I've been reading a lot about all of the controversy over the FDA and their "ongoing studies" of e-cigs. Everywhere I look there's an ignorant, over-dramatic web article about e-cigs and how they're so horrible. Everyone and their freaking mom has been pulled into the media's black hole of misconstrued/false/blatantly unbacked information or speculations about how e-cigs have X amount of chemicals and whatnot, to the point where they're pulling some kind of bulls*** work around to make e-cigs 100x worse than they are.
My friend's dad saw me drawing on my pv the other day and started spewing some crap about how "they're worse than cigarettes" because he saw it on the news
....REALLY? Some other random researcher guy basically said that smoking a cigarette is like breathing in the downdraft of a forest fire and that "e-cigs are only about 20% safer than cigarettes, and 80% of a forest fire is nowhere near healthy." <------What kind of crap is that
? That is the kind of stuff that is all over the internet and television about e-cigs. Nobody knows the right info and the media just keeps shoveling piles of crap into peoples heads.
My points with that rant is, if the media and everyone else is misconstruing information and continues to do so, what will that mean for us? I mean every "study" I have read about was done on some company manufactured e-cig, so any "volatile chemicals" as they call it are in those e-cigs, not the liquid that I'm sure a lot of other people buy online or especially those of us who make our own. If they keep up with all of these close-minded assumptions/statements/studies/accusations/etc., then e-cigs as a whole will get slammed and those of us who specifically know what is in our liquid are going to catch the bad end of it anyway. Are there any regulations/exceptions that would protect the DIYers? If they passed a law banning e-cigs in places cigarettes are banned, but didn't hit DIYers, how would that work out? If I'm walking on my college campus and an officer stops me because e-cigs are banned, in what way would I be able to utilize that said exemption to prove my e-cig is legal?
I know nothing is final, but it's hard to be confident when (at least for those of us in america) our country follows the "If it's not in black and white then we'll just shut it down" type of philosophy. Anyways...what do you guys think? What is your outlook for the future so far? Like are you hopeful/feel like we will win this?
My friend's dad saw me drawing on my pv the other day and started spewing some crap about how "they're worse than cigarettes" because he saw it on the news

My points with that rant is, if the media and everyone else is misconstruing information and continues to do so, what will that mean for us? I mean every "study" I have read about was done on some company manufactured e-cig, so any "volatile chemicals" as they call it are in those e-cigs, not the liquid that I'm sure a lot of other people buy online or especially those of us who make our own. If they keep up with all of these close-minded assumptions/statements/studies/accusations/etc., then e-cigs as a whole will get slammed and those of us who specifically know what is in our liquid are going to catch the bad end of it anyway. Are there any regulations/exceptions that would protect the DIYers? If they passed a law banning e-cigs in places cigarettes are banned, but didn't hit DIYers, how would that work out? If I'm walking on my college campus and an officer stops me because e-cigs are banned, in what way would I be able to utilize that said exemption to prove my e-cig is legal?
I know nothing is final, but it's hard to be confident when (at least for those of us in america) our country follows the "If it's not in black and white then we'll just shut it down" type of philosophy. Anyways...what do you guys think? What is your outlook for the future so far? Like are you hopeful/feel like we will win this?
Last edited: