prosecutions. Though bans do not typically impose criminal penalties directly, sellers participating in illicit markets can be charged with felony tax evasion. One pending case in Massachusetts may send two men to prison for up to five years on charges stemming from the sale of flavored cigarettes and e-cigs.
At the federal level, the Food and Drug Administration is preparing a national ban on menthol cigarettes. An even more ambitious proposal would mandate extremely low levels of nicotine in cigarettes, amounting to prohibition in all but name. The optimistic scenario envisioned by anti-smoking advocates is that these policies will effectively cut off the supply of forbidden products, nudging smokers to quit or switch to safer alternatives with little complication. The more realistic outcome is that the extremely lucrative business of supplying cigarettes to the nearly 30 million Americans who smoke will prove extremely attractive to criminal suppliers.
We have, of course, seen this all before with the prohibition of alcohol. Anti-smoking activists attempt to distance their policy proposals from the word "prohibition," but the comparison is apt. The promise to target sellers rather than consumers is identical. The indifference to the lives of drinkers who were poisoned by tainted alcohol rather than allowed a safe and legal source of liquor is echoed in today's policies that keep people smoking lethal cigarettes by banning safer alternatives. And while the United States has not yet created the conditions to completely turn the market for cigarettes over to illicit sellers, we can get a preview of what that may be like in the current rash of arson attacks on Australian tobacconists fueled by turf wars between competing gangs.
There is a deeper parallel in the ways that these prohibitions are publicly advocated. The temperance movement is caricatured in modern memory as a bunch of no-fun moralizing Protestants taking away Americans' freedom to drink. Historian Mark Schrad's excellent 2021 book Smashing the Liquor Machine is a reminder that the truth was far more nuanced; Prohibition was also a deeply progressive cause championed by reformers who sought to protect vulnerable populations from a predatory and destructive liquor traffic. The problems they identified were real, even if their solution proved to be fatally flawed.
Today's advocates for nicotine and tobacco prohibitions are in the same vein of progressive reform; they portray their policies not as restrictions on personal freedom but rather as protections against the deadly and dishonest tobacco industry. This is evident in the responses to the reversal of New Zealand's "world-leading" ban on tobacco, its change in policy described as "retrograde," an "act of idiocy," even as "systemic genocide" against the indigenous Maori. Suggestions that tobacco prohibition would infringe on liberties or have genuine downsides are barely given consideration among the press or public health experts.
Before shaking up the cocktails on this Repeal Day, today's tobacco and nicotine prohibitionists may do well to take a few moments to contemplate what lessons they might take from their anti-alcohol predecessors. Both sets of reformers justifiably railed against the sale of dangerous substances; if anything, the case against tobacco is even stronger than that against booze. But there is an essential difference too: while all sources of alcohol are roughly equivalent from a health perspective, the harms of smoking can be greatly reduced by switching to innovative, lower-risk sources of nicotine.
That difference highlights an opportunity that was never available to the Anti-Saloon League: to defeat the enemy not by prohibition but by competition. Making safer products available and using less restrictive measures to nudge consumers to use them can save lives without risking the inherent dangers and unintended consequences of prohibition. While that outcome may be less satisfying to progressive reformers than bringing the hammer down on Big Tobacco, they might consider one more lesson from the Prohibition era. If a policy was so unworkable that people are still celebrating its repeal nearly a century later, it's probably worth trying a different course of action today.
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Today’s nicotine prohibitionists may do well to take a few moments to contemplate their anti-alcohol predecessors.
LOL
"Keep your hands and your eyeballs off of women, quit treating them like objects... HEY! Subscribe to my OnlyFans!"
"we should just like, decriminalize and legalize it all, man!"
"I agree... *thinks* what we really should be doing is going after all these legal drug companies..."
Put down that vape pen and take your Ritalin! It's time to go for your puberty blocker shot!
“these laws are encouraging illicit markets, forcing consumers to buy more dangerous products, and leading to the arrest and prosecution of sellers.”
This is not the strongest argument against prohibition. The supporters of prohibition will reply with, “Of course! That’s the whole point of banning it!” A stronger argument would be to attack the alleged purpose of the bans: the proponents try to pretend that they are protecting people from their own weaknesses, bad choices and bad behavior; and, further, that by banning hazardous substances and dangerous activities they are protecting society from the collateral costs of substance abuse and dangerous activities. If the costs due directly to interdiction efforts and legal bans and, indirectly, to the altered behavior of the perps is greater – even perhaps MUCH greater – than non-intervention would have been, then that argument disappears.
