Thursday, July 17, 2008

Menthol the bait to trap smokers, researchers say 

Menthol the bait to trap smokers, researchers say
Hoping to lure a new generation of smokers, tobacco companies routinely manipulate levels of menthol so that their cigarettes prove more appealing and less harsh to novice users, Boston researchers reported yesterday. Scientists from the Harvard School of Public Health scoured thousands of pages of industry documents from the 1980s through 2006 and commissioned laboratory tests of cigarettes to confirm a long-suspected link between menthol levels and marketing strategies. The researchers found that tobacco companies embrace a Goldilocks approach when launching brands: Add too little menthol, a chemical that has an effect akin to anesthesia, and tobacco retains its intense bite. Add too much, and first-time smokers are overwhelmed. Add just the right amount, and cigarettes become powerfully seductive.
Evil I say, Evil! Next up: This salsa comes in mild, medium, and hot - is this part of the Mexicanization-of-America plot? And what about coffee coming in Decaf, regular, and French roast? Are the French in on it too? (Note how Kraft too suddenly and quietly took Postum off the market -- they're part of the conspiracy too.) How dare they give us consumers what we want?

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