On the contrary I know exactly what I'm asking. Food companies said the same thing. No, you don't need 120ml bottle. A sheet with the order will do.
I think you think you know what you (specifically) are asking for, but don't realize politically what you are calling forth. Let's say whatever you think you are asking for is not aligned with someone else in this thread, then who's right? Is the person who says it doesn't go far enough more right than the person who says "this is all we need and all we ever asked for?"
No, they wouldn't have to keep changing the list, that's the point of providing a list to begin with. You show ALL ingredients like you do with food. As certain chems come to light as potential problems, ppl could peruse their lists of flavor sheets and see if they want to stop vaping any of those...
With food labels it lists chemicals, but not amounts. As I write this, I'm looking at label for Pepsi. I'm sure most reading this post are familiar with ingredients, so I'll just spotlight one, "Citric Acid." Nothing on the label says how much, but that ingredient is listed. So, for eLiquid, it could just read "diacetyl" and then somewhere on site it could claim that it is below safe limits. But would never have to specify the amount according to your rhetoric of it just needs to match food labels.
So, for you that might be all you are asking for and is all you feel "we" need to know. But what if others are like, "this is worthless. We need to know the exact amount or what's the point of the label?"
Then let's say the amount is listed, but there is lack of trust in the people doing the testing (for whatever reason), does this mean it ought to list amount of say 2+ testers on the label? I mean it is possible vapers could say sure they listed the exact amount, but we have no reason to trust the people doing the testing, this label is worthless.
You are the one who claims you make a decision on what you feel ok vaping, and stick to those flavors. How do you make this decision without knowing what's in them? Gut intuition? Good luck with that.
And I'm willing to say you (or anyone on this thread) won't know once labels come into existence. You'll think you might know. But, there are many indications of people likely not knowing. Some examples:
- (mentioned above) people might get info that lists chemicals in their eLiquid, but not the amount
- (mentioned above) people might get amount, but not know if that amount is "safe" at that level
- (mentioned throughout this thread) people might get info that certain chemicals are unsafe, but have nothing to base that on, other than speculation. Like no one reading this knows whether DAP is harmful (or safe) for vaping, and so having it listed as an ingredient, doesn't equal to knowing whether or not the product is more or less safe. As this is essentially what debate on this thread is centered around, no need to elaborate on this point, but is rather key point to realize people don't know / won't know just cause a label has it listed (or not).
- (mentioned above) misinformation about anything within bottle. As noted above, the label could say something like 10 ppm of DA, but according to another tester it's actually 180 ppm.
> But this misinformation thing is worthy of many subpoints, as I'm looking at bottle of Black Pepper eLiquid by me right now. It says 30 ml on it, yet I've learned that isn't accurate (likely a little under that amount). It also say 18 mg Nic (but we all know that might not be accurate). It also lists 60%PG/40%VG, which is plausibly not entirely accurate. So, I might think I know what I have in front of me, but if the info on the label is not accurate, then is it accurate to say that I in fact know?
- then just general lack of understanding about chemicals. Like if label said "butanedione-free" would that lead to everyone reading that to understand that means it contains no diacetyl? I'm thinking very likely not, and instead would lead people to thinking vendor is not being forthright enough to note whether their product includes diacetyl or not.
> And sub-point to this is what
@Dixie1954 was conveying. If vendor lists the umpteen chemicals that go into simple "strawberry flavor" which my Pepsi product gets around by simple stating "natural flavor," then would most people know that the chemicals relate to the flavor or to some other component of the eLiquid?
> And additional sub-point for this is that it is quite plausible (I would say very likely) that every conceivable chemical in eLiquid carries with it a risk. In fact, I'd be surprised if there is ever a chemical (including H2O) that would be added to eLiquid and carry zero risks. Therefore, if person is matching chemical list from eLiquid with known risks of chemicals that might be in eLiquid, arguably all of them would be. Yet, if anything like the overhyped diacetyl issue, they'd possibly inflate the concern, for everything in eLiquid (including water molecules) is not 100% known over the long term as to what the risks are. And thus, this would be another way in which people could claim they know, when in reality, they wouldn't.