Biden’s Menthol Ban Follows the ‘Racist Law’ Playbook
This week, the Food and Drug Administration will be hosting listening
sessions ahead of its proposed ban on menthol cigarettes. While the attending bureaucrats will certainly rehash the data we’ve known for decades about the dangers of smoking, they’ll also be hearing a new spin from progressives: Banning menthol is essential to achieve “racial equity.”
threatens to do more harm than good for the Black people these activists purport to want to protect – just as many other race-based paternalistic laws have done in the past.
Commissioner Janet Woodcock said the goal of banning menthol “will help save lives, particularly among those disproportionately affected by these deadly products,” later adding that the ban will “address health disparities experienced by communities of color, low-income populations, and LGBTQ+ individuals, all of whom are far more likely to use these tobacco products.”
Nearly 85 percent of African-Americans who smoke often choose
menthol cigarettes, according to NBC news. And clearly, the Biden administration believes it can risk leaving so-called “cowboy killers” on
the shelf for white smokers, but the nation cannot risk black smokers
having access to their preferred product.
health of black Americans by paternalistically stepping in and stopping
them from smoking. To be fair, some black leaders have endorsed this
policy. But this would not be the first time that well-meaning leaders
have pursued policies that ended up harming black Americans.
early 70s. President Nixon signed the “Controlled Substances Act of
the 1970s.” The act essentially made owning, possessing, manufacturing, and importing certain substances (like marijuana) a federal crime.
urged Richard Nixon to ramp up his efforts against drugs. He particularly
cited the ongoing heroin epidemic sacking New York City in
1971 to justify military action against drug use in African-American
communities. Similarly, Reverend George McMurray, the lead pastor
at the Mother A.M.E. Zion Church in Harlem, believed heroin users
should spend life in prison.
pass the word down,” McMurray said.
crimes like possession of marijuana.
between Nixon’s War on Drugs and Biden’s menthol ban is time.
Every other condition has been met. Nixon, just like Biden, sought
to penalize non-violent crimes to achieve a socially-engineered vision.
Nixon, just like Biden, thinks government force can make people stop
bad habits. And Nixon, just like Biden, will be proven wrong by history
if the ban takes hold.
Of course, the Biden administration states that enforcement of the
ban will only be on businesses, not individuals. But many, including
the mothers of Eric Garner and Trayvon Martin, aren’t buying.
“We have seen the unimaginable and irreversible harm result
when policies enacted with the best of intentions are translated
into practice,” they stated, later adding, “While we have been told
that black smokers will not be criminalized for possessing menthol
cigarettes, that does not match our experience with other cigarette
policies.”
Black Americans do not need the government to prohibit them
from smoking, drinking, eating fast food, or any other behavior the
FDA frowns upon – especially when it could exasperate the already
fraught relationship between police and the black community.
Americans of all races can understand the health risks of
smoking. Instead of stepping in to hold the hands of black consumers,
perhaps Biden would be wise to deliver a message of personal
responsibility.
Drugs, like moonshine during Prohibition, are not going anywhere.
And they are still used by people of all demographics. Biden
should review his history and his menthol policy.
Christian Watson is a spokesman for Color Us United, and the
host of Pensive Politics with Christian Watson. Follow him on Twitter
at @officialcwatson.
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