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| | #11 |
| Registered Supplier - Offline Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: bakersfield ca
Posts: 252
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here is the thing. the FDA wants these banned. They are already saying the flavors are made to be marketed to kids. Now you have employees selling these things to minors. now the FDA has another thing they can argue about. Now they can say that the 0mg liquid is designed to get children hooked on it so when they are legal age they will smoke. they also now have some "scandolous" but nonetheless ground to say and give proof that these are being marketed to children. and that is what scares me. you bring that up in court and bam It doesnt matter what we say they will be shut down.
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| | #12 | |
| Super Member Join Date: Apr 2009 Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Posts: 952
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Vendors should know this and act accordingly...if they don't the result is more far-reaching than a mere kiosk in a mall. | |
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| | #13 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2009 Location: NJ, USA
Posts: 209
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Just like cigarettes, there should be hefty fines in place for anyone caught selling these to minors. Problem is -- IT VIRTUALLY NEVER HAPPENS -- so the people who stand to benefit from the penalties won't make any money!! Funny, right?
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| | #14 | |
| Super Member | Quote:
But that over-reaction does not make MacLaren buggys a dangerous, flawed product. No more than it makes e-cigarettes dangerous to minors. It is a product of nanny-state political correctness gone mad, driven into the public with brute force, that causes the zealous pursuit of anyone who even gets within 100yds of a minor whilst holding anything that resembles a cigarette. Ever see 'Invasion of the Body Snatchers'? The analogy is too close for comfort ![]() The discredit I speak of is attributable to the majority of right-wing media outlets, and the state, for it's relentless pursuit of 100% perfection and zero risk across the board. What's next? Ban bubble gum because minors can choke on it? There is a huge difference between dangerous product and careless/improper use of a product. This is a point we need to be making to the 300m Americans I spoke of earlier. 'Stuff' is allowed to happen, even if it shouldn't have, and someone or something doesn't always have to be held responsible and taken to task. Accidents happen. Sometimes that fact just has to be accepted and lived with. The climate may be whats at fault, not e-cigs? Is that a possibility? | |
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| | #15 |
| Ultra Member ECF Veteran Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: Port Arthur, Texas
Posts: 1,159
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My concern is all those thousands of underage children that are nooked on cigarettes before they can legally buy cigarettes. Do we make them wait to get of cigarettes till they are 18 or 19,(what every the age). The news media fail to take into account the underage additction to smoking and the need to get these children off tobacco cigarettes. That is just something for everyone to think about. and my 2 cents worth
__________________ actions speak louder than words, do a iittle everyday to save our PV's |
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| | #16 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jul 2009 Location: Abilene,Texas
Posts: 295
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My response: Quote:
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| | #17 |
| Moved On Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 22
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I have a question for you. If preventing the sale to minors meant the banning any of internet sales period ..................would you be in favor of that?
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| | #18 |
| Super Member Join Date: Apr 2009 Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Posts: 952
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Banning internet sales of enticing flavors to children is next on the Anti's hit list. We all know what happens next....
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| | #19 |
| PV Activist Join Date: Jan 2009 Location: St. Louis, MO
Posts: 1,464
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Personally, I think suggestions that e-cigs shouldn't be sold at kiosks is premature and perhaps a bit of a knee-jerk reaction. I've never been a big fan of SE, but, by the same token, I'm willing to give the devil its due. Time and time again we hear from people who say that their first exposure to e-cigs was at a kiosk. Not only is a kiosk often the first time someone learns about e-cigs, it also provides an opportunity for someone to actually touch and use an e-cig. For some people, this is a very important consideration because they're unlikely to buy a product like this on the internet without having had the chance to see it. Having said all of this, I think we would all agree that it's vital that e-cig companies make a serious commitment to not sell to minors. Period. But the fact that a SE kiosk got "caught" with its pants around its ankles is really not significantly different than the current state of affairs with retailers getting caught selling tobacco products to minors. FayObserver.com - Clerks cited for selling tobacco to minors Actually, the biggest difference is that right now, it's not against the law to sell e-cigs containing nicotine to minors in most jurisdictions. And to put things in a bit more perspective, the minor was offered an e-cig WITHOUT nicotine. Great press for us? Of course not. But it seems to me that the owner of the kiosk is taking this issue seriously. As for the flavors, I don't know what to say. In his talk at Vapersplace, Mr. Salmon, President of the ECA, opined that our battle would perhaps be easier if we were to eliminate the sale of flavors. That might be right, but I personally feel it's a red herring. The anti's are going to hate just about everything associated with e-cigs. Let's focus on reminding the public that we serve fruity alcohol drinks to adults, and adults are able to get GOVERNMENT APPROVED flavored nicotine products. I can go out and buy "Fruit Chill" Nicorette gum, or "Cappuccino" or "Cherry" Commit lozenges. |
