someone likes obama? i just assumed everyone hated him less then Romney lol.
I don't like any of them. They are all 'tics' (blood sucking creatures).
someone likes obama? i just assumed everyone hated him less then Romney lol.
Don't count out the financial aspect. Taxation makes much more sense in these trying economic times. Plus whether you like them or not, BLU and BT now have a say in the issue. Whether this is good or bad for the rest of the industry only time will tell.
There is one reason for resistance to ecigs and one reason alone: lots of people make vast fortunes from smoking. It's as simple as that. Health issues are irrelevant - they are not taken into account and never will be. I don't know how the numbers run in the US but in the UK it's all on such a small scale, and data capture is efficient enough, that you can easily see where the money is going:
The 2012/2013 UK tobacco market (total sales of cigarettes and tobacco) is expected to be £14bn.
The tobacco industry gets £2bn.
The government gets £12bn, the tax proportion of the sale price.
This makes government an 86% stakeholder in tobacco sales, just by main street sales revenue alone.
There's more to add though: the savings to government resulting from cigarette sales are estimated as a minimum of £10bn per annum, as smokers are said to die 8 years younger on average, so that the government saves 8 years of pensions at end of life; plus all other social support costs and healthcare etc (healthcare is free to all in the UK and costs a very large amount of money). So, make that a total £22bn gain for government.
However they have to pay out for the cost of treating sick and dying smokers, which is £3bn annually through the NHS (national health service). Net gain is therefore £19bn.
This makes government a 90% stakeholder in tobacco sales: their take is so large that essentially you buy your cigarettes from the government. Government is a 9 to 1 partner in tobacco.
The pharmaceutical industry earns £1.5bn per annum from the NHS for the treatment of sick smokers (half the cost of treatment is the drug costs).
Add in: at least £100m through the private healthcare system.
Add in: the increment in all drug sales due to smokers being less healthy and needing more of any/all drugs (such as diabetes drugs), which are not factored in to NHS's declared cost of treating smokers - let's conservatively say £250m.
Add in: 50% of the cost of the cost of NHS SSS (stop smoking services) for the drugs used, which must also be added: £100m a year.
Add in: retail sales of OTC meds that individuals buy because they are smokers; maybe £100m although that is probably low (this is the OTC market for NRTs, chest meds etc).
So pharma makes £2.05bn per annum from smoking in the UK - equal to or more than the tobacco industry earns. Pharma is a 50-50 partner with the tobacco industry on straight sales earnings from smoking.
Pharma can't publish diatribes against commercial competitors especially when those rivals look as if they are doing a better, cheaper job. Instead they buy medics, researchers and academics to publish the lies and propaganda they need promulgating, and which gives the disinformation an air of respectability and credibility. It's only the ramblings of pharma pimps but the media lap it up anyway. These sockpuppets earn a fortune and don't want to see the gravy train come to an end.
Check out virtually any [country name goes here][body part goes here] 'association' and see where their funding comes from: pharma pays the staff, and pays them well. They work to pharma's agenda - and in the smoking-related field that means against public health, if they are publishing propaganda designed to work against ecigs and Snus for example.
A measurable number of government jobs depend entirely on smoking. These jobs range from Dept of Health positions through to tax revenue collection. Included in there are various regulators. It should be fairly obvious that no government employee is going to enact regulations or otherwise work toward removing their own job; the opposite is more likely to be true. Add in the fact that pharma (and maybe some cigarette firms as well) are very generous indeed to government staff who can help.
The problem is not that the ecig vendors will take over those income channels - they can't and they won't - it's that the ecig revolution will turn off the tap on the vast money flow to everyone else. Huge sums of money will stop flowing. For example ecigs are likely to cost pharma $60bn a year at some stage - their income will probably take a 60% cut across the board in anything relating directly to smoking, plus another hit on general meds and ancillaries that are boosted by people just being sicker if they smoke.
None of these people are going to sit back and let you take away their vast incomes. Their first port of call will be to buy regulators and politicians as that's the cheapest and easiest way to fix the problem and make us go away. Now you can see that process already in motion, worldwide. Find someone who speaks out against ecigs and there is a good chance they are funded by one of the potential losers. Find a regulator or politician working against ecigs and you have found a bought & paid for puppet willing to kill on a grand scale to feather their own nest.
Rolygate, where did you get these statistics from please?! Those are some craaaaaaaaaaaazy numbers! I'm fascinated by the taxation/money side of things!x
So there is a very wide range of variation between individuals, and some need far more of [anything] than others. Part of the reason for the success of the electronic cigarette system is the vast range of options available. It's like tea: if you could only buy green tea, and only one brand of it, then tea would disappear from view as a popular drink. It works because there are thousands of options.