From the BBC:
“US announces countrywide ban on
flavoured e-cigs”
The US has announced a
countrywide ban on some e-cigarette flavours amid concerns about vaping among
teens. The ban applies to mint and fruit flavours that are offered in
cartridge-based e-cigarettes, like the popular pods sold by Juul. The US will
continue to allow menthol and tobacco flavours, as well as fruit flavours
delivered in other ways. The action has been under consideration for more than
a year, with several states passing similar rules. South Korea, India, Brazil
are among the dozens of countries that have announced sweeping vaping bans.
Others, like China, have announced restrictions. Health and Human Services
Secretary Alex Azar said the Trump administration wanted to continue to offer
adults an alternative to traditional cigarettes, while responding to concerns
about growing addiction to a new product among teens. "By prioritizing
enforcement against the products that are most widely used by children, our
action today seeks to strike the right public health balance," he said.
'Big industry'
Fifty-five people have died and
more than 2,500 people have been hospitalised with injuries linked to vaping,
US health regulators say. Investigators have said they believe vitamin E
acetate, which is sometimes added to marijuana vaping products, is playing a
role. Citing the crisis, President Trump said in September the US would ban all
e-cigarette flavours except tobacco, but the administration loosened its
position after pushback from the industry. "We have to protect our
families. At the same time, it's a big industry. We want to protect the
industry," Mr Trump said this week. Juul, the biggest e-cigarette company in the
US, had already pulled its flavoured pods from the market, but Thursday's
action forces competitors to make a similar move, within 30 days. Advocates for
stricter rules have said that teens will switch to menthol if other options are
eliminated. But officials said they
would take steps against menthol and tobacco flavoured e-cigarettes if the Food
and Drug Administration sees that their use among teens is rising. The US also
recently raised the age for purchasing tobacco products to 21. E-cigarettes are
also governed by those rules.
^ I do not smoke. With that said
I do not believe the US should move the legal age to buy or use cigarettes,
vaping products, etc. to 21 – the same way you shouldn’t have to be 21 to buy
or use alcohol. If the legal of majority in the United States is determined to
be 18 years old (and it is) then that should mean anyone 18 and over should be
able to smoke and drink if they want to. To say you are legally an adult at 18
(that you can vote, sign legal documents, fight for your country, etc.) but you
can not drink or smoke when you are 18, 19 or 20 only cheapens the age of
majority. If the US bans smoking and drinking for all adults 18 and over then
that would be one thing (which of course I don’t see ever happening since
politicians get lots of money from the tobacco and alcohol industries) but to
say you are an adult at 18 except for certain things until you are 21 means you
aren’t really considered an adult at 18 but at 21. ^
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