You just agreed with the goals of EPA, and justified the purpose of OSHA. And why they set standards for air quality in general, and the work place specifically.
Is that an "oops" on your part, or what?
If you want to have a conversation with me, you will need to learn the English language at some point. May as well start down that path sooner rather than later.
I've often wondered what is to stop people from just getting hooked on ecigs since they are actually just a "legal" version of cigarettes. I know it's strange to a smoker who actually smoked real cigarettes to think that one could actually be a substitute for another, but don't think that in a world where kids are inhaling bath salts to get high that they wouldn't just get their hands of some of this stuff instead.
Kids who have never smoked would think smoking a "legal" cigarette would be like thumbing their noses at the establishment, although in an extremely lame ass way. It would be way easier to hide your ecig habit (no smoke, no ash, no pack, no lighter).
Aren't some brands\types ecigs advertised to be cheaper in the long run than regular cigarettes? Tough times call for me to find a lesser addition that costs a little less, I guess.
Fire away.
Well, nothing, and that's what I do. I don't smoke normal cigs because I have a cheaper, cleaner, much more convenient nicotine delivery device now. And what's wrong with that?
Honestly, I'm starting to contemplate experimenting with this system for other drugs too... start buying bulk quantities of the raw chemicals and doping up different juice mixtures. The PG base is infinitely miscible in water, so you'd figure all the drugs we ingest should be soluble... good way to get wasted for all those diabetic or calorie-counting drunks, great way to get your morning coffee in without the risk of burning your crotch, and so on.
Not that what kids would do is a good reason for any law, or that most ecig vendors sell to minors, but what would be so bad about it? Nicotine alone is no more dangerous or addictive than caffeine (in fact, by some metrics, like LD:50, it's the less dangerous drug) and we let kids buy Mountain Dew and energy drinks and Starbucks (etc.), so... why not this? (Other than our current social and government campaign to eradicate annoying little freedoms like the right to choose anything, I mean.)
Wouldn't know about the adverts (though the heavily advertised ecigs, and the ones available in like gas stations and such these days are pretty much crap), since I got onto the things when it was still 100% online, and settled into a brand based on word-of-mouth and "features." But they are way cheaper in the long run for anyone with a serious habit. Went from a pack a day (and my former brand's now selling for over $6 a pack) to just under $500 in about 9 months, and that's with about a month's supplies left, so let's call it $50 a month, compared to about 3 and a half times that for traditional smokes. And that includes money spent on some ecigs I ended up not liking and thus, not using and like that there. Up front costs are higher, of course, but if you find a nice reusable ecig you like, well, I'm saving at least $1500 a year.
Oh, and not paying a red cent in taxes on 'em, which is what really gives me the warm fuzzies.
I'd love to read more about this, cursory googling only yields stuff like this:
http://www.tfy.drugsense.org/tfy/addictvn.htm
Nicotine actually plays in the same league as cocaine and heroine.
Source here
Not to mention that Nicotine is 4 times as toxic as Caffeine when comparing maximum possible dosage.
Hmmm I wonder how much more or less addictive nicotine is in this delivery form.
Try searching for articles on the dangers of caffeine, rather than the safeties of nicotine. For example, it's not possible to lethally overdose on nicotine using its preferred delivery vector (inhalation) alone, but caffeine can and will kill you if ingest enough.
More than a little disingenuous to equate nicotine to cigarettes after the big deal you made about cigarette additives making cigarettes more addictive and more toxic than they otherwise would be. :bored: (And the host of other problems with studies that compare recidivism rates for use of legal drugs and illegal ones as if there's no difference created by criminalization of one or the other.)
Treats Parkinsons as well, and has shown value in mitigating some of the symptoms of Schizophrenia. Probably other stuff as well... it's not very well studied, given how thoroughly demonized it's been for decades. Not that its medical uses should matter for recreational purposes, but I guess it does to you on account of the side you've chosen in the war against anything resembling freedom.
I wouldn't be too surprised if I ended up treating schizophrenia or any other disease with nicotine-based meds 20 years from now :o wrt PD it's hard to say for sure that it's caffeine and nicotine that are protective. So those e-cigs may even be worse :o
But this is leading us away from your claim that caffeine is more addictive than nicotine. I'm a curious fellow and I would like to see more on that. Bear in mind that I'm opposed to cigarettes, but I haven't yet developed a strong opinion on nicotine in other forms. I prefer snus to ciggies for obvious reasons. Now stop being a baby :o
No, no, no.
You're getting that wrong. First of all, yes, some additives may enhance the addictive nature of nicotine. That's NOT, however, the essential part of the nicotine addiction. It's just an enhancement. Or let me put it this way: If there was a cheap chemical which helped you sell 5% more stuff, wouldn't you use that one?
Secondly, you're just plain wrong with the "additives making cigarettes [...] more toxic" thing. You obviously did not understand what I was saying at all. Because I was arguing the absolute opposite, namely that the additives don't play a large role in toxicity.
To wit:
Capiche?Quote:
[...]And you're comitting to a logical fallacy when you think that "no additives" makes for a "healthier" option. First of all, the additives are (safe for their intended purpose) almost negligible in their toxicological impact, it's the slow, low-temperature, low-oxygen burn of the tobacco itself that matters. For that matter, cigars are even worse than cigarettes because the burn has even less oxygen and an even lower temperature - which means that it burns dirtier.[...]