You completely missed the point. Banning it won't make it less available. There's already a black market for cigarettes in many places where they're heavily taxed. The only thing banning them would do is push it completely into the black market and insure that every single person who smokes now and will smoke later is a criminal. But there will be no shortage of people willing to smuggle cigarettes into the country and sell them on the streets, just as there is no shortage of drugs in developed countries, and plenty of people were still getting wasted during prohibition.F4LL3N said:Well you can confiscate, and perhaps fine, any place that sells it. But not worry too much about if someone is growing it in their backyard. I think I read somewhere yesterday that 70% of smokers in Australia want to quit but can't. If it's less available, they'll be able to quit.
Smoking isn't a freedom we need. It's known to be one of the unhealthiest things, with literally no benefits bar a headspin when you first start smoking and then to release the tension after you're already addicted.
The smartest thing to do would be to ban it. Because on top of the above, we know tabacco companies are quite evil. We know it's marketed to kids. We know it's addictive and unhealthy.
Banning it wouldn't do a single thing except make sure all of the profit and the customers go to criminals. And this isn't simply a matter of opinion. This is what happens every single time something a large number of people want to use is banned.
The only way you're going to get rid of smoking is through education of people before they start, and by stigmatizing the act. A legal ban would cause more problems without solving the one it was instituted to solve.