Wow this blew up...thanks everyone for your replies...i will try to read them all, but its gonna take a minute, I'm only on page 3 lol
there's no way in hell they're going to make a safer alternative to what we're currently vaping.
Practically speaking, I think BT is barking up the wrong tree.
They're obviously focusing on the cig-a-like form factor. Small, underpowered batteries, coupled with non-refillable cartridges. I know these devices have some appeal, but they're just not powerful enough for most of us.
My wife knows someone at Altria, and according to him, they're hard at work in search of THE "perfect" flavor. As if! Even if they came up with a great vape, I'd still get bored of it after a day or two. Blu has a whopping seven (7) flavors available.
Regardless of ethics, which is everyone's personal decision, I think BT is missing the boat here. But I won't tell them if you won't.
Researchers Michael Rabinoff, DO, PhD, Nicholas Caskey, PhD, Anthony Rissling, MA, and Candice Park, BS reviewed publicly available tobacco industry documents, the list of 599 additives and other sources, finding that more than 100 of them have qualities that may either enhance addiction or mask the negative effects of cigarettes.
For instance, some cigarette additives:
can dilate the airways, allowing the smoker to inhale more deeply. This increases nicotine exposure and can deposit higher levels of tar in the lungs. Cocoa is an additive known to do this.
have addictive potential of their own or synergistically with nicotine.
slow the metabolism of nicotine, thereby increasing the smoker's exposure to it.
have anesthetic properties that decrease the harshness of tobacco smoke on the throat.
mask the smell, visibility and irritation of environmental tobacco smoke.
may disguise warning symptoms of illnesses associated with cigarette smoking.
They (BT) did everything they could to make it as addictive as possible; they did everything they could to make it as attractive as possible; they denied the facts as long as possible; even after the dangers and the addictiveness became common knowledge and they had to label the packages and pay out the settlement money, they're still making the highly addictive product, a jillion brands marketed to specific groups in some cases, i.e. women, and they are still as readily available as milk....Why would you trust them to make a safe, non-addictive ecigarette/ejuice???
"Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me."
Practically speaking, I think BT is barking up the wrong tree.
They're obviously focusing on the cig-a-like form factor. Small, underpowered batteries, coupled with non-refillable cartridges. I know these devices have some appeal, but they're just not powerful enough for most of us.
My wife knows someone at Altria, and according to him, they're hard at work in search of THE "perfect" flavor. As if! Even if they came up with a great vape, I'd still get bored of it after a day or two. Blu has a whopping seven (7) flavors available.
Regardless of ethics, which is everyone's personal decision, I think BT is missing the boat here. But I won't tell them if you won't.
KODIAK;12778035 said:On ethical grounds? Why not? They never twisted my arm to use their products. I knew perfectly well how bad they were.
If they only had the same four ingredients and high quality, yes I would! They would see what products sells better and we would get more advertising.
I don't think there's a whole lot of smokers left (present or former) who can honestly say that they didn't know smoking was addictive and bad for them when they started. I certainly did, and that makes ME responsible for any harm that 36 years of smoking may have caused me.
I don't have an opinion one way or the other. I'd just as likely support the big companies in their efforts as I would the smaller ones.
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KODIAK;12779315 said:No... I'm not buying that. Regardless of whether I got addicted unknowingly, it's still *my* responsibility to do something about it once I have all the facts. I (and millions of others) simply chose not to.
Because your elected officials "cut a deal" with them. (i.e., Big Tobacoo bought their right to keep killing us) So who really cares about you? (That's rhetorical... nobody cares about you except "you" in these matters).
People who choose to do things they know are bad for them are simply victims of their own stupidity. I was, as was every other former smoker who started within the past 40 years...
The utter lack of responsibility for ones' own actions is why we are becoming a nanny state...
I would have no problem buying liquid from them. I'm a libertarian and free market system proponent. If they can make a good product at a good price why not? I knew how bad smoking was when I started and they didn't force me to buy it, light it and smoke it; all they did was provide it. They provided it because there is a demand for it. Now I am in demand for e-liquid a good liquid at a good price if they can provide I'll give them my money. It's an American company with American worker and American worker families benefiting from my money also. Being a separatist benefits no one including myself.
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I'm puzzled at this entire thread.
BT is already in the vaping industry, quite heavily.
Who do you think has popularized vaping?
* Lorillard owns Blu E-cigs, which pushed its way to the #1 best selling ecig on the market, thanks to spiffy marketing. They also own cigarette brands Newport, Kent, True, Maverick and Old Gold.
