Precisely. There's not the first bit of "shooting others down" in my post. What there is, is a frustration with those who seem to think there's something "bad" about being addicted to something. It really depends on the "something" they're addicted to, and even then, it's not that they're "bad" but that they have a medical condition requiring treatment -- and nicotine is very definitely NOT in that category. I've suffered, and recovered from, a few of those other addictions, and I do know the difference.
There is also a vast difference between individuals -- my husband is one of those infuriating people who can lay anything down, cold-turkey, and go right on with his life like, hey, it's no big deal; I'm definitely not one of those, but I know that addictions *can* be overcome, if the individual WANTS to overcome them -- and that wanting is crucial -- not many, if any, have overcome addictions because someone else thought they ought to -- it just doesn't work like that. Which speaks to the "nicotine addiction" quite clearly: if someone wants to overcome their nicotine addiction, then e-cigs make it much easier than any other method, but if they don't want to, what we know now is that nicotine, divorced from the toxins in cigarette smoke, isn't terribly harmful -- at least, no more so than caffeine.
Certainly, there are those who, for their own reasons, may want to eliminate or drastically lessen their caffeine addiction -- I was one of them, at one point, and now I consume very little caffeine at all -- 2 cups of tea in the morning, and very occasionally, a soda -- loves me some Dr Pepper, but I can't handle a steady diet of the good Dr or it completely wires me. A lot of folks here seem to, eventually, take the same approach to nicotine -- they may reduce it till they're down to 0mg or 2 or 3 mg, but they keep a little stronger formulation around, for stressful times. Is that addiction? Some say it is; I say it's really just "dependance" which actually isn't all that strong, or they'd want that stronger formulation all the time -- I used to NEED that caffeine in coffee around the clock, but I don't any longer.
The point I'm trying (and trying, and trying, and trying) to make is that having an addiction to nicotine does not make anyone a junkie or a bad person -- it usually indicates a person who is a former smoker, who is trying to be healthier by not smoking any longer, but who now has this perhaps-permanent change in their brain's chemistry that makes them want nicotine, in greater or lesser amounts, depending on the circumstances. It's NOT a character defect.
Andria