Right, and because I never watch TV or go to the drugstore, I've never heard of this miracle device which has failed to eliminate smoking despite its widespread availability and lower per day cost than cigarettes.Darth Servo wrote:RedImp, there is this little thing called "the patch"
Besides that, you've just wiped out tobacco and left hundreds of millions of smokers high and dry, and the extinction of tobacco has wiped out your most economical source of nicotine for the patch. At the same time, demand is going to soar, for it and every other nicotine replacement product. Supplying these drugs to every smoker will cost tens if not hundreds of billions of dollars and it will be logistically impossible to serve every smoker immediately.
I see no reason to assume the patch would eliminate the demand for a tobacco replacement. It would certainly reduce demand, but getting it or drugs like it to every smoker in a timely manner, if at all, will be impossible, and that's very generously assuming all smokers would want to quit. The history of drugs and addiction says otherwise: the availability of cocaine detox didn't prevent the spread of meth, methadone clinics haven't stopped Oxycontin addicts who get priced out of their habit from switching to heroin. And there's an enormous incentive for people to devise a replacement: whoever invents a substitute cigarette for however many hundreds of millions of people are going through nicotine withdrawal is going to get rich overnight.