* R.J. Reynolds owns Vuse E-cigs, which are battling it out with Blu for the #1 spot. R.J. Reynolds owns cigarette brands Camel, Kool, Winston, Salem, Doral, Eclipse, Pall Mall, Barclay, Belair, Capri, Carlton, GPC, Lucky Strike, Misty, Monarch, More, Now, Tareyton, Vantage, and Viceroy.
* Altria Group owns MarkTen E-cigs and recently bought Green Smoke Vapor. Altria was the slowest to enter the market, but it's gaining steam. Altria Group owns cigarette brands Basic, Benson & Hedges, Bond Street, Cambridge, Chesterfield, L&M, Marlboro, Merit, Next, Papastratos, Parliament, SG, Português, Ritz, Águia, Tabaqueira, Detroit, Kentucky, and Sampoerna.
Big Tobacco Begins its Takeover of the E-Cigarette Market - Corporate Intelligence - WSJ
All 3 of these BT companies are taking business from 'clean' vape companies that have never sold a cigarette, such as NJOY, Logic, Fin and Mistic, and leaving them in the dust. Considering a large percentage of current vapers switched initially to one of these brands, like Blu, I find the notion of condemning vapers who choose to use BT vaping products to be hypocritical.
How many of you have used or tried a Blu or a Vuse, and did so without the knowledge that those companies are owned by BT? Did you die when you vaped it? Did you feel you were addicted to that specific brand and just couldn't go on living without it?
No? Hmm...
It's fine to love vaping and take a stance against smoking. But when you take on a holier-than-thou attitude, especially against another vaper, you become no better than an ANTZ.
That's my issue with the boogeyman term "big". Yes, I shop a Lowes and WalMart. I also shop frequently at local stores for different things. When people start slinging terms like "ethical" around, they are treading into territory they have no business being in. As in, suggesting that I am unethical if I buy something from so called "big" tobacco? Bite me. I am an adult who earns my own money, and I will determine where I spend it, and what I will spend it on.
I am not a cranky person; really I'm not, but this kind of garbage has become so ingrained in our society it is beginning to make me ill. I don't like group mentality, I never have. I am an individual who is capable of making my own judgements about what is and what is not ethical and base my decisions upon that. You wanna brew your own juice? Fine with me. You wanna shop at nothing but local botique shops? Knock yourself out. My ethics are my business, and suggesting otherwise is starting down a path that has been tread upon before. It doesn't lead to anywhere good.
The "Big Tobacco" meme is part of the ANTZ propaganda, and part of the long-term strategy to denormalize smoking. If cigarettes can be seen as some kind of alien influence, then all the better for them.
If there's profit in it, BT will make a safer product- they have no particular need to kill customers. But it's a business and they have an ethical obligation to their stockholders to make profit, not to be moralistic about what people choose to smoke, vape, or injest... especially when that product is 100 percent legal. If you want to blame somebody, blame the government that has no moral resolve, because they are the ones that basically set the ground rules that BT plays under. The government gets to hypocritically play both sides- verbally abusing tobacco companies and smokers (and soon vapers), but at the same time profiting from the sale of cigarettes.
I don't think cig-a-likes are dead, and I think its smart for tobacco companies to focus on them because that helps lure in current smokers more than handing them something that looks like a flashlight. Cig-a-likes won't appeal to hobbyist, "sport vapers", but they work for many people. Let's remember that the e-cigarette took off around the wold in the cig-a-like or pen-style form factor.
Yep; what got me curious about vaping late last year were all the articles in the press that were lamenting the fact that the FDA had not yet done it's job by regulating e-cigs, so I figured I should check it out before the government ruined it.Had it not been for the campaign against vaping, I never would have discovered the truths. The way the "health" groups attack smokeless products, THR products, filters, etc, just nauseates me. It is they, the "health experts and anti-anybody" whom I don't trust.
Practically speaking, I think BT is barking up the wrong tree.
They're obviously focusing on the cig-a-like form factor. Small, underpowered batteries, coupled with non-refillable cartridges. I know these devices have some appeal, but they're just not powerful enough for most of us.
My wife knows someone at Altria, and according to him, they're hard at work in search of THE "perfect" flavor. As if! Even if they came up with a great vape, I'd still get bored of it after a day or two. Blu has a whopping seven (7) flavors available.
Regardless of ethics, which is everyone's personal decision, I think BT is missing the boat here. But I won't tell them if you won't.
I'm rethinking my previous position. Maybe if BT were to offer coupons with their vapes I could get a new wrist watch?