I'm disappointed in both of you.
If you can't see how corporate lobbying is stifling innovation, I'm not sure it could be explained to you.
Guns and e-cigs are completely different; guns have been around for well over 100 years; everyone knows what they are.
E-cigs are a great technological piece of progress, but not well known, at all, and they have to contend with Big Pharma and Big tobacco, who have a lot more resources, to try to stop them, not because it's right, but because they want the market for themselves.
But if you want to cling to those conservative ideas, then by all means, "Please proceed". I get the argument that "some people are just not ready for change, and it's morally wrong to push it on them against their will".
If you can't see how corporate lobbying is stifling innovation, I'm not sure it could be explained to you.
Guns and e-cigs are completely different; guns have been around for well over 100 years; everyone knows what they are.
E-cigs are a great technological piece of progress, but not well known, at all, and they have to contend with Big Pharma and Big tobacco, who have a lot more resources, to try to stop them, not because it's right, but because they want the market for themselves.
But if you want to cling to those conservative ideas, then by all means, "Please proceed". I get the argument that "some people are just not ready for change, and it's morally wrong to push it on them against their will".
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