I have no doubt they are doing just that.
At this point, they have an opportunity to destroy the competition.
And then step in to the void when ready.
That is sound business principles.
If that's what they're really doing, then they will never get a dime from me when they do step into the void.
I feel the same thing and think if a bigwig tobacco company made ecigs, they'd be on the market in no time. My main concern would be if they started adding chemicals into the juice that helped increase the addiction as they do with analogs, though I see some of that changing now that they will be required to list ingredients.
I agree totally on the chemical additions. That's why I'm glad this forum (and lots of others as well, I'm sure) give instructions for making your own.
If ecigs become black market, then that's where I go. After 35 years of a 2 pack a day habit of Camel Lights, these have been a life saver for me and I won't go back!
I'm with you, and wouldn't hesitate to go to the black market. That's something I'd like to see thoroughly studied and announced. A lot of these anti-ban presentations make a lot of references to what percentage of people would return to analogs if e-cigs were banned, but I haven't seen very many of them mention statistics on how many of us would simply keep using and getting them despite the law. I think this is very important, because if the government (and/or the tobacco industry) want us to return to analogs and they receive validation that we will do so from the very people who are trying to reason with them, then the reasoning not only won't work, but will fuel their position.
I also remember reading in the FDA appeal that they mentioned new NRT's that they're working on....there's another conflict since that adds more into Big Pharma's power train.
As far as I'm concerned, they can keep coming out with those until they're blue in the face, because those will never compare to what the e-cig provides - a real alternative. One of the biggest hindrances to quitting smoking is that we really, really,
really enjoy the entire process of smoking - the taste, the feel, the act of smoking itself (with all of the various ways we "play" with them as we use them). If all of those behaviors aren't addressed by an NRT, then failure is pretty much a guarantee right out of the starting gate.
All these years I said over and over that if someone would just come up with something that's just like a cigarette without all of the dangers of smoking, I'd switch to it in a heartbeat. Well, here they are, and I am
so grateful to whoever the genius was who thought of them, and to all of the people who have made sure the word about them got out. This is literally a dream come true.
I had my first cigarette at age 8 with a neighbor. The guy in the little store down the road sold them to us when we were about 11. We could buy beer at 16, even wine.
No one cared about what was going on then, and the government still got their money from us kids. Guess I should be entitled to a refund!
I'm sorry to hear that! I wasn't quite so young. I was in basic training in the military, and back then only smokers were given breaks throughout the day. I initially went out pretending to be a smoker, but the tech sergeant in charge pointed out that he'd be watching, and that he could tell the difference between smoke that was inhaled and smoke that was just taken into the mouth, so I learned how to smoke...
We all want quality control to ensure that we are getting the liquid and carts that contain the right ingredients that help make ecigs a safer alternative, and it would be great, but unless the government can profit from it, they will push to ban it like many other inventions that could really improve our world.
They can profit from it, but they'll need to learn to do so legitimately since we already have legitimate sources for these things, and unless they offer at least the same quality of products/service, we will have no reason to patronize their ventures.
The invention of ecigs is pure genuis, and a technology that should be embraced and perfected, not banned imho.
Agreed! And with all the passionate support there is for them, banning them is doomed to failure. Even if they become illegal, they'll still exist, and bans will simply make us all the more determined to keep them.
