Reduced harm would apply to tofu in your scenario if tofu was also considered harmful.
"Reduced harm" means that the product is similar to the dangerous product, may carry it's own risks, yet the risks are considerably less than the product it's intended to replace.
All foods that contain fat come with at least a small amount of risk.
The point I was making is that nicotine is not considered harmful, and so far, I can't find any proof that PG and food flavorings used in e-cigs are harmful if ingested.
It's the other junk in cigarettes that have been proven to be deadly, not the nicotine. Nicotine in cigarettes is legal to use. So is the nicotine in e-cigs.
So why would there be a need to define nicotine as a "new drug".
If you're saying the combination of nicotine, PG, and food flavorings make it a new drug substance, then so what? We simply mix our own liquids. Regardless of the bans, nicotine would remain legal to use. Double flavored 0-nic liquid would also be legal to purchase. The FDA doesn't come into my house and check if I'm mixing my own cocktails with the correct amounts of alcohol.
As far as the hardware is concerned... I have no worries the hardware will still be available for as long as there are vapers desiring to purchase and use them (I covered that in several other posts).
Your opinion is wrong about mailing ecigs. Sorry. Read the PACT Act. It only applies to specific tobacco products and ecigs are NOT on the list. It would take an act of congress to get them added.
We'll see how long that lasts. I am simply not that naive. The PACT Act was written while e-cigs were NOT clearly defined. A rewrite will be inevitably discussed (if not immediately) once the courts label e-cigs with the shiney new tag; "tobacco product".
I can't understand how anyone would think this isn't a possibility.
Have you read ANYTHING about this topic?
Yes.
The FDA WANTS it to be classified as a drug, effectively BANNING it immediately. Then it'll take years and millions of dollars to get it approved.
Nicotine is legal. So we all become mixers during the next phase. You can still buy PG, food flavorings, and nicotine. They are all legal. So are all of the remaining components. The only true threat to the market is the sale of full "kits". At worst, this is just an inconvenience.
So we take a small step back. At least we still get our flavors and hardware in almost the same fashion we do now.
As a tobacco product, it will at least stay available for us to use, it'll take a couple of years for the FDA to get standards established and give us time to prove it's reduced harm value.
We've already had time. And what's come of it so far? Conceding that it should be called a tobacco product? That's our reply? That is a giant leap in the wrong direction. That loses us a lot of ground, some of which we'll never get back. Junk science and baseless myths about e-cigs seem to be the rules of thought today. That will NOT change once e-cigs are recognized as tobacco products. It will get far worse.
Letting the FDA call the nicotine in our e-cigs a drug doesn't get them much to work with in the long run. It's already a recognized drug in several OTC products.
Thousands of people have already been ground testing this "new drug" for years. It's already progressed far beyond the initial testing phase and far more positive pressure can be applied from users and concerned family members for this "new drug" since we aren't seeing people keel over from its use. The exact opposite is true.
And, as I've stated before, there are many options left for companies (and all of us) to exploit in any proposed attempts at banning e-cigs.
Taxes are NOTHING. I've made this point several times:
A cigarette is 35 cents. A nicotine inhaler cartridge is $1.05.
Even with the taxes, ecigs will be CHEAPER AS TOBACCO PRODUCTS than if they get in the hands of the drug companies!!
Taxes on cigarettes is about 70-90 percent (depending on where you live). An equivolent tax would be hard to miss and not likely to be called "nothing" by most people.
And, once taxed... the taxes can only get higher.
Non-smokers don't care how much "tobacco products" are taxed. You won't find any sympathy from these people.
EDITED to add: Sorry, Thad, I missed your post before posting this. You already covered everything!
All I see is a lose/lose for vapers by labeling e-cigs as tobacco products.
I hold no animosity toward you or others that believe "tobacco product" is the right way to go. I just don't agree with you.