NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,033
The FDA recently closed the disposable flavored-vape loophole, but unscrupulous vendors now figure the fines are just part of the cost of doing business. My state is considering making vape products Rx-only, so as to preserve them for folks who want to stop smoking conventional tobacco products. (Anything plant matter that actually burns puts tar in the lungs, and properly-made vape products do not do that, but they have other associated health risks. I think regulated US-made vape products are still a good alternative to actual cigarettes if you can't break the habit, but they should be a therapeutic device and medically supervised.)
The biggest problem I see with the vape industry right now is that regulation wasn't approached well, for all that legislators had good intentions. Anyone who has ever dealt with chemical purity standards in imported products knows that China simply doesn't enforce such standards at all, and the vacuum caused by the sudden banning of US-made flavored vape products caused Chinese companies to flood the US market with disposables. Those things contain only God knows what. (I'm not saying that flavored vapes should not have been banned; I'm saying that implementation was poorly planned and full of loopholes. Congress and the FDA failed to coordinate properly with Customs & Enforcement, and that meant that their actions mostly amounted to rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.)
DD saw pervasive vaping when she was in public middle school, but she's now in a private all-girls HS where the staff is much more vigilant, and the kids have mostly given up trying to use these devices in the school and on school grounds. I do see them in cars, though. (DD and her friends are all athletes in a year-round training situation and won't vape for that reason.)
The biggest problem I see with the vape industry right now is that regulation wasn't approached well, for all that legislators had good intentions. Anyone who has ever dealt with chemical purity standards in imported products knows that China simply doesn't enforce such standards at all, and the vacuum caused by the sudden banning of US-made flavored vape products caused Chinese companies to flood the US market with disposables. Those things contain only God knows what. (I'm not saying that flavored vapes should not have been banned; I'm saying that implementation was poorly planned and full of loopholes. Congress and the FDA failed to coordinate properly with Customs & Enforcement, and that meant that their actions mostly amounted to rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.)
DD saw pervasive vaping when she was in public middle school, but she's now in a private all-girls HS where the staff is much more vigilant, and the kids have mostly given up trying to use these devices in the school and on school grounds. I do see them in cars, though. (DD and her friends are all athletes in a year-round training situation and won't vape for that reason.)