Let's keep the personal jabs out of the conversation please.
It's enough of a mess with out being snarky to each other.
Thank you
It's enough of a mess with out being snarky to each other.
Thank you
Let's keep the personal jabs out of the conversation please.
It's enough of a mess with out being snarky to each other.
Thank you
Maybe I will have to do thatSeriously, though nicotine can currently be bought over the counter. Where does it say in the regulations this would be changed?
I am just asking.
Sorry if I came off harsh, but the amount of misinformation flying around is staggering. (on the internet in general and also some on ECF) DVAP has some blogs reguarding WTAs and the difficultly in processing (he's a real chemist).
The regulations as proposed will require all manufacturers and vendors apply to register their "tobacco products" with studies detailing why at a "population level" they will not increase the smoking population OR at a "population level" reduce the number of smokers from quitting. If they are able to accomplish this, then they also need to submit an environmental impact study....
The FDA would not ban tobacco, smoking, nicotine, vaping....but tie it up in mountains of red tape to accomplish a de facto ban. Realize in 1937 the federal government never banned the other stuff, but only passed regulations to require a tax stamp, and it took 77 years to begin to make any substantive changes.
I appreciated you frankness. There is too many lies going around that someone who knows the truth would give us all the right info.
And it's easier to find stamps that technically don't exist...The FDA would not ban tobacco, smoking, nicotine, vaping....but tie it up in mountains of red tape to accomplish a de facto ban. Realize in 1937 the federal government never banned the other stuff, but only passed regulations to require a tax stamp, and it took 77 years to begin to make any substantive changes.
Find a good chemist, it's an involved and inherently dangerous process. Most of the processes you can "google" are bogus, and the ones that are more accurate are very lacking in safety or necessary testing.
Sorry if I came off harsh, but the amount of misinformation flying around is staggering. (on the internet in general and also some on ECF) DVAP has some blogs reguarding WTAs and the difficultly in processing (he's a real chemist).
Eh, po' folk & desperate folk get "creative"..
There are many instances of people drinking Sterno to become intoxicated. Bluesman Tommy Johnson alludes to the practice in his song Canned Heat Blues recorded in 1928.
The practice is said to have become popular during the Great Depression in hobo camps, or "jungles", when the Sterno would be squeezed through cheesecloth or a sock and the resulting liquid mixed with fruit juice to make "jungle juice" or "squeeze".
Sterno - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://nicotinetruth.blogspot.com/2012/03/chronic-conditions-require-ongoing.
Frontiers | Cotinine: Beyond that Expected, More than a Biomarker of Tobacco Consumption | Neuropharmacology
I am not making up these claims. It wasn't until I talked to a schizophrenic that I realized the need, yes need for some people to never stop smoking/vaping.
The young man I talked to said to me, "If I stop smoking I will go insane". He meant it. Does he have a choice?
''The system in place has failed,'' Coleman's father, Mark, said. ''The anti-smoking laws, as they stand, are too rigid.
''When people like my son are admitted, they are already suffering from conditions such as severe depression, anxiety issues and suicidal tendencies - without the added burden of suddenly being told they must quit. It seems cruel and unjust.''
He called on the O'Farrell government to show ''compassion''.
Family Drug Support founder Tony Trimingham is also campaigning for changes after witnessing the ''horror'' that was endured by an autistic and schizophrenic family member in Goulburn Hospital's mental health ward in October.
''All was fine until he wanted a cigarette and was told that policy now said he couldn't,'' he said.
Mr Trimingham said the situation triggered an ''emotional outburst'' which led to him being placed in ''total isolation'' for 48 hours.
A spokesman for the Mental Health Council of Australia, Simon Tatz, said forcing a nicotine addict to endure withdrawal symptoms while battling an acute episode of mental illness may impose a disproportionate level of suffering on people who were already suffering enough.
"No one wants to defend smoking, but when you're dealing with people in extreme crisis, their mental health and wellbeing has to be the priority, not quitting smoking," Mr Tatz said.
Desley Casey, who has worked in the mental health field for 15 years and has been an acute psychiatric inpatient several times, said forcing people to quit when they are acutely unwell is inhumane and "goes against a patient's human rights".
She is concerned that some patients will not seek help or admit themselves to hospital if they know tobacco is banned.
