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E-raamat: Smoke Em If You Got Em: The Rise and Fall of the Military Cigarette Ration

  • Formaat: 320 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Nov-2018
  • Kirjastus: Naval Institute Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781682473603
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  • Formaat: 320 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Nov-2018
  • Kirjastus: Naval Institute Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781682473603
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The American military-industrial complex and accompanying culture are most often associated with massive weapons procurement programs and advanced technologies. Images of supersonic bombers, strategic missiles, armor-plated tanks, nuclear submarines, and complex space systems clog our imagination. However, one aspect of the complex is not a weapon or even a machine, but one of the world's most highly engineered consumer products: the manufactured cigarette.

Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em describes the origins of the often comfortable, yet increasingly controversial relationship among the military, the cigarette industry, and tobaccoland politicians during the twentieth century. After fostering the relationship between soldier and cigarette for more than five decades, the Department of Defense and fiscally minded legislators faced formidable political, cultural, economic, and internal challenges as they fought to unhinge the soldier-cigarette bond they had forged. Smoke 'Em If You Got 'Em is also a study in modern American political economy. Bureaucrats, soldiers, lobbyists, government executives, legislators, litigators, or anti-smoking activists all struggled over far-reaching policy issues involving the cigarette. The soldier-cigarette relationship established by the Army in World War I and broken apart in the mid-1980s underpinned one of the most prolific social, cultural, economic, and healthcare related developments in the twentieth century: the rise and proliferation of the American manufactured cigarette smoker and the powerful cigarette enterprise supporting them.

From 1918 to 1986, the military established a powerful subculture of cigarette-smoking soldiers. The relationship was so rooted that, after the 1964 Surgeon General's Report warned Americans that cigarettes were hazardous to health, a further 22 years were needed to advance military smoking cessation as official policy, and an additional 16 years to sever government subsidies providing soldiers low-cost cigarettes. The role of wars and the military in establishing and entrenching the American cigarette-smoking culture has often gone unrecognized. Using the manufactured cigarette as a vehicle to explore political economy and interactions between the military and American society, Joel R. Bius helps the reader understand this important, yet overlooked aspect of 20th century America.

Arvustused

"[ A] fascinating story about the rise and fall of a masculine rite of passage." The Daily News

Acknowledgments ix
List of Abbreviations
xi
Introduction 1(6)
PART I THE RISE
1 Smoke Rising
7(16)
"I'd give a boy the cigarettes."
2 The Damn Y Man
23(23)
"The American Army is thoroughly molly-coddled."
3 General March's Ration
46(14)
"Enlist and all will be well."
4 The Greatest Generation of Smokers
60(33)
"Do you just assume that every soldier in the United States Army smokes?"
PART II THE FALL
5 Operation Volar
93(15)
"The taxpayer was being taken for a ride in two directions at once."
6 Soldier-Starters
108(20)
"The renewal of the market stems almost entirely from 18-year-old smokers."
7 Health Care and the All-Volunteer Force
128(15)
"Promises have been broken."
8 The Beltway Battle
143(24)
"Our industry is under siege."
9 The Reaganomics of Smoking
167(19)
"An economic burden we can no longer bear."
10 The Downfall
186(19)
"This provision [ does not] deny a benefit to the military community, unless lung cancer and heart disease are benefits."
Conclusion 205(4)
Epilogue 209(8)
Notes 217(58)
Bibliography 275(12)
Index 287
Joel R. Bius is an assistant professor of national security studies at the U.S. Air Force Air Command and Staff College. He received his PhD in U.S. history from The Dale Center for the Study of War and Society at The University of Southern Mississippi.