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GottaKickit is a smoking cessation plan that uses your iPhone, iPod Touch, or Google Android-based mobile to help you break free of smoking without drugs, patches, potions, or even a whole lot of willpower. It costs less than a pack of cigarettes. It could literally save your life.

August 30, 2010: "iOS4 provides boost for GottaKickit and users" (read the press release)
July 31, 2010: "Nicotine research supports GottaKickit approach" (read the blog entry)
June 24, 2010: "GottaKickit Smoking News Digest" (read the blog entry)

GottaKickit Smoking News Digest — June/July 2010

This issue: A new federal law tightens regulation of tobacco companies in the U.S., an Islamic high council in the Philippines declares a fatwa against the production and use of tobacco, and a new tax threatens $11 cigarettes in New York City.

New U.S. law tightens regulation of tobacco companies

A new federal law that went into effect in the United States in June contains several important provisions with regard to tobacco smoking. In general, the legislation further constrains the marketing of tobacco, and provides for enhanced disclosure and regulation of smoking formulations. However, there are also some significant concessions to the tobacco companies. Some highlights:

[Summary of the legislation]

Smoking illegal under Islam, says Supreme Council

In the Philippines, a council of Islamic leaders has issued a fatwa, or religious ruling, declaring it a sin for Muslims to smoke tobacco or participate in its trade. The Supreme Council of Darul Ifta of the Philippines, under Grand Mufti Sheikh Omar Pasigan, based the judgement on teachings that prohibit activities harmful to the body. As in the West, smoking has been subject to mounting pressure in Muslim countries for some time: a smoking ban has been in effect in Mecca and Medina, cities regarded as holy in Islam, since 2002.

[Article in Manila Bulletin, June 26, 2010]

Cigarettes head towards $11 a pack in NYC

When a new state tax came into effect in New York on July 1, the tax total on a pack of cigarettes in New York City — where there is also a municipal tax — rose to $5.85, the highest in the country. The retail price of a pack of smokes in the Big Apple could end up near $11, bringing the yearly cost of a pack-a-day habit to about $4000, more than $2100 of it in taxes.

Although middle-class smokers may grumble at the new tax, such measures are toughest for the burgeoning ranks of out-of-work smokers, and those on low or fixed incomes, especially long-time users caught between their addiction and their encroaching poverty. Government loves the cash, and anti-smoking activists will look on with satisfaction as smoking rates ratchet downward one more notch under the increased financial pressure. As for the multitude of low-income smoking addicts who make up the bottom of the iceberg in this story, we may not hear too much about the impact of the tax on their lives. But at 11 bucks a pack, there will be, along with some small number of success stories, a lot of addicts in pain.

[TIME blog item about the tax hike]

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