April 9, 2009 /

Reason: Where’s The Fire?

An excellent write up today in Reason about the e-Cigarettes and the uncertain fate they are facing with our government: The first time Tom Kiklas saw an electronic cigarette, he recalls, “I couldn’t stand it….I thought, ‘I don’t want to be involved in this.’ I’m an anti-smoking kind of guy.” But after Kiklas realized that […]

An excellent write up today in Reason about the e-Cigarettes and the uncertain fate they are facing with our government:

The first time Tom Kiklas saw an electronic cigarette, he recalls, “I couldn’t stand it….I thought, ‘I don’t want to be involved in this.’ I’m an anti-smoking kind of guy.”

But after Kiklas realized that electronic cigarettes, a.k.a. e-cigarettes, deliver nicotine without tobacco or combustion products, thereby eliminating virtually all of the health hazards associated with smoking, he was comfortable becoming media relations director for inLife, one of the companies that sell the devices in the United States. Unfortunately, many anti-smoking activists and public health officials are stuck in that first stage of visceral antipathy toward anything that resembles cigarettes, an emotional reaction that could prove deadly for smokers.

Last week the House of Representatives approved a bill that authorizes the Food and Drug Administration to regulate tobacco products. Lest anyone think that cigarettes will be safer as a result, the bill prohibits manufacturers from mentioning FDA regulation, saying “consumers are likely to be confused and misled” if they know about it.

Meanwhile, supporters of the bill, which the Senate will consider later this year, are demanding that the FDA ban e-cigarettes, a potentially life-saving alternative for smokers, as unauthorized drug delivery devices. Last month Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.), who brags that he is “one of the Senate’s leaders in protecting Americans from the dangers of smoking,” urged the FDA to take e-cigarettes off the market “until they are proven safe.” The next day, the American Cancer Society, the American Heart Association, the American Lung Association, and the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids applauded Lautenberg’s position.

There has been so much great press about e-Cigarettes lately. It’s really a good sign. I have been cigarette free for over a week now, and couldn’t have done it without my e-Cigarette. I feel so much better, not coughing all the time and even have more energy now.

(Please take a moment and sign the petition to keep e-Cigarettes on the market)

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