I thought ECITA had bellied up.... now I face another confusion.
The ECITA is the e-cig trade group in Europe. The ECA is the U.S. group that went "belly up."
I thought ECITA had bellied up.... now I face another confusion.
If all of this is true, which seems somewhat clear at this point, then we might want to start fighting them as well.I think that, in the beginning, the noise they make will be advantageous. Later on they will not be of much help to trade or community, in fact the opposite seems likely. A 'trade' group of carto-only vendors, with a board no one else can get on, only has one agenda.
I just had a very strange thought. Since electronic cigarettes will at some point be regulated as tobacco products, what about some of the e-cigarette vendors approaching the Tobacco Retailer's Association to see if that goup would be willing to take on e-cigarettes as a sub-group. One of the biggest barriers to vendors staring a Trade Association is lack of experience and knowledge about trade assocations. The TRA has been around the block many times and already does advocacy work to protect the market for smokeless tobacco, does it not?
RPG publishers. Had to google that one- role playing game publishers for those among us who are uninitiated. I didn't think you were publishing about rocket propelled grenades, homeland security may have been interested. You can tell I've had military in my background.
I just had a very strange thought. Since electronic cigarettes will at some point be regulated as tobacco products, what about some of the e-cigarette vendors approaching the Tobacco Retailer's Association to see if that goup would be willing to take on e-cigarettes as a sub-group. One of the biggest barriers to vendors staring a Trade Association is lack of experience and knowledge about trade assocations. The TRA has been around the block many times and already does advocacy work to protect the market for smokeless tobacco, does it not?
I dunno . . . we've always been able to argue we're not "Big Tobacco," and I wonder if throwing in with a Tobacco Trade Association would dilute that claim a bit.
Personally, I'm hopeful that ECITA will make the decision to expand into the U.S. What they've been doing in Europe is pretty amazing.
Meh. Why should we be afraid of tobacco? Tobacco is no more evil than cacao, coffee, tea or any other plant in that it can be used to create a variety of products with various hazards and benefits associated with their use. Big Pharma wants people to believe that Tobacco companies are somehow more motivated by profit and greed than other companies whose products are regulated by the FDA. Think about it, if drugs or tobacco products cause people to get sick or die, who benefits more: tobacco companies or pharmaceutical companies??
The disinformation and denormalization of tobacco is so ubiquitous that we seem to have a paralyzing fear of guilt by association. <--Is that the kind of sentence that we really want used to describe our society??
The known carcinogens in Tobacco can only account for 2% of the cancer attributed to smoking--the other 393,000 estimated annual deaths and 8.6 million people with chronic illnesses are specifically associated with the hazards and byproducts of combustion from smoking. Tobacco companies are trying to offer products that don't have any of the dangers of smoking but the Pharmaceutical companies selling 98% ineffective drugs are trying to ban them so people who are dependent on nicotine but do not want to smoke will have no option but the drug or black market. Who are the "bad guys" again???
As you well know, Thad, you are preaching to the choir on this one. Tobacco is not inherently evil nor particularly dangerous in and of itself.
But we've been successfully arguing that we have no ties to organized tobacco, and I'm wondering whether our vendors would be better served by, at least for now, not getting into a traditional tobacco trade association.
Yes, I do know that the only reason you mentioned it was for strategic purposes, but I was just making the point that allowing the fear of guilt by association to determine our strategy only perpetuates the myth.
The Tobacco Trade Association might not be the ideal reps for the industry, but in my mind these vendors better find some association to support them or in short order they'll be on the outside looking in.
I dunno . . . we've always been able to argue we're not "Big Tobacco," and I wonder if throwing in with a Tobacco Trade Association would dilute that claim a bit.