Smoking has become highly moralized in American society. Not only is it not cool, it's stigmatized.
But the point that I'd like to make about this is the relationship between smoking and socioeconomic status. As a 2012 scientific review put it, "Smoking prevalence is higher among disadvantaged groups." Which means that smoking is just one more way the rich can look down upon and morally judge the poor.
Why do the poor smoke more than the rich?
In Texas where I live a pack of cigarettes costs about $6.00. There are about twenty cigarettes in a pack. The average smoker smokes a half pack or less a day.
Basically, for about $3.00 you've got yourself a pleasurable activity to carry you through the day. Hedonically speaking, that's not a bad deal.
Of course, there is more to smoking than hedonic pleasure. There is the cancer risk, the odors to contend with (on your clothing or person and in your car or dwelling), and that social stigma we mentioned.
In the face of those negatives the rich opt for different pleasures. You know what I like to do? I like to go out to eat. Or to a movie. Or read a book. Or go on a vacation.
But all those hedonic pleasures cost more money. Let alone requiring a car. For example, it costs my family of four about $20 to eat at Taco Bell. Taco Bell. Twenty dollars. And anything beyond fast food is way, way more expensive than that.
Here's my point. When the rich want to do something pleasurable they usually go out to eat or to some entertainment. Or they go shopping.
And on top of all that, the rich go on vacations where they spend hundreds and thousands of dollars.
That's what hedonism looks like for the rich. Eating out, shopping, going to entertainments, taking vacations.
The poor, by contrast, smoke. It's a pleasure they can afford. But at the end of the day, despite the moralization smoking gets, it's no less hedonistic than the pleasures of the rich.
Email Subscription on Substack
Richard Beck
Welcome to the blog of Richard Beck, author and professor of psychology at Abilene Christian University (beckr@acu.edu).
The Theology of Faƫrie
The Little Way of St. ThĆ©rĆØse of Lisieux
The William Stringfellow Project (Ongoing)
Autobiographical Posts
- On Discoveries in Used Bookstores
- Two Brothers and Texas Rangers
- Visiting and Evolving in Monkey Town
- Roller Derby Girls
- A Life With Bibles
- Wearing a Crucifix
- Morning Prayer at San Buenaventura Mission
- The Halo of Overalls
- Less
- The Farmer's Market
- Subversion and Shame: I Like the Color Pink
- The Bureaucrat
- Uncle Richard, Vampire Hunter
- Palm Sunday with the Orthodox
- On Maps and Marital Spats
- Get on a Bike...and Go Slow
- Buying a Bible
- Memento Mori
- We Weren't as Good as the Muppets
- Uncle Richard and the Shark
- Growing Up Catholic
- Ghostbusting (Part 1)
- Ghostbusting (Part 2)
- My Eschatological Dog
- Tex Mex and Depression Era Cuisine
- Aliens at Roswell
On the Principalities and Powers
- Christ and the Powers
- Why I Talk about the Devil So Much
- The Preferential Option for the Poor
- The Political Theology of Les MisƩrables
- Good Enough
- On Anarchism and A**holes
- Christian Anarchism
- A Restless Patriotism
- Wink on Exorcism
- Images of God Against Empire
- A Boredom Revolution
- The Medal of St. Benedict
- Exorcisms are about Economics
- "Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?"
- "A Home for Demons...and the Merchants Weep"
- Tales of the Demonic
- The Ethic of Death: The Policies and Procedures Manual
- "All That Are Here Are Humans"
- Ears of Stone
- The War Prayer
- Letter from a Birmingham Jail
Experimental Theology
- Eucharistic Identity
- Tzimtzum, Cruciformity and Theodicy
- Holiness Among Depraved Christians: Paul's New Form of Moral Flourishing
- Empathic Open Theism
- The Victim Needs No Conversion
- The Hormonal God
- Covenantal Substitutionary Atonement
- The Satanic Church
- Mousetrap
- Easter Shouldn't Be Good News
- The Gospel According to Lady Gaga
- Your God is Too Big
From the Prison Bible Study
- The Philosopher
- God's Unconditional Love
- There is a Balm in Gilead
- In Prison With Ann Voskamp
- To Make the Love of God Credible
- Piss Christ in Prison
- Advent: A Prison Story
- Faithful in Little Things
- The Prayer of Jabez
- The Prayer of Willy Brown
- Those Old Time Gospel Songs
- I'll Fly Away
- Singing and Resistence
- Where the Gospel Matters
- Monday Night Bible Study (A Poem)
- Living in Babylon: Reading Revelation in Prison
- Reading the Beatitudes in Prision
- John 13: A Story from the Prision Study
- The Word
Series/Essays Based on my Research
The Theology of Calvin and Hobbes
The Theology of Peanuts
The Snake Handling Churches of Appalachia
Eccentric Christianity
- Part 1: A Peculiar People
- Part 2: The Eccentric God, Transcendence and the Prophetic Imagination
- Part 3: Welcoming God in the Stranger
- Part 4: Enchantment, the Porous Self and the Spirit
- Part 5: Doubt, Gratitude and an Eccentric Faith
- Part 6: The Eccentric Economy of Love
- Part 7: The Eccentric Kingdom
The Fuller Integration Lectures
Blogging about the Bible
- Unicorns in the Bible
- "Let My People Go!": On Worship, Work and Laziness
- The True Troubler
- Stumbling At Just One Point
- The Faith of Demons
- The Lord Saw That She Was Not Loved
- The Subversion of the Creator God
- Hell On Earth: The Church as the Baptism of Fire and the Holy Spirit
- The Things That Make for Peace
- The Lord of the Flies
- On Preterism, the Second Coming and Hell
- Commitment and Violence: A Reading of the Akedah
- Gain Versus Gift in Ecclesiastes
- Redemption and the Goel
- The Psalms as Liberation Theology
- Control Your Vessel
- Circumcised Ears
- Forgive Us Our Trespasses
- Doing Beautiful Things
- The Most Remarkable Sequence in the Bible
- Targeting the Dove Sellers
- Christus Victor in Galatians
- Devoted to Destruction: Reading Cherem Non-Violently
- The Triumph of the Cross
- The Threshing Floor of Araunah
- Hold Others Above Yourself
- Blessed are the Tricksters
- Adam's First Wife
- I Am a Worm
- Christus Victor in the Lord's Prayer
- Let Them Both Grow Together
- Repent
- Here I Am
- Becoming the Jubilee
- Sermon on the Mount: Study Guide
- Treat Them as a Pagan or Tax Collector
- Going Outside the Camp
- Welcoming Children
- The Song of Lamech and the Song of the Lamb
- The Nephilim
- Shaming Jesus
- Pseudepigrapha and the Christian Witness
- The Exclusion and Inclusion of Eunuchs
- The Second Moses
- The New Manna
- Salvation in the First Sermons of the Church
- "A Bloody Husband"
- Song of the Vineyard
Bonhoeffer's Letters from Prision
Civil Rights History and Race Relations
- The Gospel According to Ta-Nehisi Coates (Six Part Series)
- Bus Ride to Justice: Toward Racial Reconciliation in the Churches of Christ
- Black Heroism and White Sympathy: A Reflection on the Charleston Shooting
- Selma 50th Anniversary
- More Than Three Minutes
- The Passion of White America
- Remembering James Chaney, Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman
- Will Campbell
- Sitting in the Pews of Ebeneser Baptist Church
- MLK Bedtime Prayer
- Freedom Rider
- Mountiantop
- Freedom Summer
- Civil Rights Family Trip 1: Memphis
- Civil Rights Family Trip 2: Atlanta
- Civil Rights Family Trip 3: Birmingham
- Civil Rights Family Trip 4: Selma
- Civil Rights Family Trip 5: Montgomery
Hip Christianity
The Charism of the Charismatics
Would Jesus Break a Window?: The Hermeneutics of the Temple Action
Being Church
- Instead of a Coffee Shop How About a Laundromat?
- A Million Boring Little Things
- A Prayer for ISIS
- "The People At Our Church Die A Lot"
- The Angel of Freedom
- Washing Dishes at Freedom Fellowship
- Where David Plays the Tambourine
- On Interruptibility
- Mattering
- This Ritual of Hallowing
- Faith as Honoring
- The Beautiful
- The Sensory Boundary
- The Missional and Apostolic Nature of Holiness
- Open Commuion: Warning!
- The Impurity of Love
- A Community Called Forgiveness
- Love is the Allocation of Our Dying
- Freedom Fellowship
- Wednesday Night Church
- The Hands of Christ
- Barbara, Stanley and Andrea: Thoughts on Love, Training and Social Psychology
- Gerald's Gift
- Wiping the Blood Away
- This Morning Jesus Put On Dark Sunglasses
- The Only Way I Know How to Save the World
- Renunciation
- The Reason We Gather
- Anointing With Oil
- Incarnations of God's Mercy
Exploring Preterism
Scripture and Discernment
- Owning Your Protestantism: We Follow Our Conscience, Not the Bible
- Emotional Intelligence and Sola Scriptura
- Songbooks vs. the Psalms
- Biblical as Sociological Stress Test
- Cookie Cutting the Bible: A Case Study
- Pawn to King 4
- Allowing God to Rage
- Poetry of a Murderer
- On Christian Communion: Killing vs. Sexuality
- Heretics and Disagreement
- Atonement: A Primer
- "The Bible says..."
- The "Yes, but..." Church
- Human Experience and the Bible
- Discernment, Part 1
- Discernment, Part 2
- Rabbinic Hedges
- Fuzzy Logic
Interacting with Good Books
- Christian Political Witness
- The Road
- Powers and Submissions
- City of God
- Playing God
- Torture and Eucharist
- How Much is Enough?
- From Willow Creek to Sacred Heart
- The Catonsville Nine
- Daring Greatly
- On Job (GutiƩrrez)
- The Selfless Way of Christ
- World Upside Down
- Are Christians Hate-Filled Hypocrites?
- Christ and Horrors
- The King Jesus Gospel
- Insurrection
- The Bible Made Impossible
- The Deliverance of God
- To Change the World
- Sexuality and the Christian Body
- I Told Me So
- The Teaching of the Twelve
- Evolving in Monkey Town
- Saved from Sacrifice: A Series
- Darwin's Sacred Cause
- Outliers
- A Secular Age
- The God Who Risks
Moral Psychology
- The Dark Spell the Devil Casts: Refugees and Our Slavery to the Fear of Death
- Philia Over Phobia
- Elizabeth Smart and the Psychology of the Christian Purity Culture
- On Love and the Yuck Factor
- Ethnocentrism and Politics
- Flies, Attention and Morality
- The Banality of Evil
- The Ovens at Buchenwald
- Violence and Traffic Lights
- Defending Individualism
- Guilt and Atonement
- The Varieties of Love and Hate
- The Wicked
- Moral Foundations
- Primum non nocere
- The Moral Emotions
- The Moral Circle, Part 1
- The Moral Circle, Part 2
- Taboo Psychology
- The Morality of Mentality
- Moral Conviction
- Infrahumanization
- Holiness and Moral Grammars
The Purity Psychology of Progressive Christianity
The Theology of Everyday Life
- Self-Esteem Through Shaming
- Let Us Be the Heart Of the Church Rather Than the Amygdala
- Online Debates and Stages of Change
- The Devil on a Wiffle Ball Field
- Incarnational Theology and Mental Illness
- Social Media as Sacrament
- The Impossibility of Calvinistic Psychotherapy
- Hating Pixels
- Dress, Divinity and Dumbfounding
- The Kingdom of God Will Not Be Tweeted
- Tattoos
- The Ethics of :-)
- On Snobbery
- Jokes
- Hypocrisy
- Everything I learned about life I learned coaching tee-ball
- Gossip, Part 1: The Food of the Brain
- Gossip, Part 2: Evolutionary Stable Strategies
- Gossip, Part 3: The Pay it Forward World
- Human Nature
- Welcome
- On Humility
Jesus, You're Making Me Tired: Scarcity and Spiritual Formation
A Progressive Vision of the Benedict Option
George MacDonald
Jesus & the Jolly Roger: The Kingdom of God is Like a Pirate
Alone, Suburban & Sorted
The Theology of Monsters
The Theology of Ugly
Orthodox Iconography
Musings On Faith, Belief, and Doubt
- The Meanings Only Faith Can Reveal
- Pragmatism and Progressive Christianity
- Doubt and Cognitive Rumination
- A/theism and the Transcendent
- Kingdom A/theism
- The Ontological Argument
- Cheap Praise and Costly Praise
- god
- Wired to Suffer
- A New Apologetics
- Orthodox Alexithymia
- High and Low: The Psalms and Suffering
- The Buddhist Phase
- Skilled Christianity
- The Two Families of God
- The Bait and Switch of Contemporary Christianity
- Theodicy and No Country for Old Men
- Doubt: A Diagnosis
- Faith and Modernity
- Faith after "The Cognitive Turn"
- Salvation
- The Gifts of Doubt
- A Beautiful Life
- Is Santa Claus Real?
- The Feeling of Knowing
- Practicing Christianity
- In Praise of Doubt
- Skepticism and Conviction
- Pragmatic Belief
- N-Order Complaint and Need for Cognition
Holiday Musings
- Everything I Learned about Christmas I Learned from TV
- Advent: Learning to Wait
- A Christmas Carol as Resistance Literature: Part 1
- A Christmas Carol as Resistance Literature: Part 2
- It's Still Christmas
- Easter Shouldn't Be Good News
- The Deeper Magic: A Good Friday Meditation
- Palm Sunday with the Orthodox
- Growing Up Catholic: A Lenten Meditation
- The Liturgical Year for Dummies
- "Watching Their Flocks at Night": An Advent Meditation
- Pentecost and Babel
- Epiphany
- Ambivalence about Lent
- On Easter and Astronomy
- Sex Sandals and Advent
- Freud and Valentine's Day
- Existentialism and Halloween
- Halloween Redux: Talking with the Dead
The Offbeat
- Batman and the Joker
- The Theology of Ugly Dolls
- Jesus Would Be a Hufflepuff
- The Moral Example of Captain Jack Sparrow
- Weddings Real, Imagined and Yet to Come
- Michelangelo and Neuroanatomy
- Believing in Bigfoot
- The Kingdom of God as Improv and Flash Mob
- 2012 and the End of the World
- The Polar Express and the Uncanny Valley
- Why the Anti-Christ Is an Idiot
- On Harry Potter and Vampire Movies
I agree with the goal, but I'd critique the implicit rational choice model that I think animates the post, with statements like, "Hedonically speaking, that's not a bad deal" and "In the face of those negatives the rich opt for different pleasures. You know what I like to do? I like to go out to eat." The rational choice model is particularly inappropriate in cases like addiction; most of the smokers I know (regardless of income) wish they didn't smoke. For the broke smokers I know, the cost just adds more anxiety. They prefer different preferences, and yet their flesh won't do what they will. Polling shows that most smokers have actually tried to quit multiple times, and failed.
I think we can see smoking as an addiction rather than a reasonable choice, and still avoid stigmatizing people who do it. We don't need dubious utilitarian ethics to rationalize our unease with the way people judge the poor. In fact, I think the rational choice element dulls the ethical point. We should avoid judging outgroup members because it is wrong to do, and because we have a healthy fear and awareness that those judgments will be measured back to us. We all struggle with our addictions. That sucks, and we all need help overcoming them. When I see someone suffering from a noxious addiction, I try (and sometimes don't fail) to ask myself, "What are my own noxious addictions?"
Great observations. I intentionally stayed away from the addiction aspect to keep the post simple and focused on pleasures, those available to the poor and those available to the rich. But the addiction aspect needs to be talked about so I'm glad you addressed it.
I also find it ironic that there is a movement to legalize smoking marijuana, let me write that again, s m o k i n g marijuana, but at the same time we make it illegal to smoke cigarettes.
Another point, I took a vacation this year, first one of this type in years. We saved up for it and didn't "go into credit card debt" to do so. How much of a finnancial strain on a budget is smoking?
Finally, besides the risk of cancer, smoking leads to emphysema, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, etc. etc. I don't think my rare vacation trip will do that much damage.
I talked about smoking a lot at my last church because it seemed such an obvious example of addiction--precisely because everyone I knew who smoked said, with a certain amount of shame, that they wished they didn't. But I think at times it sounded like I was picking on a particular disadvantaged group.
Perhaps the problem is that the richer you are, the more likely it is that your addictions (including Taco Bell?) will not be obviously unhealthy, or even obviously addictions. It's parallel to the use of "bad language"--people in higher social classes have as much "unwholesome talk" as people in lower social classes, but a sarcastic snub is not as obvious as the F-word. Lazy moralists (including most preachers) point to the obvious examples, and as a result, they make it sound like they are hostile to the vices that are most characteristic of the poor.
Point well taken. At Grace Fellowship often poor smokers stand outside and usually off to the side, furtively taking their drags. These folks are friendly but obviously desparate for a shot of nicotine comfort before coming in to the meal and assembly. Probably none among the non smokers even mentions it. But sometimes in the prayer and announcement period someone will say with pride, I've been off tobacco for ........ Days now! And everyone will clap and cheer and pat them on the back. We are all happy....rich (comparatively so) and poor alike...about this small but significant victory in the quest to overcome our demons. There's not a lot of preaching about it, but we all seem to know that we're in this together.
The same observation could be made with junk food intake. I used to frequent a grocery store in Old East Dallas that inevitably had shoppers lined up with tons of junk food purchases on food stamps. The choices weren't wise by many standards, but they were at least in ways understandable. Easing psychic pain, seeking relief in the midst of abismal circumstances is an almost ubiquitous quest. Let's hear it for the leveling and forgiving and encouraging ethos of simple discipleship. Like many moral issues, subjects get quickly complex. How hard to acknowledge that we are ALL ultimately in the same boat...desparately seeking the miracle of an overcoming word of solidarity and hope.
Don,
At $3/day smoking costs ~$1000/year, not enough to cover the trip you took I'm guessing. Also the various ways our society attacks people without a lot of money makes it difficult for them to save up. Smaller costs spread throughout the budget cycle, particularly any which can be scaled back when money is tight (between the rent check and the next paycheck for example) are much more reachable. to give an example my bank charges me $15/month for my account unless I maintain an average balance of over $2500. If I was putting aside my cigarette money for a trip that would be 15% of my funds gone before anything else hit like an unexpected car repair issue or medical expenses.
As for Marijuana the health damage from cannabis doesn't really compare to tobacco. If someone smoked 10 joints per day then it might but that would be someone who had a serious problem, not the average smoker. In addition our hypothetical 10 joint/day smoker would not experience physical withdrawal issues if they attempted to stop the way a nicotine addict would. There might be psychological issues, in fact at that point I strongly suspect there would be, but physical addiction would not be one.
I think we are always tempted to focus on the sins of others.
And stepping back, I don't really know what I'm trying to say in this post. Obviously, I don't want to minimize the addictive aspects of smoking. I'm just noting the socioeconomic divide when it comes to smoking. Maybe that divide is economics, maybe it's socialization, maybe it's IQ. I'd always rather look at situational aspects (e.g., economics, socialization) rather than dispositional ones (e.g., IQ), but at the end of the day it doesn't much matter as the outcome is that the poor engage in a habit that many, if not most, of the rich feel, viscerally, to be disgusting and revolting. (Everything I describe in Unclean comes into play here.) And that has a dehumanizing effect. It's that instinctive dehumanization we feel toward smokers, most of whom are poor, that I'm trying to focus on.
Don't you know that the rich and wealthy are privileged to engage in whatever behavior because they are rich and wealthy? Having wealth justifies idleness, non-productive lifestyle, justification for greed, any type pleasure, and the right to judge the vulgar masses for their sins.
I think what is interesting in this is that the divergent trends in smoking by SES started to become apparent in the 70's but the social stigmatization aspect didn't really start to become a factor until the 90's and really kick in until the last decade or so. A quick search hasn't found any good longitudinal studies on this (except one which doesn't start until 2001 at which point a lot of the trends have been well underway) however I strongly suspect that it wasn't until smoking became publicly identified as a vice of the poor that the moral aspect was added in.
Aside from the health aspects and addiction piece of it the question is how we treat people who engage in behavior based on expectations about social power. If we only start publicly condemning the people who do something once they are already safely situated at the bottom of the social hierarchy then we are just using the arguments as a way to justify our existing social structures and preconceptions about morality. The other piece then is the idea, prevalent in our society, that the poor are that way for a reason. If they would just do this, or not do that, they could change their basic patterns of life. This ignores the fact that at different places in the SES spectrum incentives are very different. Ta-Nehsi Coates writes a lot about how the patterns of behavior which served him well growing up in the 80's in Baltimore no longer worked when he was an editor at the Atlantic and being invited to the Aspen Ideas Festival. This doesn't mean that the behaviors from his childhood were "worse" and the ones he uses now are "better", just that each were appropriate to the circumstances he was in and those have changed. Trying to moralize without understanding the context that creates those reactions often, even if it isn't intended, results in the use of privilege as a weapon to force people into abandoning rational choices for their circumstances for less optimal ones.
All I know is I hate cigarettes - a way for the wealthy tobacco companies to take advantage of the poor - and they killed my grandpa at age 56, and I was 7. I hate what took him from me. I understand the addiction. I don't preach to anyone. Everyone I know who smokes is far from poor, except for those at our homeless ministry. I don't look down on them, because I have my own bad habits. But I will always hate cigarettes.
I remember, in my youth, the days of condemning smoking from the pulpit (usually while the deacons were in front of the building smoking.) I remember hearing how awful it was to pollute and destroy the temple of God. Now that we know what we know about food, why don't we hear condemnations about sugar?
We all have our vices. Some drink. Some smoke. I eat.
Interesting post.
There's one other reason to smoke - it inhibits hunger. It is cheaper to smoke, even at $6.00 a pack, than to eat in many cities in America. That's why a number of poor people throughout history have started smoking, so they can go longer without food.