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Moscow Anti-Smoking Campaign Uses Obama's Image as Deterrent

Anti-smoking posters in Moscow have used the image of U.S. President Barack Obama smoking to deter smokers — saying that both he and cigarettes are killers.

The poster has a photoshopped image of the U.S. president and the words: “Smoking kills more people than Obama, although he kills a lot of people. Don't smoke — don't be like Obama.”

Russian State Duma opposition deputy Dmitry Gudkov published a photograph of the bus stop poster on Facebook, adding a Soviet joke about freedom of speech in the United States versus the Soviet Union — essentially, Soviet citizens were free to criticize U.S. presidents while standing in Red Square.

Анекдоты с бородой — в жизнь. «У нас в СССР — свобода слова! Я тоже могу выйти на Красную площадь и сколько угодно ругат...

Опубликовано Dmitry Gudkov 16 февраля 2016 г.

“In fact, I am disgusted and ashamed of what appears on the streets of the Russian capital,” Gudkov said.

Obama has often been targeted in racist and anti-American campaigns. In December 2015, a major Russian supermarket chain apologized after selling a chopping board with Obama pictured as a chimpanzee.

In January a pro-Kremlin art community hung a banner depicting Obama, with the caption “killer,” opposite the U.S. Embassy in the center of Moscow.

Tobacco use causes nearly 6 million deaths annually, and is projected to cause 8 millions deaths per year by 2030, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported in December 2015.

In 2009 Obama said that he “constantly” struggles with cigarettes. “I would say that I am 95 percent cured,” Obama said, “But there are times where I mess up.”

At a 2013 event, Obama said that it was Michelle Obama who “scared” him into quitting smoking. “I haven’t had a cigarette in six years," the president said. "That’s because I’m scared of my wife.”

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