Is it to late? It won't let me submit!!
I would have done it...I kept mine short (589 characters) because big blocks of text rarely get read.
Sadly, I felt it in my best interest to delete my favorite line: "Please do not make me choose between going back to smoking or becoming a criminal because regulations will make my only alternative illegal." (Alerting the powers-that-be that you're going to be a rebel is never a good idea.)
Did ECF send out a mass email?Comment sent in, thanks for the email I would have definitely missed it.
Regarding your earlier post that being a "tobacco product" was a quick fix shortcut and we should have fought harder for a different designation, that was not possible. This was determined via a lawsuit and a judge's opinion. The FDA was arguing that e-cigarettes were drug treatments and must be banned until they could be proven "safe and effective" as a way to nicotine abstinence, the same as approved NRT products are required. At the time of this case, the FDA regulated nicotine in only 2 ways - as drug treatments or tobacco products. The e-cig companies only had those two choices to choose from and of the two, e-cigarettes which allow for the recreational use of tobacco-sourced nicotine are much more like smoke-free tobacco for "intended use" than NRT. There is no category for "used like tobacco leaf product but contains no tobacco leaves" and at the time of this trial, no company had the time, money or influence to get Congress to create such a category before the judge made his ruling. Now that the FSPTCA has passed, there is the possibility of products being categorized as "modified risk," which most e-cigs would be able to apply if the FDA hadn't made it impossible to qualify.
Hope that clears some things up for people!![]()
Edited to add: Bear in mind that there are smoke-free tobacco products which are just as safe as e-cigarettes are believed to be. In fact, it's the plethora of studies showing the safety of Swedish snus that help support the likely safety of e-cigarettes. Given this fact, it's irrational to be defensive over classification as a "tobacco product."