The Biden administration is currently considering two new sweeping FDA rules affecting combustible tobacco cigarettes: 1) banning menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars, and 2) reducing nicotine levels, presumably to a non-addictive level. Where we stand on these two potential changes is as follows:
The first one, Twenty-One Debunked is on the fence about that, as we can see both sides of that issue, noting that Canada has already banned menthols and the EU has phased them out, while also noting the inconvenient truth of racism and how it intersects with this issue as well. The flavored cigars we generally lean against banning, while for menthol cigarettes we believe that if they must do it for whatever reason, they should phase them out more gradually and allow existing stocks to be sold well after the designated "quit date" for selling newly manufactured menthols. Also, possession and consumption of menthols should NOT be banned or punished, and police should NOT go out of their way to target the sale of menthols or "loosies" in underprivileged neighborhoods with people of color.
(For what it's worth, quit rates in Canada have improved significantly since their menthol ban, particularly among formerly menthol-preferring smokers. That lends credence to the idea that menthol enhances the overall addictiveness of tobacco by making the high nicotine levels less harsh on the throat, which also makes it easier for young experimenters to pick up the habit in the first place.)
The second one, reducing nicotine levels, Twenty-One Debunked has cautiously supported since 2014, and we still do, provided that all of the following are true:
- The phasedown of nicotine to a non-addictive level is done gradually and stepwise over a period of at least a year, in at least three stages.
- The sale of existing domestic stocks of cigarettes above the nicotine cap can continue at least six months after the "quit date" for manufacturing and importing cigarettes above that cap (at each step of the phasedown).
- The possession/consumption of cigarettes with nicotine levels above the cap is NOT banned or punished.
- The only other tobacco products subject to the same cap shall be little cigars (below a certain size), perhaps all cigars with a smoke pH below 8, and possibly loose roll-your-own cigarette tobacco and/or pipe tobacco with a pH below 8. Nothing else, period. We would be fine with, and would actually prefer, if only pre-rolled commercial cigarettes and little cigars (the size of cigarettes) were subject to the nicotine cap.
- The addition of any harmful or addictive additives to all newly manufactured tobacco products is banned effective immediately as well. All additives must meet the same standards as for additives to food. Radioactive fertilizers for growing tobacco must also be banned as well.
The majority of people in the U.S. don't believe in personal freedoms anymore. People would rather believe in progressives who support Tobacco 21 laws rather than the rights of young adults which they should have. The federal government should not have raised the smoking/vaping age to 21. The FDA should have from the start, banned flavored cigarettes and reduced the amount of nicotine in cigarettes and in vaping devices. Those two policy decisions alone would be sufficient to regulate tobacco products.
ReplyDeleteIndeed, and there is really nothing "woke" or progressive about raising these age limits to 21.
DeleteAgreed, there is nothing "woke" about the raise in the minimum age of 21 for tobacco.
DeleteI just made some more updates today.
ReplyDelete