Speaking of taxing the snot out of cigarettes... Here in NYC, they're running between $4.39 - $4.95 a pack at the moment, prices having increased by more than a dollar over the past quarter-year.
The interesting twist is... about the only way to get cigs at some kind of affordable price is to buy them from... the Indians...
Apparently one of the concessions designed to recompense Native Americans for having stolen their land and killed a lot of them and imprisoned the rest on reservations is that they can buy cigarettes very cheap... so they resell them.
Don't quite know how this relates, except that it reminds me of homeless people retrieving hundreds of deposit bottles (we pay a nickle for the 'use' of the bottle many drinks come in... if we return the bottle to the store, we get the nickle back. Many people just throw the bottles in the recycling) from public and private garbage receptacles to make a few bucks a nickle at a time... which manages again to provide a service to everyone from a basis of oppression and humiliation.
It tells us something about the cleverness born of true (financial, in this case) desperation and desire to survive.
Don't forget, water finds its own level, and people generally work things out... so don't let's be too sure we even know what would happen if such legalization became fact.
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Holly
[This message has been edited by HollyBerri (edited 25 April 2000).]
The interesting twist is... about the only way to get cigs at some kind of affordable price is to buy them from... the Indians...
Apparently one of the concessions designed to recompense Native Americans for having stolen their land and killed a lot of them and imprisoned the rest on reservations is that they can buy cigarettes very cheap... so they resell them.
Don't quite know how this relates, except that it reminds me of homeless people retrieving hundreds of deposit bottles (we pay a nickle for the 'use' of the bottle many drinks come in... if we return the bottle to the store, we get the nickle back. Many people just throw the bottles in the recycling) from public and private garbage receptacles to make a few bucks a nickle at a time... which manages again to provide a service to everyone from a basis of oppression and humiliation.
It tells us something about the cleverness born of true (financial, in this case) desperation and desire to survive.
Don't forget, water finds its own level, and people generally work things out... so don't let's be too sure we even know what would happen if such legalization became fact.
----------------------
Holly
[This message has been edited by HollyBerri (edited 25 April 2000).]
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