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var Quotation = "A strong regular length business is key to attracting younger users and ensuring a healthy future franchise.<br /><em>Rothmans, Benson & Hedges, 1993</em>||Marketing activities have historically been and continue to be targeted at young smokers...<br /><em>Imperial Tobacco Limited, 1995</em>||A tobacco industry executive was asked, \"How do infants avoid second-hand smoke?\" His response? \"At some point they begin to crawl.\" Tobacco Executive 1996||In reference to the fact that smoking while pregnant puts babies at risk of low birth weights, ex-Phillip Morris CEO Joseph F. Cullman replied: \"Some women would prefer having smaller babies\"||\"We did not look at the underage market even though I am holding a document in my hand that says we did.\" James Morgan, former president and CEO of Phillip Morris (Videotaped testimony)||\"We don’t smoke that s**t; we just sell it.  We reserve the right to smoke for the young, the poor, the black and the stupid.\" R.J. Reynolds Executive||\"If you are really and truly not going to sell to children, you are going to be out of business in 30 years.\" Benett Lebow, CEO of Brook Group Ltd. (Makers of Lark and L&M Cigarettes)   ||\"…[W]e are naturally more interested to learn how you plan to target the emerging young adult female smokers rather than the older female smokers.\" Philip Morris, 1989 ||A tobacco company once gave $125 000 worth of food to a charity, according to an estimate by The Wall Street Journal. Then they spent over $21 million dollars telling people about it.||Brown & Williamson paid its product placement agency as much as $120,000 a year from 1979 to 1984 to put its brands in Hollywood movies and negotiate deals with individual actors. A multi-picture product placement deal was struck with Sylvester Stallone for $500,000. (The deal was later cancelled.) ||Between 1984 and 1994, American Tobacco (now part of British American Tobacco) paid a product placement firm upwards of $675,000 to put its brands on screen. The agency claimed that it delivered cigarettes, signage and unspecified \"incentives\" to nearly five hundred Hollywood film productions.||Smoking in movies is the most powerful pro-tobacco influence on kids today, accounting for 52% of adolescents who start smoking, an effect even stronger than cigarette advertising. www.smokefreemovies.ucsf||In July 2007, Disney became the first major Hollywood studio to ban smoking in its family oriented movies. Congrats Disney!||Why would Big Tobacco want their products in Hollywood movies? Well to start, viewers are usually unaware of sponsor involvement. It also implies celebrity endorsement, and associates commercial tobacco products with a glamorous lifestyle. You don’t see the not-so glamorous effects-in fact; smoking in movies is almost always portrayed in a neutral or positive light. Movies make tobacco industry products appealing to young people-making them up to 3x more likely to start smoking. Not bad for business.||Youth rated movies are routinely edited for content such as drug use, sex, alcohol, and even swearing. Why not tobacco? Tobacco is, after all, responsible for 500,000 deaths worldwide every year. That’s a lot more deaths than the f-word ever caused. ||Big Tobacco promised it would stop paid product placement in movies in 1990. In 1997, Burger King paid the producers of Men in Black $15million in a product placement deal. Philip Morris, makers of Marlboro cigarettes-apparently paid nothing. Marlboro cigarettes were shown more often and more prominently than any Burger King product. Strange. ||\"Smoking is being positioned as…unfashionable, as well as unhealthy….  We must use every creative means at our disposal to reverse this destructive trend.  I do feel heartened when I go to a movie and see a pack of cigarettes in the hands of the leading lady….  We must continue to exploit new opportunities to get cigarettes on screen and into the hands of smokers.\" Hamish Maxwell, President of Phillip Morris International, 1983||Worldwide, approximately 1.3 billion people smoke cigarettes or other tobacco products: almost one billion men and 250 million women. (www.ash.org)||The younger people start smoking cigarettes, the more likely they are to become strongly addicted to nicotine. www.cdc.gov||Tobacco is the second major leading cause of death in the world. (http://www.who.int/tobacco/en/)||By the year 2025, it is estimated that almost 10 million people a year will die from tobacco-related diseases… that’s the population of Ottawa killed ten times over.