The Western Journal

NANNY STATE: UK Slaps Nation’s Youth with Permanent Lifetime Smoking Ban

The article reports that the United Kingdom has passed the Tobacco and Vapes Bill, which introduces a generational smoking ban. Key points include:

– The law would forbid selling tobacco products to anyone born after January 1, 2009, effectively ensuring those born after that date will never be legally eligible to buy cigarettes.

– The minimum age to purchase tobacco products would rise by one year each year, starting in January 2027.

– The bill would reclassify smoke-free zones to include vaping and imposes extensive restrictions on how smoking and vaping products are sold, advertised, and displayed, with ministers given broad regulatory powers over flavors, packaging, and displays.

– while many people would still be able to smoke, the legislation creates a long-term, generational prohibition framework and tightens regulation on the industry.

– critics label the measure a “nanny State” overreach, arguing it gives excessive oversight to ministers and curbs personal choice; social media reactions quoted in the piece range from sarcastic memes to broader political debate.

The article cites reuters and Time for context and includes various media reactions and commentary surrounding the controversial policy.


Well, it’s certainly a more creative way to ban something than what was attempted during prohibition.

The United Kingdom raised a few eyebrows this week when officials announced Wednesday that the Tobacco and Vapes Bill had passed, according to Reuters.

The bill will effectively ban smoking for younger people — though it stops just short of actually banning smoking.

Many U.K. citizens will still be able to smoke after this legislation passes, but there will now be new age restrictions on smoking.

In short, the law would make it an offense to sell tobacco products to anyone born after January 1, 2009, and that age cutoff is where this ban gets creative.

Effectively, the legislation would raise the minimum age of purchasing smoking products by one year every year, starting in January 2027, according to Time magazine.

(The current age to purchase nicotine or tobacco products is 18.)

That means that anybody born after 2009 will never be old enough to legally purchase smoking products.

The bill will also reclassify smoke-free zones to include the banning of vapes.

Furthermore, the bill will put all manner of restrictions on how smoking products are sold, advertised, and marketed.

Critics of this bill, however, have taken some umbrage with the last part of this bill, which would hand extraordinary oversight powers to U.K. ministers.

As Time describes: “The bill will also empower ministers to regulate the flavors, packaging, and display of vapes and nicotine products.”

The totality of the bill has many U.K. critics blasting the nation as a growing “Nanny State”:

As one viral post on X puts it, this wasn’t so much a ban on smoking as it is a “ban on adults making their own choices based on the year they popped out.

“Born in 2008? Light up at 18 like a free human.

“Born in 2009? Sit down, serf, the government owns your lungs forever.”

Other critics on social media felt that, while smoking may very well be “gross,” there are also far bigger problems afflicting the U.K. currently, such as the issue of unchecked immigration.

“I don’t smoke,” claimed one X post that had garnered over 21,000 likes. “But isn’t it weird that the UK can ban smoking for everyone born after 2008, but they can’t do an inquiry into the nation’s gang rapists because it might offend mostly Pakistani Muslims who raped a million girls since the 1960s?”

Advertise with The Western Journal and reach millions of highly engaged readers, while supporting our work. Advertise Today.









" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."
*As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases

Related Articles

Back to top button
Close

Adblock Detected

Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker