They cant do it before the tax laws are on the books for the State. New tax laws are not retroactive.They can't do that UNTIL it's deemed tobacco on the 8th right? Anything bought before that can't be taxed?
They cant do it before the tax laws are on the books for the State. New tax laws are not retroactive.They can't do that UNTIL it's deemed tobacco on the 8th right? Anything bought before that can't be taxed?
The affect of a defacto ban will turn many vapers into quasi dealers as they help their friends by mixing juice for them, for example. That leads into a slippery slope of quasi commercial ventures. I could compare this to things we can't discuss here so I won't go there. But it's a good analogy.
I don't know about harm reduction but in my estimation the 95% figure is pretty accurate as it pertains to one thing:I only included the accidents so as not to make it 100%, because certainty makes people nervous.
The only thing more worrisome than a curious kid is an incurious kid.I was a curious and precocious child. I started smoking at 13, just before I moved to a new town and a new school, so you can't say it was peer pressure. I'm sure it was stress. I was also "gifted," so they made me skip a grade. That was a very bad plan. A 13-year-old freshman in high school doesn't fit in with older kids. A year ahead in maturity can make a big difference. However, like attracts like, so I met up with a few other stressed out teens who didn't fit in. Long story long, we never had trouble getting anything: cigarettes, booze and well, you know.
This was in the '70s, but I doubt very much has changed, except kids aren't as interested. Remember, there were no computers, hardly anyone had their own phone (which, of course, was a landline), parents didn't want to drive us anywhere and on my side of the town there was no bus service. We didn't even have a movie theater close by. There wasn't a whole lot to do, but test the boundaries of reality.
Kids have more ways to spend their time now. Computers, smartphones, social media, youtube, music on demand, video games, Netflix, etc. they don't have as much time to kill - and yet, people who try stuff, try stuff. There's no way around it, no matter how many warnings are in the media, what they hear in school or what their parents say. How else can one explain kids doing whatever they do with bubble bath and whippets?
or kids that don't know what capture the flag or a whiffle ball is...hey that's my kids!The only thing more worrisome than a curious kid is an incurious kid.
I remember MaryAnne.I fear for the generations who have no idea of who Gilligan is![]()
20% of 12th graders have "been drunk" in the last 30 days vs 16% that vaped. Of that 16%, 65% only vaped flavors - no nicotine.
I remember MaryAnne.
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Ok, so is the truck now a "tobacco product" too?
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When I was in the 4th grade, I used to literally run home from school during Raquel Welch week to catch her movies @ 4PM. I was to young to know why what happened to me every time I saw her, I just knew I liked it.I remember MaryAnne.
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MmmmmaryAnneI remember MaryAnne.
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When I was in the 4th grade, I used to literally run home from school during Raquel Welch week to catch her movies @ 4PM. I was to young to know why what happened to me every time I saw her, I just knew I liked it.
wow...that "4th grade thing" just happened
Same here. I also remember the names of all the actors on Leave it to Beaver, including Frank Bank as "Lumpy".I remember Dobie Gillis.But I watched the reruns
No kidding. The Reuters guy is just paraphrasing press releases, but who knows, maybe he'll want to write a breakout article.