As we have discussed, Kent, I do not think our aldehyde study did anything of the sort.
If you go to that particular link of my last post, it was about our disagreement on
degree of safety, not on anything particular about the study.
I know you believe this is a done deal and they are safe enough now and should not be scrutinized
And while we disagree on the degree of safety, I never said 'no safety', or that certain aspects of vaping shouldn't be scrutinized - I've done my share of scrutiny in the threads mentioned - dangerous carto, ego types forum, TC forum, and some eliquid threads as well. If I thought it was a 'done deal' I wouldn't have gone past the Janty 510 ecig. :- )
but the FDA doesn't care what you or anyone else believes, they want hard data
I'm not sure that is true. There's a lot of information from the FDA and statements that imply otherwise. I think the some of the FDA funded studies show they want just the opposite - subjective data that can be spun against ecigs rather than hard objective data. I can give you many examples if you wish.
Our study and its implications are getting a bit of media coverage now, and I think sending the right message about this issue (
Vaping Emits Less Formaldehyde than Previously Thought).
I saw that and it's commendable when people understand and have the whole context but when, as we've seen with some of Dr. F studies - where media takes things out of context, the only thing that gets reported is the one case where "the ecig has 15 times the aldehydes of cigarettes".
And while the full context is helpful to many here with those concerns and may alter their choices of how they vape, the larger public without the context or concerns, may continue to smoke or even switch back to smoking. I'm not saying you shouldn't continue your work - only showing how it can be, and has been translated to the larger public through some media that don't care about context, only headlines. If the current election hasn't shown you that, I don't think there's any way for me to really 'convince' you of that being the case. And I'm not saying you should alter your studies or your phrasing of the results - only that media cherry picks. Although perhaps adding that fact into the report as a prophylactic might help. :- )
Burying our heads, or bleating complaints will do very little to counter this well-funded campaign. It is vital that good research be carried out and published to counter it, or that good research be done quicker to preempt the junk.
I don't think anyone here would think I'm burying my head in the sand, although some wish I would. lol... And I don't 'bleat complaints' - I give the best analysis I can on why certain things aren't helpful and suggest how people can help counter ANTZ studies and media articles - even those that give what looks like a 'balanced' view, all the while dragging out
all of the negative talking points against ecigs - that is, if you have the same or similar views, do things I do - email or comment on articles, email representatives, federal, state and local. Respond to CAASA's Call to Actions, and when possible contribute money to those most helpful to our cause.
I've been supporting smoking rights for decades and while I find it 'interesting' of the back and forth of the scientific community on many issues, the main issue for me and for others with similar views - is we have the right to vape and to smoke regardless of any real or imagined harm that it may do to us - it's our choice, no one else's. Esp. scientists and junk scientists where their conclusions may imply or start with "shoulds" and end up as a basis for "forced mandates" of government regulation.