I wasn't around then but I'd imagine it might have had something to do with mentioning an illegal act (which technically it is). My son was of age when he started vaping, just poor, and I was happy to help him switch from cigarettes.
Personally, I don't find issue with what private parents do in their own home, including "illegal acts" that aren't actually so terrible. I once read a study that stated most Americans commit a felony a day. Given that here, going over 20 miles over the speed limit is a "felony" well I imagine they aren't all egregious felonies, like child abuse and whatnot.
But, felonious behavior seems to be a fact, for many people. It's different than posting about it on an online forum, however.
I kind of like to imagine, when I'm having a bad day, that there is some nice, wonderful church group around who is... "Saving all their felonies up... for me to use."
I'm kidding, mostly. I might well have got my kid vaping were he 17, rather than 18, but fortunately I didn't have to make that choice.
My personal theory is, whether it's allowing a kid to try their first glass of wine (something so totally normal in Europe) at whatever age, that kind of stuff, is ultimately LESS damaging to children than pretending everything is "fine" as the kid skulks off and does illegal stuff with their friends because it is "exciting" and "whatever" it is.
So, glorifying vaping AND trying to enforce children away from tobacco products or vaping products does little good, in my eyes.
With that said, as vapers, we should comply, generally, with the laws as they stand, even if we disagree with them and etc., but it's hard at times.
I still care a lot less about who is "juuling" vs. who is "going to school with a gun packed and loaded for destruction."
And no, I don't think vape bans OR gun bans will solve the issue, either.
Anna