Just wait until they ban alcohol again
Ron Paul writes (speaks?) on a topic very dear to my heart:
Last week, another bill was passed and signed into law that takes more of our freedoms and violates the Constitution of the United States. It was, of course, done for the sake of the children, and in the name of the health of the citizenry. It's always the case that when your liberty is seized, it is seized for your own good. Such is the condescension of Washington.
I personally don't like smokers. I don't smoke, I don't like the smell of the smoke, and I think I'm allergic to it, too. This is even before we talk about the supposed harms of second-hand smoking. But I don't want the government "cracking down" on either smokers or tobacco companies (especially when the tobacco company is no longer lying to people), no more than someone who didn't have particular fondness for Jews before WWII might have wished Holocaust to happen.
If there's to be any ban on tobacco, it has to be done at the local level. It has to be done by individual private building owners, and perhaps on the largest scale that's (barely) acceptable, by city councils. Any governmental organization larger than that has no legal power to regulate tobacco—least of all a federal agency. Where in the Constitution does it say that when tobacco is grown in a state, processed in the same state, and smoked in the very same state, the federal government could have any say as to in what manner it can be smoked or marketed? (Although I don't find it morally acceptable, I suppose on legal grounds a state, depending on its constitution, could regulate tobacco within its own sphere of influence.)
If there's a bar where there's no smoking at all (not even on the balconies, as smoke does enter back into the bar even then), I might be more inclined to go there than at bars where people smoke. If there's a city where smoking is generally not accepted, I might be more inclined to live there in order to live with like-minded people. But a federal government "regulating" honest marketing of tobacco is way beyond where I draw the line.