An allegiance to profit: with friends like these, the tobacco industry is on the rebound. (Commentary).In the sweltering swel·ter·ing adj. 1. Oppressively hot and humid; sultry. 2. Suffering from oppressive heat. swel heat of late summer, Thomas Novotny resigned as chief U.S. negotiator on an international treaty to reduce tobacco use. The real heat was on Bush administration officials, who were quick to deny that Novotny had political differences with the president. As deputy assistant secretary at the Department of Health and Human Services Noun 1. Department of Health and Human Services - the United States federal department that administers all federal programs dealing with health and welfare; created in 1979 Health and Human Services, HHS , Novotny led the U.S. delegation to the World Health Organization's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. Officials at HHS HHS Department of Health and Human Services. stated that Novotny, 54, simply wanted to retire. But numerous sources close to Novotny, who served in this capacity in both the Clinton and Bush presidencies, said that he was frustrated with administration moves to back off high standards on the advertising and marketing of cigarettes and restrictions on secondhand smoke sec·ond·hand smoke n. Cigarette, cigar, or pipe smoke that is inhaled unintentionally by nonsmokers and may be injurious to their health if inhaled regularly over a long period. Also called passive smoke. . Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), a congressional leader in struggles to hold the industry accountable, called the Bush administration positions a "breathtaking reversal in U.S. policy---going from global leader on tobacco control to pulling back and advocating the tobacco industry's positions." Only a month earlier, Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that the federal case was weak (much to the surprise of the many state attorneys general who had tried or settled cases against the tobacco industry) and that the government would likely need to settle out of court with the industry. Such a public pronouncement, of course, does not put prosecutors in a strong bargaining position. Rev. Douglas Miles, pastor of Koinonia Noun 1. koinonia - Christian fellowship or communion with God or with fellow Christians; said in particular of the early Christian community fellowship, family - an association of people who share common beliefs or activities; "the message was addressed not just to Baptist Church in Baltimore, believes "the attorney general's decision [to settle out of court] is unconscionable Unusually harsh and shocking to the conscience; that which is so grossly unfair that a court will proscribe it. When a court uses the word unconscionable to describe conduct, it means that the conduct does not conform to the dictates of conscience. , given his profession as a Christian, since he has chosen an allegiance to profit over the good of the people." During his confirmation hearings, Ashcroft declared, "I am no friend of the tobacco industry." But the record suggests otherwise. Ashcroft served on the advisory board of the Washington Legal Foundation The Washington Legal Foundation is a nonprofit legal organization founded in 1977. Their stated goal is "to defend and promote the principles of freedom and justice". The organization usually takes the side of businesses fighting against governmental regulation and for a , a think tank strongly identified with the industry. The WLF WLF Washington Legal Foundation WLF Wallis and Futuna (ISO Country code) WLF Waist Level Finder (camera viewfinder type) WLF Viva La Figa (MotoGP motorcycle races) is one of many mouthpieces attempting to "legitimize le·git·i·mize tr.v. le·git·i·mized, le·git·i·miz·ing, le·git·i·miz·es To legitimate. le·git a predatory, rogue industry," says Rick Bernardo, co-director of the Spirit of Life, a youth tobacco-prevention partnership of the Minnesota Council of Churches and the Minnesota Department of Health. HHS Secretary Tommy Thompson, another Cabinet member with long-standing ties to the WLF, received more than $100,000 in contributions from tobacco groups while Wisconsin governor. Philip Morris thanked him for his "value[d] ... loyalty and friendship." While acting as advisor to then-Gov. Bush, Senior Advisor Karl Rove was a paid lobbyist and consultant for Philip Morris. In this capacity, Rove pushed Bush to limit victims' ability to combine claims in class-action lawsuits, to seek punitive damages Monetary compensation awarded to an injured party that goes beyond that which is necessary to compensate the individual for losses and that is intended to punish the wrongdoer. , and to consider pain and suffering in compensation. Not surprising, with friends in such high places, the tobacco industry has revived. And it has a strategic agenda for this presidency: Continuing to exempt tobacco from the FDA FDA abbr. Food and Drug Administration FDA, n.pr See Food and Drug Administration. FDA, n.pr the abbreviation for the Food and Drug Administration. oversight required of other drugs; working toward trade policies that make it easier for tobacco companies to promote tobacco overseas; trying to stop the Department of Justice lawsuit that charges the industry with hiding the addictive nature of nicotine; and challenging state and local restrictions on advertising to children. Some hopeful signs exist. In Florida, Mississippi, and Minnesota, reports show the effectiveness of programs where youth stand up to tobacco companies. When young people see how the tobacco industry targets them and vulnerable communities for lifelong addiction to a deadly product, they become less vulnerable to those intentions. "Tobacco companies see their customers as, in one executive's words, `the young, the poor, the black, and the stupid,'" says Bernardo. "They invoke spirituality in their marketing and promotional funding alike, with a two-fold goal: provide teens a false, addictive rite of passage rite of passage n. A ritual or ceremony signifying an event in a person's life indicative of a transition from one stage to another, as from adolescence to adulthood. , and silence real community voices." Communities of faith are beginning to organize around this significant public health issue. For Rev. Miles and others like him, tobacco use is a spiritual issue. "The role of the church," Miles says, "is to raise a public voice about an industry set up to profit upon people's enslavement en·slave tr.v. en·slaved, en·slav·ing, en·slaves To make into or as if into a slave. en·slave ment n. ."
Snapshot WHERE DID THE WORLD'S 12 MILLION REFUGEES CALL HOME? (Top Five Refugee Populations by Country of Origin) Afghanistan 3,567,200 Burundi 567,000 Iran 497,400 Sudan 485,500 Bosnia and Herzegovina 454,700 * Note: The Afghan refugee population has increased substantially since Sept. 11, 2001 Source: U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. Bob Hulteen is the director of the Twin Cities Religion and Labor Network. As director of the Minnesota Council of Churches' Commission on Life and Work, he was engaged with the Spirit of Life Project. |
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