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Updated: April 8, 2005, 03:30:24 AM PDT
We wouldn't encourage anyone, especially our own children, to take up
the nasty habit of chewing tobacco, given the health risks and the mess
associated with spitting.
That said, we believe the leaders of the Oakdale Saddle Club should be
allowed to decide whether to continue depending on Skoal and Copenhagen
as sponsors for the Oakdale Rodeo.
The anti-tobacco coalition wanted the club to cut off its association
with the U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Co., which makes both brands of spit tobacco.
The nonprofit Saddle Club allows the company to distribute free snuff
samples in exchange for providing a scoreboard, which is an essential
part of the rodeo operation. The club said the sponsorship was critical
to the success of the event.
We applaud the Saddle Club for agreeing not to put the smokeless tobacco
sampling tent near concessions aimed at young people.
This situation demands a three-way balance of good individual health
decisions, the economics of a nonprofit group sponsoring a major community
event and free enterprise. Spit tobacco is, after all, legal for anyone
older than 18 to use.
Whether it's a wise choice is another matter. People who use spit tobacco
are three to four times more likely to get oral cancer than nonusers.
Oral cancers include those of the mouth, tongue, throat and voice box.
Treatment can be disfiguring as well as disabling. Spit tobacco also has
been linked to gum disease, hypertension, heart disease and ulcers. It
is, like tobacco smoking, addictive.
It's perfectly appropriate for the Stanislaus County Health Services
Agency to alert people, especially children, to these dangers. Previously,
there have been national campaigns targeting collegiate and professional
baseball for the same reasons — concern over the health of the athletes
and over the examples set for children.
Since the early 1990s, minor league baseball players have been forbidden
to chew at games, practice or on the road. Some Major League clubs have
active campaigns to discourage their players from chewing, for health
and image reasons.
Eventually, we hope professional rodeo cowboys will take the same industrywide
approach.
Two groups must make decisions in this matter — and neither requires
government intervention.
Parents must decide whether they want to expose their children to advertisements
promoting this unhealthy and unsanitary activity.
The Saddle Club must decide how it can best keep alive an event with
a rich and long tradition that benefits the town and the entire region.
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