Opinion: FDA vaping rule is ridiculous
....perhaps it’s the FDA that should come with a warning label, not e-cigarettes.
....perhaps it’s the FDA that should come with a warning label, not e-cigarettes.
....perhaps it’s the FDA that should come with a warning label, not e-cigarettes.
tobacco kills more people than world wars. If there were no excise taxes on tobacco everybody would love ecigs and the inventor would get the Nobel prize in Medicine.Opinion: FDA vaping rule is ridiculous
....perhaps it’s the FDA that should come with a warning label, not e-cigarettes.
No, tobacco does not kill more people then world wars, but inhaling smoke from burning tobacco does shorten a lot of peoples lives. Smokeless tobacco has vanishingly low risk comparable to vaping, and I am staying away from pipe and cigar smokers as I have no issues with it. By making a generalized statement about tobacco you are pushing the same lies that got us into this mess.tobacco kills more people than world wars. If there were no excise taxes on tobacco everybody would love ecigs and the inventor would get the Nobel prize in Medicine.
I'll grant you pretty much all your points. FDA doesn't protect us from snake oil they just make it much more expensive. Nicotine gum and patches are approved because they don't work. That makes them snake oil. Electronic cigarettes won't be approved because they do work. The taxes nationally and globally, are just too important.No, tobacco does not kill more people then world wars, but inhaling smoke from burning tobacco does shorten a lot of peoples lives. Smokeless tobacco has vanishingly low risk comparable to vaping, and I am staying away from pipe and cigar smokers as I have no issues with it. By making a generalized statement about tobacco you are pushing the same lies that got us into this mess.
The lies we are hearing about vaping are simply an extensions of the lies we have all been fed about smokeless tobacco (and I probably should add second hand smoke). The tobacco control industry got plenty of practice lying and deceiving the public in past decades.
Additional questions would be "How many people have died because of the snus ban in the EU?" Looking at the data out of Sweden the answer is in the millions, and likely ten's of millions.
How many people have died because of the false warning labels on cans of smokeless tobacco in the US, and the lies that have come out of the tobacco control industry and government agencies on the relative risk compared to inhaling smoke? The answer is a lot.
There is nothing new going on with this. I have some faith that this one will fail, largely because of overreach by the FDA. But I could be wrong.
I could argue a lot of the points you have made. Nicotine gum and patches do work, just not as intended. At least 50% of the use of NRT's is off label. Smokers use then in places they can't smoke. The FDA all but admitted this when they allowed the change in the usage instructions a few years ago.I'll grant you pretty much all your points. FDA doesn't protect us from snake oil they just make it much more expensive. Nicotine gum and patches are approved because they don't work. That makes them snake oil. Electronic cigarettes won't be approved because they do work. The taxes nationally and globally, are just too important.
There are influences then there are controlling influences. Yes, there are many influences. Money is the controlling one. Imagine the Supreme Courts strikes down all discriminatory taxes on tobacco (just for the sake of argument). Suddenly governments' tobacco gravey train is gone. Then everybody would get serious about severely marginalizing or eliminating tobacco and I'm sure we would figure out how to do it. The people getting tobacco money will work at least as hard to protect their money as many of us will to protect our lives.It is popular to say it is all about the money, but I have some doubts about that. Money plays a part, but it is not the whole story.
I could argue a lot of the points you have made. Nicotine gum and patches do work, just not as intended. At least 50% of the use of NRT's is off label. Smokers use then in places they can't smoke. The FDA all but admitted this when they allowed the change in the usage instructions a few years ago.
I listened to the FDA meetings when the issue of changing the instruction labeling for NRT's where being discussed. The FDA actually supported harm reduction as they admitted that as long as people where using NRT's, even off label, it could very well lead to complete cessation of cigarettes long term. It was one short moment of enlightenment by the FDA, never to be seen or heard from again.This is one thing the FDA/CDC found out from follow-up surveys. "Oh, I only use them where I can't smoke". And it is one of the 'arguments' they used against vaping early on. "They only use ecigs where they can't smoke" - hence the focus on 'dual users'. (this is not to say there aren't dual users, there are, just that the argument was used to diminish the actual continued use of ecigs early on. )
I listened to the FDA meetings when the issue of changing the instruction labeling for NRT's where being discussed. The FDA actually supported harm reduction as they admitted that as long as people where using NRT's, even off label, it could very well lead to complete cessation of cigarettes long term. It was one short moment of enlightenment by the FDA, never to be seen or heard from again.