Yeah, and with illegal street drugs being the problem, let's make it ALL illegal street drugs. That'll fix the problem. 

And what I have been hearing, it is moms of underage children who are most favorable to vaping bans. So that's primarily who the politicians are pandering to.I guess the question is, who fights the hardest to protect the children. This governor is being proactive, that governor is OK with letting the children go on suffering for another 6 months. The governor who doesn't act now will be attacked by whoever wants to take their job. A two minute talking point for the next election.
It goes all the way to the bottom of the political pile. I forget why, but half our city council seats (3) are being voted on in a special election in a few weeks. One candidate I'll never vote for has already chimed in on the banwagon to save the children. The trolling opportunities on FB have been epic.And what I have been hearing, it is moms of underage children who are most favorable to vaping bans. So that's primarily who the politicians are pandering to.
Came across this on elr.
House panel to take up $10B vaping tax Wednesday
Let's do a quick bit of math:The bipartisan bill, from New York Reps. Tom Suozzi, a Democrat, and Republican Peter T. King, would tax “any nicotine which has been extracted, concentrated or synthesized” at the same rate cigarettes are currently taxed, or the equivalent of $50.33 per 1,810 milligrams of nicotine.
I find this tax rather moot as well because most (if not all) juice makers and nic extractors (for juice makers) will be put out of business by Deeming anyway.Let's do a quick bit of math:
$50.33 / 1,810 = $0.027807 / milligram.
Call it 2.78 cents per milligram.
There are 100,000 milligrams of nic in a liter of 100 mg base.
This means the tax on a liter of nic base would be $2780.
Two Thousand Seven Hundred Eighty Dollars.
Keep calm and and refer back to post #4 of this thread.
Let's do a quick bit of math:
$50.33 / 1,810 = $0.027807 / milligram.
Call it 2.78 cents per milligram.
There are 100,000 milligrams of nic in a liter of 100 mg base.
This means the tax on a liter of nic base would be $2780.
Two Thousand Seven Hundred Eighty Dollars.
Keep calm and and refer back to post #4 of this thread.
Fixed that for you.I find this tax rather moot as well because most (if not all) juice makers and nic extractors (for juice makers) will beput out of businessdriven into the un-taxed, informal economy by Deeming anyway.
Only the ones dependent on US sales. More concerned for diyers that can't afford to stock up in the near future.I find this tax rather moot as well because most (if not all) juice makers and nic extractors (for juice makers) will be put out of business by Deeming anyway.
Anyone have any idea when we will know if this passes? And if so, how long do you think it will be until it is enacted?Came across this on elr.
House panel to take up $10B vaping tax Wednesday
Anyone in Congress can propose a bill to do just about anything. I don't know what percentage of bills end up being passed by both houses and signed into law, but I bet it's 10% or less. In fact, a measure like this has a better chance if it is attached to some major, must-pass piece of legislation rather than as a stand-alone bill. In any case, I wouldn't expect it to become law very quickly.Anyone have any idea when we will know if this passes? And if so, how long do you think it will be until it is enacted?
Anyone in Congress can propose a bill to do just about anything. I don't know what percentage of bills end up being passed by both houses and signed into law, but I bet it's 10% or less. In fact, a measure like this has a better chance if it is attached to some major, must-pass piece of legislation rather than as a stand-alone bill. In any case, I wouldn't expect it to become law very quickly.
Then again, if it does become law, and the States follow suit with their own per-milligram taxes, there will probably be a positive side-effect: A cease-fire in the War on Vaping.
Yeah, I just worry that the current climate might accelerate things and also make it more likely that it passes.Anyone in Congress can propose a bill to do just about anything. I don't know what percentage of bills end up being passed by both houses and signed into law, but I bet it's 10% or less. In fact, a measure like this has a better chance if it is attached to some major, must-pass piece of legislation rather than as a stand-alone bill. In any case, I wouldn't expect it to become law very quickly.
Agreed. It all comes down to the money.Then again, if it does become law, and the States follow suit with their own per-milligram taxes, there will probably be a positive side-effect: A cease-fire in the War on Vaping.
Not really. Pods do have a following and black market juice will be readily available. You don't honestly think the shop owners are going to toss out all their juices do you? I predict private clubs will form in some areas much like they do in dry counties.With the result being the only people who will still be vaping nicotine are those DIY people who stocked up on nicotine beforehand.
So I diy, but assume for a minute that I didn't, to get an idea of what a juice buyer might expect. Tell me if I'm missing a decimal or something, but to get to what effect it would be on someone buying store bought juice, vaping at my levels.Let's do a quick bit of math:
$50.33 / 1,810 = $0.027807 / milligram.
Call it 2.78 cents per milligram.
There are 100,000 milligrams of nic in a liter of 100 mg base.
This means the tax on a liter of nic base would be $2780.
Two Thousand Seven Hundred Eighty Dollars.
Keep calm and and refer back to post #4 of this thread.
This is my fear as well. On top of that the states will get a healthy kickback of those tax $$.Yeah, I just worry that the current climate might accelerate things and also make it more likely that it passes
No worries - I'm sure some respectable, trustworthy suppliers will step up:Fixed that for you.![]()
Seriously, though- I doubt that many legal companies we're familiar with now will be driven to black market. If your business model is legal, it'd be hard to make that decision. I'd think it'd be the ones that are already in the black market that will see an opportunity and step in and fill the void.