Tobacco Control 2004;13:213-214
© 2004 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
Canada: chicanery in the chicanes
Stan Shatenstein
Correspondence to:
Stan Shatenstein
shatensteins@sympatico.ca
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Formula 1 (F1) racing cars fly by so fast it requires slow motion replay to judge whats really happened. In the whir and blur of real time action, the Canadian F1 Grand Prix race in Montreal in June appeared to show tobacco control gaining a lap on the smoke industry. On closer examination, however, the image is actually fuzzier, the result less obvious. Michael Schumacher won in Montreal, as almost everywhere else on the F1 circuit, but whose interests are really coming out ahead?
Canadas Tobacco Act, adopted in 1997, was supposed to put an end to industry sponsorship of sporting and cultural events. Major tennis and golf tournaments, as well as a raft of music, comedy, and fireworks festivals, all managed to free themselves from the grasp of nicotine stained dollars. However, some ash-laden lobbying earned Big Tobacco no less than a seven year reprieve for a "transition period". . . . [Full text of this article]
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