Not that it will do much, but you could also use their own garbage against them. Some of these efforts (i.e., the ban on menthol) are blatantly racist. They've made it clear that menthol needs to be banned because it has "disparate impacts" on black communities. Basically, they are saying "we want to ban products that black people like"...which is going to fuel black market sales where? in black communities...which at some point is going to turn into further evidence of "systemic racism" once enforcement goes all in.
Pretty sure that's a feature, not a bug.
Well, yes. I should also have mentioned that the bans don't work (in addition to being counterproductive at saving society money or deaths) but the proponents simply come back with, "Well, we have to try!"
I'm in favor of giving up on "arguments" and just throat punching these statist fucks.
If we were much better armed so we could exterminate them, I'd be all for that. You're not libertarian? Bang, you're dead. How about you, change your mind? Thought so.
Those kind of movements have a trend of eating their own.
How will this impact spittin tobacky futures?
Copenhagen Longcut, (the best chew), is already "flavorless". Unless a complete ban is enacted, I don't think much would change.
If a $100 a carton doesn't prohibit smoking nothing will. Stupid government fucks should have pushed for widespread vaping.
What else are the welfare queens going to do with all that paid time off they got voting to steal from the working? Something about idle hands being the devils workshop.
Haven't read the article yet, but I'm nonplussed that as I watched it happen, nicotine became vilified. But then, over a slightly longer time, it nearly happened with sugar too, and in a relative eyeblink it did happen with fur.
We can't expect our government to continue without a bunch of people to punish. Leading the world for incarcerations. Of course, our government is representative of the American people, the people are responsible (since our government doesn't seem to be responsible for anything).
By the time the government gets finished regulating tobacco teenagers will be boofing raw nicotine in the school parking lot at lunch break.
People will be growing tobacco in clearings in the national forests, like with weed.
Smugglers' lobby approves.
Biden's war on menthol cigarettes is as troubling as it is racist. Blacks, for whatever reason, overwhelmingly prefer them, so nanny Biden feels that those poor ignorant black folks just can't make their own decisions. Obviously, he will make wiser decisions for them. Seeing as how he's white and all.
Tobacco prohibitionist: "They had to pass a constitutional amendment to ban an evil product? Hahahaha!"
These freaking Nicotine Nazis are getting way out over their skis, especially about vaping. Many regulations are obviously made by people who've neither vaped nor smoked and don't understand the difference. Who ever heard of "second-hand vape"?
Just this morning I was reading guidelines for using the Virtual Hearing feature for Courts in St. Louis County, MO. (I want to listen to an eminent domain case tomorrow.)
The guidelines say:
"The same etiquette and protocol of a physical courtroom are expected during virtual court. ... We ask all virtual court participants to observe these rules of court decorum:
Dress appropriately for court.
Avoid inappropriate or districting [sic] activities.
Use formal titles. Sit up straight and speak clearly.
Be courteous and respectful. No profanity.
*Do not use tobacco or vaping products*."
So when I attend a virtual court session from my home, I'm not allowed to smoke or vape? Right... What a joke.
And even worse, no one can tell that you're vaping (unless your juice has a strong odor or you're showing off your major puffs). I've vaped on every flight I've flown on this year (at least a dozen). Thanks to the continuous air filtering in air craft, who can even tell?
No one. Again, what a joke.
You can thank Daddy Bloomberg for the Nicotine Nazis. Even as smoking as declined, he continues to shower them with his billions
Many regulations are obviously made by people who’ve neither vaped nor smoked and don’t understand the difference.
That is correct. And neither do most voters. In fact, most voters don't care, which is why this is a politically dead horse.
Unhappily for the prohibitionists, irrespective of the law, any product for which there is a demand will be supplied at a price that reflects the costs and risks of providing it.
I’m glad that the kiwis at least had the balls to kick these woke assholes out. But since the majority of people in English speaking countries don’t smoke or vape, most don’t care or approve of the bans. If they tried this shit in Greece, they would be hanged in the public square.
The dominant party in the new coalition govt (National) was dead set against cannabis law reform during a referendum in 2020 (and for decades previously).
Now tobacco restrictions will lead to a black market, 600 stores are not enough (420 cannabis stores were too many) and “lets let people choose to smoke tobacco if they want” are the calls from them
Fucking hypocrites
Does the new NZ government want to ban cannabis again? If not, good. If they do then they are fucking hypocrites. By the way, most of those who are trying to ban tobacco and nicotine also are quietly against cannabis, though now some of them are complaining about it here that cannabis gummies and vapes are too appealing to the kiddos, Twice as many teens in the US use cannabis than nicotine, although all we ever hear about is the latter.
