I'm not holding my breath until either Obama or Romney makes a policy statement on e-cigarettes. If you want to know how the Republicans and Democrats vote on regulating tobacco products, see the link in post #58.
I'm not holding my breath until either Obama or Romney makes a policy statement on e-cigarettes.
Who voted and which way?
S. 1147 (111th): PACT Act (On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass) -- GovTrack.us
Keep in mind that the PACT act is recent Federal legislation that will have a profound effect on the future of tobacco product sales (including e-cigarettes) in the US. Pact Act passed the house and senate with bipartisan support.
IMO the only way to get a truly qualified candidate would be to draft her or him. I think so far that's Washington and Ford, everybody else asked for the job.
Because they are both politicians, the candidates may appear to be similar; however I see a major difference between the two parties in terms of how they view the role of government and in their history of implementation of government.
One party believes that the government knows best. The government needs to micromanage every aspect of the citizens' lives. Toward this goal, the government needs to enact many more laws, as complex as possible, with reams and reams of regulations to back that up without regard to how much it will cost to enforce those regulations and how much it will cost businesses and individuals to comply with them. This party loves to raise taxes and to spend more money than we take in. Business growth has stagnated under this type of government because the costs of running a business grows exponentially as more and more regulations are imposed.
The other party believes that the government that governs least governs best. In the past, presidents elected from this party have actually rolled back some regulations, Congress has lowered taxes and refrained from imposing laws that would raise costs not only for running the government, but also for running businesses.
I think we all need to open the line of communication with President Obama and show him how vaping has changed our lives
zona wrote:
Except that I've spent about 30 hours per week since 2009 exposing and opposing Obama's policies and programs (and hundreds of false and misleading claims by Obama appointees at FDA, CDC, US SG, DHHS, DOT, branches of military) opposing tobacco harm reduction products and policies. During that time, I've corresponded with hundreds of federal appointees and their bureaucrats on a weekly basis encouraging them to reconsider.
They've responded by trying to ban e-cigarettes, lying about e-cigarettes, lying about dissolvables, and falsely claiming that all tobacco products are as hazardous as cigarettes. Even after losing every step of the way in federal court, the FDA still refuses to correct or clarify any of their many false allegations about e-cigarettes, and instead stated its intent to regulate the products under Chapter IX of the FSPTCA, which could effectively destroy or decimate the e-cigarette industry.
And please remember that Obama's CDC has funded many/most state and local attempts to ban the sale and use of e-cigarettes.
In sum, nobody in America has done more to attempt to ban e-cigarettes and demonize tobacco harm reduction than President Obama's appointees.
Anyone who claims otherwise is either a highly partisan Democrat and/or a naive fool.
For disclosure, I campaigned for Obama in 2008 because I actually believed his folksy good government rhetoric. But his subsequent actions on tobacco policy speak far louder than his speeches.
That pretty much dispels the naive belief many on the forum hold that the republicans will somehow be hands off and leave the e-cig industry alone. My only point was that it might not be a good idea to make false assumptions and cause people to vote against there own interests.
Rather than dispel anything, it 'pretty much' indicates that you
are making a 'false assumption' that the PACT Act says anything
about e-cigs at all.
Have you read it?
It doesn't.
If you're not proposing we should believe that, I guess I'm a little
confused why you think this act offers any insight whatsoever into
how anybody might vote; either for or against e-cigs.
Perhaps you meant to post a different link that actually supports
your point? If so, please post it. I'd like to see it.
Personally, I think it's 'naive' of you to suggest that 'hands
off' is the only rational alternative to the 'total ban' Obama
wants.
There's plenty of ground between those two extremes that
I'd be quite happy with. But that's just me. I wouldn't dare
pretend to know what 'many on the forum' believe; and I
certainly wouldn't pretend to speak for all of them.
I do agree with parts of your point, though: we shouldn't
make false assumptions, and we shouldn't vote against
our own self interests like we did in the 2008 presidential
election.
Before we all toss the Democrats under the bus I think everyone outta at least consider one aspect of the "nanny State" actually benefiting ALL of us health wise.
If it wasn't for ALL the pollution regulations passed by mostly Democrats we would now have a lot more to worry about than cigarette smoke when it comes to our lungs and our health.
I would also remind you that the Republicans may not want to tax us as much as the Democrats but they SURE do a good job at spending money and running up our federal deficits. You don't have to be a CPA to understand what has happened to our federal deficits under Republican rule since the Reagan years.
...
Also, please note that all cosponsors of the two Senate bills in Congress to tax e-cigarettes at the same rate as cigarettes are Democrats....
Will all due respect, in the hyper-partisan Congress of the last 2 years, that really doesn't mean much. It has become a matter of principle among Republicans not to cosponsor any bill put forward by a Democrat, regardless of its merit or lack thereof, either in the House or the Senate. Don't mistake failure to cosponsor a bill with opposition to the contents of the bill. Nowadays, it means nothing of the sort. It's merely partisan gamesmanship. If that bill was sponsored by a Republican, it would likely have plenty of Republican cosponsors.
Look what up? In general, all you have to do is look at the Congressional record to see the all-time record numbers of filibusters and overall mass gridlock in the last do-nothing congress. An agreement was made early on between Republican leaders that nothing, no bill, would be passed. Remember Mitch McConnel's public pronouncement that the overriding goal of congress would be to ensure that Obama would be a one term president?Where can we look this up? I'm a liberal Dem but I hear my state's two nannies are in need of letters on this.
I think it is funny that our form of corruption is more honest than that of my colleagues from other countries. In their country, one bribes city councilmen. In my country, we bribe cities! Now it's at the state level at least: the state needs the tobacco money.
You forgot the 3rd component to "sin taxes". The "sin" being taxed must be a universal and inseperable part of human nature. You can't target a "sin" that can be universally eschewed, lest you risk eliminating the sin and therefore the tax revenue.Also, bear in mind there are two components to "sin taxes." 1. Sinfulness -- it's bad and 2. MUCH MORE IMPORTANT! People desire it enough to pay for it ahead of other spending.
So, for anybody here who is not inherently against "sin taxes" -- promoting things like a 1-cent tax on sugary drinks (because the body only counts calories that are chewed in the homeostasis part of the brain) would probably bring in orders of magnitude more money than taxing ecigs: I wonder if there is info on the relative benefits of quitting smoking vs losing weight? And I'd rather pay an extra 1c on a cola than an extra $50 on an e-kit.
I blew my quotes. I wanted to look up the Senate cosponsors that Bill Godshall was talking about.Look what up? In general, all you have to do is look at the Congressional record to see the all-time record numbers of filibusters and overall mass gridlock in the last do-nothing congress.
Sugar* is more-inherent in human nature than alcohol, in fact a lot of acoholics have some genes for hypoglycemia and may be partly going after the carbs. But if 1c would cause soft drinks to be universally eschewed, how come machines can sell them for more than stores charge?You forgot the 3rd component to "sin taxes". The "sin" being taxed must be a universal and inseperable part of human nature. You can't target a "sin" that can be universally eschewed, lest you risk eliminating the sin and therefore the tax revenue.