Every year tobacco kills more Americans than
did World War II — more than AIDS, cocaine, heroin, alcohol, vehicular
accidents, homicide and suicide combined.
George Will on Thursday, June 18th, 2009 in a Washington Post op-ed
Claims that smoking kills more people annually than other dangerous activities combined
Congress recently gave the Food and Drug Administration the ability to regulate tobacco, and George Will is not impressed.
He said the new law is flawed because it restricts advertising (new
rules could "merit a constitutional challenge"), because it is supported
by the tobacco industry ("a crystalline example of Washington business
as usual") and because it it perpetuates what Will calls a government
"addiction to tobacco tax revenue."
"The February expansion of the State Children's Health Insurance
Program is supposed to be financed by increased tobacco taxes, so this
health care depends on an ample and renewable supply of smokers," he
wrote in a June 18, 2009,
Washington Post
column. Governments will never outlaw smoking because "governments cannot loot tobacco companies that do not flourish."
Will thinks the new law is no good, but he's certainly no fan of
smoking either, and he made this claim to demonstrate his aversion to
the habit:
"Three decades ago, public outrage killed an automobile model (Ford's
Pinto) whose design defects allegedly caused 59 deaths," he wrote. "Yet
every year tobacco kills more Americans than did World War II — more
than AIDS, cocaine, heroin, alcohol, vehicular accidents, homicide and
suicide combined."
More than AIDS? More than car accidents? We were skeptical, so we decided to take a look ourselves.
It seems that Will plucked part of his claim from the Campaign for
Tobacco-Free Kids, a leading advocate for the new law. According to the
organization, about 400,000 people die from their own smoking each year,
and about 50,000 die from second-hand smoke annually. And according to
the group's Web site, "Smoking kills more people than alcohol, AIDS, car
accidents, illegal drugs, murders and suicides combined."
Even though that fact is repeated by many antismoking campaigns, and by
the American Cancer Society, we decided to crunch the numbers
ourselves. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
in 2006, when their database was last updated, 22,073 people died of
alcohol, 12,113 died of AIDS, 43,664 died of car accidents, 38,396 died
of drug use — legal and illegal — 18,573 died of murder and 33,300 died
of suicide.
That brings us to a total of 168,119 deaths, far less than the 450,000 that die from smoking annually.
As for the part about World War II, Will came up with this comparison
himself. About 292,000 soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines were killed
in battle during World War II, according to a U.S. Census Bureau April
29, 2004, report in commemoration of the new World War II memorial in
Washington, D.C. An additional 114,000 members of U.S. forces died of
other causes during the war, bringing the total to 406,000 people.
Will's claim — that smoking kills more people annually than in World
War II or from other dangerous diseases and habits — holds up with the
CDC and the Census Bureau. As a result, we giv
e Will a True.
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