Might help if you quote my posts in entirety, rather than excerpts. I strongly believe I am giving more detailed rationale to points I make than those on the side that say "black market is not a solution" and leave things at that.
Would be rather impossible to construct a black market scenario with 'no risk involved to anyone.' Can't even do that with the current legal market, but you are asking for the impossible under black market scenario.
Challenging also to say what black market will look like for you, plus challenging to offer genuine help in thread where I reckon people are looking to dismiss that option as a genuine way to obtain product under quasi-strict regulations. Also, just challenging to offer specifics about overcoming legal restrictions on an open forum. But, if genuinely interested in list of scenarios I see as viable going forward, feel free to PM me.
In general, I think you'll find local means via friends that strike you as slightly risky, but are basically trusted sources, and are not dangerous. Also plausible you'll find it online with sites that are either blatantly attempting to circumvent the restrictions or doing so in way that they realize may be questionable, but worth the risk from their end given high product demand. I also think China will on the surface give lip service to US restrictions, but have enough places online that appear like China laughs in the face of US policy on this matter.
In general, I would say that there will be a transition period that likely lasts months, if not years, and that all current vendors will be possibly willing to engage in gray-ish market where it is risky for both buyer and seller, pending outcome of litigation, but transactions will occur. The moment it becomes too risky for seller, means those products will go to places where buyers will be found, but might not be easily found via internet search engines.
I reckon we are at least 5 years, and probably closer to a decade away from it being impossible to get liquid nic via online order. May never occur, and I imagine backdoor channels will be available forever via the net. Again, don't need for everyone to have source product for black market to operate efficiently.
Also, don't need internet to find it locally. Though, even then, I'm sure net will be used, but not for finding specific places that you can type in 'liquid nic' and get local results.
It is challenging to say how costs will be effected, yet not impossible to conclude that it won't be drastic changes on cost. Here in the legal market we have sellers offering liquid at around $1 per ml, and finding buyers willing to pay that. Black market isn't one homogenous group, so there may be sellers at $1 per ml, while others find comfortable profit margin at 25 cents per ml.
One of the ways I see underground market being established is if all current vendors are allowed to operate legally, but all are in agreement that to keep things legal, it must be taxed up the wazoo, so that buyers are buying product around $1 per ml. I see an underground market cutting into that, which won't be necessarily more popular than legal market, but will allow a segment of the purchasing population to get decent product closer to 50 cents per ml.
I currently do not see an underground market being established because liquid nicotine is deemed illegal for sale anywhere in the US. I feel if that scenario were to arise, it would be at least 5 years from now, and more like a decade away.
And all this, is currently known to black market players. In fact, I could see black market people being those who favor bans, as they would stand to benefit greatly under such a scenario.
If they took away my electronic cigarettes I would go back to smoking.Theres been a lot of criticism of vaping because vapers are replacting nicotine with nicotine and in their opinion, that's not really "quitting". If you took away their new form of nicotine, many would go back to smoking combustionable cigs. It might be more effective to point that out and ask the FDA if they are ready to see a spike in smoking from banning ecigs?
I have an acquaintance who is a doctoral candidate in neurological sciences. We were discussing vaping one day, and I mentioned beneficial effects of nicotine.Today it would seem from other posts here that the dogma of "evil tobacco" dictates that no such finding is possible and should not even be discussed in polite company much less pursued.
If someone in college or medical research today proposed such a line of study I imagine they would quickly be sent packing.
aikanae1
Theres been a lot of criticism of vaping because vapers are replacting nicotine with nicotine and in their opinion, that's not really "quitting".
I have an acquaintance who is a doctoral candidate in neurological sciences. We were discussing vaping one day, and I mentioned beneficial effects of nicotine.
Her reply?
"Absolutely, but we're not supposed to mention it to anyone because smoking is bad."
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Your response is filled with so many ifs, ands, buts and maybes that it is hard for me to believe that a black market will solve all are vaping prohibition problems and that smokers will simply flock to this new vaping black market and the "new" vaper demographic will just explode in growth.
I don't know who your friends and acquaintances are, but very few of mine will feel comfortable with navigating any black market that his risks involved.
And I would still like you to explain how PayPal will not process any US vaping purchases currently with no threat of government action but that if the Deeming Regs are passed, the government will completely ignore all financial institutions in their fight to enforce their regulations.