Is there any reason to think that the Nazi’s anti-smoking campaign actually influenced later ones in Germany or elsewhere very much?
(I think there are much stronger candidates for ways in which the Nazis produced good as well as harm—e.g., scientific progress motivated by WW2. But there’s a lot of harm to weigh against.)
Relevant: Could Nazi Germany seeding the first modern anti-tobacco movement have resulted in an overall net gain in public utility till date?
Is there any reason to think that the Nazi’s anti-smoking campaign actually influenced later ones in Germany or elsewhere very much?
(I think there are much stronger candidates for ways in which the Nazis produced good as well as harm—e.g., scientific progress motivated by WW2. But there’s a lot of harm to weigh against.)