The new govt wants to keep it banned, it is not legal for recreational use
Bootleggers and Baptists, unite!!
"Today’s [abortion] prohibitionists may do well to take a few moments to contemplate their [anti-alcohol, nicotine, marijuana and sugar] predecessors."
Nothing will change unless a litmus test is held to every politician claiming to support freedom and individual liberty - does that include tobacco and vaping freedom and on privately owned property? No? then you do NOT support freedom and individual liberty - period! How many "libertarian" posters have I seen on this website over the years claim to be all about liberty, but if the topic is tobacco or vaping, they sound no different than a progressive liberal hack?
Is tobacco and vaping freedom a major plank or any plank of the Libertarian Party? Nothing will change until people and parties stand up to the sheer money and media machine that is anti.
This article, as a loud side note, touts the benefits of vaping over smoking - agreed, but that battle was lost when the industry completely failed to keep its use from being banned in all places tobacco use is banned. Unless that is reversed, why vape when tobacco tastes so much better and is now under less attack?
There aren't enough radical libertarians in the USA or anywhere else in the world to achieve what you're asking for. We can only supply a very slight additional preference for freedom when an issue like this is already at equipoise on other grounds.
Nothing will change until people and parties stand up to the sheer money and media machine that is anti.
You: “Unless people vote for the politicians who represent exactly what I want, nobody should vote.”
It’s this kind of insanity why libertarians keep losing.
There are sizable numbers of Americans who want restrictions on alcohol, nicotine, and drugs. Many of those happen to also want low taxes and less government spending. Since I don’t care about alcohol, nicotine, or drugs but do care about lower taxes and less government spending, I vote with them. That is how politics works.
You will never get what you want because your bundle of policy preferences simply is a tiny fringe among US voters. Neither you nor the LP even really deserve the name "libertarian" anyway.
Hmmm. You could also say that the policy preferences of those who want free, on demand gender affirming surgery and unrestricted abortions up until birth are also fringe views (the number of actual trans/non-binary people is less than 1%). Yet somehow these are front and center of the donkey party platform.
You still don't get it. Most voters have a few policies that they really want, a few policies they really hate, and lots of policies they don't care about much.
Among the policies most voters don't care about much either way is whether other women kill their babies, whether other women castrate their children, whether recreational drugs are legal, or whether the US bombs some Asian goat herders into oblivion, as long as either (D) government handouts are high, or (R) taxes are low. Parties sweep up the big voting blocs based on what everybody cares about and then cater to fringe groups with special interests most people don't care about either way.
But, oh no, libertarians demand ideological conformance on lots of issues. And that's why libertarians keep losing.
This is an egregious example of what I call dragging the pivot foot in moving an issue of public policy. The usual examples I think of relate to sexual exploitation, as when child porn is outlawed because it takes illegitimately from a child, but then the aspect of protection of the victim is severed from the basis of such laws when self-produced porn, sexting, etc. comes up. It's like...we agree kiddie porn should be illegal, this is kiddie porn, now why was that...who cares?
So in this case it was about inhalation of smoke being bad for health. So then why do people smoke? To get nicotine. So what if we develop ways to get nicotine harmlessly because no smoke? Uh, what was the reason again for public policy on this issue?
Imagine how this could, or could have, play out in other areas of public policy. Negroes are discriminated against, being discriminated against is bad...so let's outlaw Negroes, right? No blacks, no discrimination against them.
So in this case it was about inhalation of smoke being bad for health. So then why do people smoke? To get nicotine.
Nicotine in any form is both addictive and bad for health. It simply is even worse when inhaled with tobacco smoke.
Now, I don't particularly care about the cigarette ban either way, but people like you should get your facts straight.
Imagine how this could, or could have, play out in other areas of public policy. Negroes are discriminated against, being discriminated against is bad…so let’s outlaw Negroes, right? No blacks, no discrimination against them.
Actually, giving freed black slaves their own homeland was seriously considered, but it wasn't practical in the 19th century.
Nevertheless, dealing with discrimination and intolerance by letting people segregate into separate autonomus nations is probably the only thing that has really worked historically.
good
And just as in that previous era, these laws are encouraging illicit markets, forcing consumers to buy more dangerous products, and leading to the arrest and prosecution of sellers.
Nobody is "forced" to buy tobacco or nicotine. If you choose to do so illegally, the consequences are on you.
You'd be amazed about all the useful things law abiding citizens can't buy due to prohibitions and that we therefore don't buy.