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Big Joke: E-cigarettes are bad for you and they are illegal


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1 minute ago, NCC1701A said:

it is illegal. 

Well, unless that has changed it contradicts what others have said very recently. I have read on here and heard from someone else they were stopped by the police with one, the police wanted a bribe or they threaten to take you to the station. However, there isn't then actually anything they can do at the station as there is no law to say having an e - cig is a crime. 

 

 

 

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25 minutes ago, lemonjelly said:

Are there any signs at Thai immigration entry points warning tourists of the illegality of vaping? If not, there bloody well should be.

Truth is Thailand is not the only country where vaping is banned but may well be the only country with such draconian punishments for vaping. Note not selling or importing but fir actually vaping, even though actual vaping is not illegal .

 

you recall net idol who was arrested for having vape gear in her car? In an interview she argues that vaping in private is not illegal and vape was in her car so she did nothing wrong . 

 

Police countered that because vape was visible from outside from the window it makes it illegal, which is insane.

 

so vaping in private is legal but if anyone sees the cloud or the mod then it’s illegal. 

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Meanwhile, walk around any cities in neighboring countries, such as Siem Riep, Phnom Phen, Savannakhet, Vientienne, Luang Praban, and watch the locals, trendy young kids & students vaping away.

Numpties.

Absolute numpties.

As someone mentioned, the Thai Tobacco Monopoly have just been too slow to get in on the Vape Act...

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Thailand is to be commended for its stand on e-cigarettes aka vaping. The products are dangerous and encourage young people to  vape under the misleading claim that the vape is  not harmful.

 

1 hour ago, SammyT said:

So are normal smokes, so why are they still legal?

The fact that one harmful activity has been grandfathered into  legal acceptance does not justify the permission for a new harmful activity. 

 

1 hour ago, BestB said:

Would be good if he also provided some medical study to back his assertion it was bad for you.

The obligation is not on BJ to support the  now established  view that vaping is harmful to physical health. The onus is on the promoters of the activity to show that it is not causing direct physical harm. Common sense tells us that the ingestion of unregulated toxic chemicals will cause damage. Because vaping is a relatively new activity, long term studies  have not been  available to show just how dangerous it is, but as time goes by, the evidence is becoming unassailable. For example;

E-cigarette vapor disables key immune cells in the lung and boosts inflammation: Effects similar to those seen in regular smokers and patients with chronic lung disease published British Medical Journal August 2018

 

Food and Chemical Toxicology, Volume 120, November 2018 recapped the  existing knowledge that smoking flavoured e-cigarettes can produce unacceptably dangerous” levels of formaldehyde and other carcinogenic compounds.

 

I can cite 20+ studies and presentations in the past year which all  discuss the damage done and  harmful effects of vaping. Those who claim there are no harmful  effects have a vested interest. The positions adopted by some health agencies that vaping was less harmful than heavy cigarette smoking have been taken out of context. What they said was common sense: If vaping could be used as a smoking cessation  tool then it was less damaging than continuing to smoke cigarettes. No one has greenlighted the activity, nor the  dangerous chemicals  used,

 

43 minutes ago, lemonjelly said:

Are there any signs at Thai immigration entry points warning tourists of the illegality of vaping? If not, there bloody well should be.

The notices are on many foreign service websites as a travel advisory. A quick google search will show many articles warning against vaping.

 

Although vaping in itself is technically not illegal. The import, sale and servicing of the products is. Therefore, if a foreigner is vaping, the foreigner has illegally obtained the product. The concept is no different than  being in possession of stolen merchandise. The holder need not have stolen the merchandise.

 

 

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14 minutes ago, BestB said:

I will not get into a debate with you on how harmful or not ecigs are as it’s off topic and been covered plenty of times before but most of not all of your post is bs.

 

not a single company markets ecig as harmless , all mods come with a warning , however what all market is that ecigs are less harmful than regular cigs. 95% less harmful to be precise .

 

there is not nor have been any studies to support your claims that youth pick up vaping instead of smoking , however plenty of stats to show smoking in youth is on the rise.

The BS  is your dismissal of substantiated scientific fact. You cannot  cite one recent peer reviewed public health study that backs up your position.

As for your claim that  ecigarettes are 95% less harmful, you are lying. Provide the established data that substantiates  your claim.  You don't even know what is in the liquids used, so how can you even claim they are not harmful.  Yes  a .38cal bullet fired from 100m is less harmful than a tossed grenade at 50 m. However, the  bullet can still be lethal sometimes.

 

Thailand is doing the right thing and it is supported by public health professionals around the world. Vaping is  harmful and causes serious and significant lung damage.

 

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E-cigarette busts in Bangkok land 18 in custody

By The Nation

 

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Sixteen Thais and two Myanmar men were arrested in Bangkok on Sunday night for selling e-cigarette devices, nicotine chargers and baraku (hookah) tobacco-smoking products.

 

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Immigration Bureau chief Pol Lt-General Surachet Hakpal, speaking in his capacity as deputy chief of the Action Taskforce for Information Technology Crime Suppression, told reporters on Monday the arrests were made at several night markets.

 

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Twenty-one shops were found to be selling the illegal e-cigarette devices and baraku pipes and 18 people were arrested.

 

Police confiscated 81 e-cigarette devices, 1,127 bottles of e-cigarette chemicals and 777 baraku and other illegal items, Surachet said.

 

The operation followed a February 28 raid on the Klong Thom market in which three Thais and two Lao were arrested for selling the same kind of gear.

 

Full story: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/breakingnews/30365143

 

thenation_logo.jpg

-- © Copyright The Nation 2019-03-04
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