||47,000 Canadians die every year due to tobacco related illnesses (that’s 130 people every day. www.cancer.ca||Tobacco kills more than AIDS, legal drugs, illegal drugs, road accidents, murder and suicide combined. (www.ash.org)||5% of Canadians have no real protection from second-hand smoke. (www.smoke-free.ca)||A non-smoker breathing second-hand smoke can be exposed to 4,000 different chemicals, 50 of which are associated with or known to cause cancer. www.tobaccofacts.org||Exposure to second-hand smoke for as little as 8 to 20 minutes can cause physical reactions linked to heart and stroke disease. www.tobaccofacts.org||By 2030, a projected 7 million people in developing countries will be killed every year by tobacco. (www.ash.org)||80 % of the world’s smokers live in developing countries. (www.ash.org).||The World Bank estimates that by the year 2025 deaths from tobacco will exceed the deaths from AIDS, tuberculosis (TB) and complications from childbirth (a common cause of death in the 3rd world) combined. This equals about 10 million deaths a year, which is equal to the cities of Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver dying every year.||Research has shown that over 10.5 million people in the Asian country of Bangladesh who are currently malnourished could have an adequate diet if money spent on tobacco were instead spent on food, saving the lives of 350 children under age five each day.||For the cost of a pack of Marlboro cigarettes-you could buy 10 litres of milk in Algeria or 8 kg. of potatoes in Uruguay.||For decades, the tobacco industry has encouraged countries and families to grow tobacco, claiming that it will bring them prosperity. Instead, it has created a situation where more and more farmers are competing to sell tobacco to the companies for lower and lower prices. This results in debt because most tobacco companies operate a \"contract system\" where they provide loans to farmers in the form of seeds, fertilizer, pesticides and technical support. The farmers are usually then obligated to sell all off their crop to that company at a set price, which sometimes ends up being less than the value of the initial loans. This results in debt.||The poorest households in Bangladesh currently spend almost 10 times as much on tobacco as on education.||Three-quarters of a million deaths each year in China are caused by tobacco and it is projected that by the year 2025 there will be 2 million deaths annually due to tobacco in China alone.||Big Tobacco is increasingly putting pressure on developing countries to grow and farm tobacco in order to lower their production costs. The majority of tobacco production now takes place in the developing world, where they are able to ask for lower and lower prices while turning a blind eye to deforestation, child labour, and inhuman working conditions.||Philip Morris, the world's largest tobacco company, has already increased its overseas sales 80 percent in the past five years.||Farmers have a difficult time reusing the same land year after a year since tobacco plants drain the soil of essential nutrients like nitrogen. As a result, tobacco farmers need to clear more land to grow their tobacco crops.||Children and adults working with tobacco frequently suffer from green tobacco sickness (GTS), which is caused by absorption of nicotine from contact with wet tobacco leaves. Common symptoms range from nausea, vomiting and weakness to headaches and dizziness, and may also include abdominal cramps and difficulty breathing, as well as fluctuations in blood pressure and heart rates.||The use of child labour in the tobacco fields is a common practice in many tobacco-producing countries. Among poor families who depend on tobacco, children work on tobacco farms or factories from a very early age, working long hours, and missing out on education that could help lift them out of poverty. The tobacco companies do not pay their adult workers enough to survive without their children’s labour. And so the vicious circle of poverty continues||The FCTC (Framework Convention on Tobacco Control) was been created by the World Health Organization (WHO) and out of the WHO’s 192 member countries, 167 have signed the treaty, making it one of the most widely and rapidly adopted international treaties of all time. The FCTC helps make legislation equal across international boundaries; simply put it creates a gold standard on tobacco control. Canada was one of the first counties to ratify the treaty. Some of the countries that have not yet ratified the treaty include the United States and Italy.";

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