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| | #20 | |
| Super Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Northern California
Posts: 318
| Quote:
Are we going to use the 'for the children' argument for our side, too? I say we do make them wait. And for several very good reasons. Adult activities should be reinforced as 'adult' activities every chance a parent (or big brother or big sister) can get. Smoking is not a civil right - it's an adult privilege. It's our moral responsibility as adults to discourage minors from engaging in adult activities. While the lack of carcenogens is played up mightly, other effects of nicotine are generally ignored or not discussed by salespeople chasing commissions. (and how much do we actually even know about the various niquids? seen any ingredient labels lately? ) If we're truely concerned about the health of our youth, it's a much better idea to gather more information and user-based research from an older age group, who, quite frankly, have less to risk, before we allow our youth anywhere near unmonitored intake of nicotine liquid. There are thousands of posts about 'throat hit' being related to nicotine level, along with a lot of enthusiastic encouragement to try higher nicotine levels when starting to vape, as if 'throat hit' is the only element of vaping that matters. I've seen 6mg/ml described as 'wimpy' or 'no throat hit', yet it seems to be a goal strength for many people using PV's to reduce their nicotine intake. A minor probably won't realize the significance of nicotine levels or recognize tolerance building because, unlike cigarettes, there's no immediate physical clue you're getting too much nicotine. Minors do recognize what the 'in crowd' touts as acceptable, tho. So a combination of inexperience, misinformation and lack of packaging information could quickly lead to even stronger addictions than could be obtained from smoking. How many minors even know what 1ml of 24mg is equal to in analogs? or how to safely measure the 1ml in a sterile manner? or have parents that would be 'cool' with the minor having syringes floating around? The post comes to mind of the young poster who, out of nicquid, smoked 4 packs of cigarettes in two hours trying to satisfy his nicotine craving. Will we end up with twen-teens hopelessly addicted, perhaps far deeper than the 40/50/60yo'ds this product is helping? I often ask, if you used PVs to get off analogs, what will you use to get off PVs? Minors also aren't best known for being consciencious about things they do, and that would most certainly translate into carelessness with nicotine liquid and the behavior of vaping in general, such as vaping around 2-yo'ds, or leaving bottles within reach of their siblings, or spilling a bottle on the couch and not vacuuming it out - they just don't think about it. Their rooms are all the evidence we need. Not really their fault - it's biology - their brains haven't fully developed critical thinking synapses until their early 20's. But is this the end result we want? Is this a risk we want to take as a society with our youth? Finally, and maybe even one of the most important points for the chances of public acceptance of PVs, is the attitude of the 'me' generation towards PV's. More than a few believe that because a Chinese instructioned box and a commissioned kiosk person says 'smoke anywhere,' that it's true, and they tend to run with it, to the complete disregard of any sense of propriety or timing already imposed by society. The 'in your face' attitude jeapordizes the ability of those who really do truely need this product, and for whom the product is not a fad: the 'experienced' (and usually, desperate) smoker, willing to shell out $300 for a kit and supplies. For every story of a 20 or 30 or 40 year smoker breaking the bonds of slavery to analogs, is another story of some young buck or dudette blowing smoke in their boss's face, or talking about how somehow they're completely incapable of sitting thru a lecture or picking up a loaf of bread at the supermarket without a dose of nicotine. If there is some element to niquid that compells folks to need to vape every several minutes, as opposed to the usual every half to full hour or more for analogs, we need to more fully explore what it is, because it's a pretty alarming behavior that casts a very negative shadow on vaping in general, even to older vapers. Today we have the twen-teen challenging professors with their vaping, tomorrow will we have pre-teens challenging their JrHi teachers? because it's 'legal' according to some kiosk guy?? Again, is this the end result we want? Where do we draw the line? Is it not our responsibility as adults, to wholeheartedly reinforce that vaping a poison more dangerous than rattlesnake venom is an adult activity, perhaps a less-unsafe activity than smoking analogs, but certainly not a carte blanche 'safe' activity? That vaping is an activity that has appropriate times and places to engage in? Or even that vaping is an activity that's much more targeted to those who've tried other means to quit analogs over a period of years, than to those who just want another way to challenge 'the man' or look 'cool'? Which approach is going to get us more widespread public acceptance? just sayin... TTRP | |
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