I’m a bit late with this, but good to see that Australia is doing something constructive to dissuade people from smoking:

Ignore big tobaccos absurd fight against plain packs

New Scientist 02 May 2011 by Simon Chapman

Australia's bold plan to remove all branding from cigarettes and their packaging is a triumph for public health

EARLIER this month the Australian government released draft legislation that promises to be a landmark in the global fight against tobacco. If passed, from January 2012 cigarettes and hand-rolling tobacco will have to be sold in plain, unappealing olive-brown packs plastered with large, graphic health warnings. The only thing distinguishing one brand from another will be the name written in a standard font on the top, bottom and front of the pack, below the health warning. This is a world first.

The legislation also proposes that cigarettes themselves should be completely plain. That means no branding, no coloured or flavoured papers, no gold-banded filters and no different gauges like slimline and mini cigarettes.

With this bill, the Australian government is sending out an unambiguous message that cigarettes are exceptionally dangerous. Future generations will grow up never having seen the finely crafted elegance of a cigarette box sitting alongside confectionary and groceries in their local shop.

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3 responses to “Plain packs”

  1. Spike avatar

    If cigarettes are exceptionally dangerous, why don’t they just ban them altogether?

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  2. Chris avatar

    Like they banned alcohol in the US? Or making drugs such as Cocaine and Heroin illegal? Yeah, that would work…

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  3. The Shadow HK avatar
    The Shadow HK

    It won’t work – government intervention makes things worse not better. Give it a month into it and the tobacco companies will be giving away free promotional cigarette holders to put your ugly packets in – remember cigarette cases form the 50s, 60s and 70s.
    These morons in government have no clue. As Spike said, ban it entirely – oh that’s right we like the tax revenue. Can’t wait to see how they will ban alcohol and big macs next as these too are exceptionally dangerous substances for human consumption

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