Attorneys general from 28 states and U.S. territories have written to the chief executives of major U.S. pharmacy chains urging them to stop selling cigarettes and other tobacco products.
Following the decision by CVS Caremark to stop selling tobacco in its stores, the chains Wal-Mart, Walgreens, Rite-Aid, Safeway and Kroger are being asked to follow suit.
New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman says pharmacies increasingly market themselves as sources for community health care, sending “a mixed message” by continuing to sell “deadly tobacco products.”
Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine says voluntary decisions by the national retailers will also help keep tobacco away from youths.
According to Schneiderman’s office, the attributable health care costs of smoking are at least $289 billion annually.
(AP)
One Response
So the idea is to replace tobacco with marijuana? Well, it should be revenue neutral. But if you are going to allow toxic substances at all, why not allow them all and tax them all. From an ethical perspective, ripping off addicts is questionable, but from a fiscal perspective, it sure beats raising my taxes.