Expanding the Drug War To Include Tobacco Would Be a Big Mistake
The judicially approved Brookline ban reflects a broader trend among progressives who should know better.
The judicially approved Brookline ban reflects a broader trend among progressives who should know better.
Medical professionals are often unaware of the relevant research on the relative risks of tobacco products, and that can matter for public health.
Zyn pouches are a dramatically safer alternative to smoking.
Plus: The most boring write-in campaign, some heat in the Argentine streets, Brooklyn's penchant for vehicular manslaughter, and more...
Heated tobacco products are coming to America, at long last. How will they change the landscape for smokers and prohibitionists?
Another significant court loss for the Food & Drug Administration's arbitrary approach to regulating vaping products.
Today’s nicotine prohibitionists may do well to take a few moments to contemplate their anti-alcohol predecessors.
Plus: Repealing tobacco bans, UN pointlessness, Substack's "Nazi problem," and more…
Policies inspired by that exaggerated threat continue to undermine the harm-reducing potential of e-cigarettes.
The Reason Sindex tracks the price of vice: smoking, drinking, snacking, traveling, and more.
The U.K.’s “conservative” prime minister wants to prohibit people born in 2009 and later from buying cigarettes—forever.
A study found a "high rate of substitution" between vapes and cigarettes, suggesting that policies aimed at preventing underage use are undermining public health.
Well-intentioned restricitons on selling vaping products with non-tobacco flavors could have dire unintended consequences.
Providing accurate information about the risks of different nicotine products is long overdue.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit takes issue with how the FDA evaluated Fontem's unflavored vaping products.
Since the FDA began regulating vaping products as "tobacco" products, American ignorance about vaping's realtive risks has gotten worse.
The organization has a long history of pushing bogus anti-tobacco claims.
High taxes and heavy regulations are as effective as prohibition at creating black markets.
Kathy Hochul isn't just waging a war on menthols. She's also floating a ban on all cigarette sales in the state.
Even the best studies haven't surmounted a key statistical issue, and they tend to distort the evidence to make e-cigarettes look dangerous.
The appeals court says regulators violated the Administrative Procedure Act when they tried to pull menthol vapes off the market.
Another opinion exposing the Food and Drug Administration's vaping problem.
Thanks to tendentiously sloppy research, most Americans think vaping is just as dangerous as smoking. That’s not true.
And now the state thinks it needs to crack down even more.
To reduce cancer deaths, Biden should stop restricting safer nicotine alternatives.
Another potential legal setback for the FDA's attempt to regulate electronic cigarettes as tobacco products.
The obvious problems with the article reflect a broader pattern that suggests a peer review bias against e-cigarettes.
The agency is determined to ban the flavors that former smokers overwhelmingly prefer. For the children.
The country's strategy ignores the failures of prohibition.
The failure to consider the timing of diagnoses makes it impossible to draw causal inferences.
You can smoke all the pot you want, but flavored tobacco or nicotine is soon to be illegal.
By making e-cigarettes less appealing, it will discourage smokers from switching to a much less hazardous nicotine habit.
Bring on the black market.
It's about protecting adults from themselves, which should be none of the government’s business.
Voters have shown a propensity to veto the meddlesome efforts of lawmakers in the past.
The CDC is still citing underage consumption as a reason to restrict adult access.
The state is prioritizing harm-reduction approaches for drug users. That's great. So why are lawmakers taking a maximalist approach to punishing smokers?
The "epidemic" of adolescent vaping seems to be fading fast, and vaping is replacing smoking among adults, a harm-reducing trend that regulators seem determined to discourage.
The likelihood that the Supreme Court considers the FDA's treatment of vaping products is increasing.
Formerly ubiquitous tobacco vending machine sales are now banned under a 2010 FDA measure.
Something is wrong at the Food & Drug Administration's Center for Tobacco Products, and federal courts are beginning to notice.
The agency’s policies would boost the black market and smoking-related deaths.
Banning less harmful tobacco alternatives is not a way to improve public health.
In a move that is likely to undermine public health, the agency warns that products containing synthetic nicotine "will be subject to FDA enforcement."
The proposed rule, which targets the cigarettes that black smokers overwhelmingly prefer, will harm the community it is supposed to help.