Summary

The Supreme Court is reviewing whether the FDA unlawfully blocked over a million kid-friendly flavored vape products, which critics say fuel youth nicotine addiction.

Despite FDA bans, flavors like fruit and candy dominate illicit vape sales, with 1.6 million minors using such products.

Vape companies argue flavored e-liquids help adult smokers quit, but the FDA counters that their evidence is insufficient to outweigh youth addiction risks.

A lower court sided with the companies, and the Supreme Court’s ruling, expected by June 2025, could reshape vaping regulations.

  • TommySoda@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    This kinda shit always pisses me off because if you actually look up the statistics for the use of tobacco products over the years, we’ve been seeing a steady decline since the 90’s. So I’d like to counter your counter and say where is the actual data showing the increase in tobacco products among the youth? All you’re saying is that sales are up. And as someone that switched to vaping after 15 years of smoking, I’m calling bullshit on the “most adults prefer tobacco flavor” claim you’re making. I’ve even asked the dude that runs my local vape shop what the most popular flavor was when I was looking for new flavors to try and it definitely was tobacco flavored. Even my 70 year old mom who smoked for 50 years didn’t even go for tobacco flavor.

    Kids are still gonna vape regardless of flavor. It’s the nicotine that’s the problem. That shit is so addictive it could taste like literal ass and people would still use it. Smoking doesn’t taste good but kids have been doing that for years.

    • JWBananas@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      This kinda shit always pisses me off because if you actually look up the statistics for the use of tobacco products over the years, we’ve been seeing a steady decline since the 90’s. So I’d like to counter your counter and say where is the actual data showing the increase in tobacco products among the youth?

      Five seconds of Googling will find those results for you.

      The TL;DR is that the 2024 numbers are down significantly from 2023, and that much of that decline is attributed to bans on certain vaping products. But in many years prior, usage was on the rise. For example, in high school students, use of any tobacco product rose 38% from 2017 to 2018 alone.

      • pearsaltchocolatebar@discuss.online
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        12 days ago

        That’s because they’re labeling vapes as a tobacco product, which it isn’t.

        You wouldn’t call a red bull a coffee product because coffee contains caffeine.

    • cm0002@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      I’ve found that the whole asinine idea of “adults don’t like sweet flavor” is pervasive even beyond vapes. I had to specifically ask my dentist for the “flavored” toothpaste thing they use on deep cleaning because they assume all adults just default to mint or whatever.