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4/7/2021 Menthol Cigarettes Kill Many Black People. A Ban May Finally Be Near. - The New York Times <br />https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/22/health/methol-smoking-ban.html?eType=EmailBlastContent&eId=bd8daf2b-5b8f-41c2-9965-e86e972f975f 2/4 <br />Menthol is a substance found in mint plants, and it can also be synthesized in a lab. It creates a cooling sensation in tobacco products and <br />masks the harshness of the smoke, making it more tolerable. Some studies have shown that menthol also acts as a mild anesthetic. Back in <br />1953, when menthol was not widely used, a Philip Morris Co. survey revealed that 2 percent of white smokers preferred a menthol brand, <br />while 5 percent of Black smokers did, according to a review of tobacco industry documents by Dr. Gardiner that was published in 2004 by <br />the medical journal Nicotine & Tobacco Research. <br />“The industry looked at that and said, ‘We’re missing an opportunity,’ and consciously targeted the African-American community,” said <br />Matthew L. Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, which has long lobbied for a menthol ban and also helps fund the <br />African American Tobacco Leadership Council. <br />What followed has been well-documented in records made public from numerous lawsuits, that tobacco companies have targeted Black <br />communities with menthol cigarettes for decades. They distributed free samples, offered discounts and sponsored countless concerts and <br />special events, among them the famous Kool Jazz Festival. Tobacco companies also gained good will by advertising in newspapers and <br />magazines geared to a Black readership — and by donating money to civil rights organizations. <br />The companies have also been frequent donors to Black political candidates, and they have been generous supporters of the Congressional <br />Black Caucus and the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation. Officials with Juul and Altria, which owns Philip Morris and also has a 35 <br />percent stake in Juul, serve on the foundation’s corporate advisory board. <br />The Biden administration still lacks a permanent F.D.A. commissioner, and Dr. Janet Woodcock, the acting commissioner, has not been <br />vocal on tobacco issues. But public health advocates were heartened by the confirmation on Thursday of Xavier Becerra, the former <br />attorney general of California, as the secretary of health and human services. In California, Mr. Becerra took aggressive action against <br />tobacco and e-cigarette companies. In August, California became the second state — after Massachusetts’ lead — to ban the sale of all <br />flavored tobacco products. (The law is on hold, pending an industry-sponsored referendum to repeal it, which will be on the ballot in <br />November 2022.) <br />The tobacco industry is in a tricky spot. For several years, the largest companies, Altria and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, now owned by British <br />American Tobacco, have sought to position themselves as transforming their companies into responsible businesses being eager to to <br />preventing young people from smoking and to developing less harmful products. For critics, the industry’s lobbying to protect its menthol <br />brands contradicts that assertion. <br />“It doesn’t seem very transformative if you’ve taken zero steps to address a particular product that has so disproportionately and <br />detrimentally harmed Black Americans,” said Maura Healey, the attorney general of Massachusetts, which enacted a ban on flavors, <br />including menthol, in June. “It’s time for the F.D.A. to act on the scientific evidence that is out there.” <br />Dr. Phillip Gardiner has been pushing for menthol bans in communities across the <br />country. “It’s precisely at this time that we need strong public health measures,” he <br />said.Jim Wilson/The New York Times