Britain Bans Tobacco! Proposed Lifetime Smoking Ban to Become Law!

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/21/world/europe/uk-smoking-ban-2009.html?unlocked_article_code=1.dVA.f9yJ.YMVg9N8QOlio

Britain aims to raise a “smoke-free generation” by permanently banning the sale or supply of tobacco to anyone born in 2009 or after, with a bill that was approved by Parliament on Tuesday.
The bill applies to people currently 17 years old or younger and aims to keep them from ever picking up the habit in their lifetime. The proposal is expected to soon go into law after the final formality of approval by King Charles III.
Lawmakers say that in practice, the measure means the age of sale for tobacco products will rise over time as the targeted demographic group grows older and could lead to a smoke-free society. The law will apply in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
The people covered by the law will be “part of the first smoke-free generation, protected from a lifetime of addiction and harm,” said Wes Streeting, the health secretary, on Tuesday. “Prevention is better than cure.”

The legislation includes new licensing and registration requirements for retailers and adds product information mandates, advertising and promotion controls, and further restrictions on smoking and vaping in public places, as well as allowing additional restrictions on vaping products. It hopes to block the use of tobacco products, describing them as “the main underlying drivers of ill-health,” and to reduce the pressure on Britain’s publicly funded health care system from smoking-related illnesses.
The bill, first proposed in 2024, is among the few generational smoking bans to have gained traction worldwide. Last year, a law banning tobacco for anyone born in 2007 or later went into effect in the Maldives.
New Zealand enacted the world’s first generational smoking ban in 2022. It was lauded by public health officials and criticized by retailers and the tobacco industry, and was abolished the next year under a new government.
The fate of New Zealand’s legislation, which some of its proponents say was killed as a result of the influence of the tobacco industry, may signal similar struggles ahead for Britain’s smoking cessation efforts.
In 2024, Britain’s Office for National Statistics reported that 5.3 million people aged 18 or over were smokers, accounting for more than 10 percent of adults in the United Kingdom. Smoking is responsible for 64,000 deaths every year in Britain, making it the leading preventable cause of death, disability and ill health in the country, according to the Department of Health and Social Care.

In total, smoking costs Britain nearly $29 billion annually, including through lost productivity and health care costs, according to the government. Smoking also has socioeconomic effects and exacerbates health inequalities, the health department said, noting that 500,000 households are “living in poverty” because of tobacco expenditures.
A 2024 report on adult smoking habits in Britain by the Office for National Statistics showed that three-quarters of smokers wished they had never started smoking and the majority wanted to quit. Citing those statistics, the health department, in an assessment of the generational ban bill, said, “Addiction is not a choice.”

A correction was made on April 23, 2026: An earlier version of this article misstated how the ban would apply to vaping products. It would add new vaping restrictions, not ban vape sales.

1952 – 1956 Lorillard / Kent Sold Crocidolite Asbestos Filler

In 1952, as concerns grew over the link between ṣmọking and cạncẹr, Kent cigạrẹttẹṣ introduced the Micronite filter, claiming it would protect ṣmọkẹrs. However, between 1952 and 1956, these filters were made with crocidolite, or blue asbestos, one of the most hazardous forms. They were marketed as a “taste improvement” and “kind on the lungs.” When asbestos was marketed to the public.

Gemini Pro: One of the most tragic ironies in consumer history. The sentence fragment at the end of your prompt—“When asbestos was marketed to the public”—highlights a bizarre era where one of the deadliest carcinogens known to man was sold not just as a building material, but as a luxury health feature.

Here is the context on how asbestos was marketed to the public during that specific window (1952–1956) and why it was effective.

1. The “Science” Angle

In the early 1950s, the public began to worry about the “cancer scare” associated with smoking. Tobacco companies needed a way to reassure customers.

  • “Micronite” as a Buzzword: The term “Micronite” was pure marketing genius. It sounded high-tech, precise, and scientific. It obscured the fact that the material was actually crocidolite asbestos.
  • Medical Authority: Advertisements heavily featured men in white lab coats looking into microscopes. The marketing copy claimed the filter was “made of a material so safe, so pure, it’s used to filter the air in leading hospitals.” This was a fabrication intended to equate asbestos with sterile, medical-grade safety.

2. The “Miracle Mineral” Reputation

To understand how they got away with this, you have to look at the reputation of asbestos in the 1950s. It wasn’t viewed with fear; it was viewed with awe.

  • Ubiquity: Asbestos was marketed as the “Magic Mineral.” It was fireproof, durable, and cheap. It was in tablecloths, oven mitts, hairdryers, and even children’s costumes (for fire safety).
  • Perceived Safety: The public associated asbestos with protection (from fire), so the leap to protection (from smoke particles) felt logical to the average consumer.

3. The Specific Danger of the Kent Filter

While white asbestos (chrysotile) is dangerous, the blue asbestos (crocidolite) used in Kent filters is widely considered the most hazardous type due to its needle-like fibers.

  • The Mechanism: To filter the smoke effectively, the asbestos was packed very tightly. This made the cigarette hard to draw, forcing smokers to inhale more deeply to get smoke through.
  • The Failure: As users inhaled deeply, microscopic needles of blue asbestos would break loose from the filter and travel directly into their lungs.

The End of the Era

Lorillard (the maker of Kent) quietly changed the filter material from asbestos to cellulose acetate in 1956. They did not announce this change to the public or recall the old packs, likely to avoid admitting liability. It wasn’t until decades later, when rates of mesothelioma (a cancer almost exclusively caused by asbestos) skyrocketed among former factory workers and heavy smokers of that specific era, that the full scope of the tragedy was uncovered.

Grimm Green Removed From YouTube

“After 16 years, my channel (GrimmGreen) was terminated today with no real explanation. I’ve built my content around harm reduction, helping adult smokers quit, and advocating for science-based policies. This feels like a huge mistake. If you believe in THR, free speech, and the mission we’ve been on, please help me get YouTube’s attention. I’m asking for a real human to review my case. I’ve never promoted anything illegal. I’ve never targeted youth. I’ve worked tirelessly to be a responsible voice in the vaping and harm reduction space. But like many creators in this space, it seems I’ve been swept up in an overly aggressive moderation wave.”