#after the vape I had a panic attack and looked up does one puff of vape kill you
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cheesecake-clown · 1 year ago
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Buttercup 💪 (ask game)
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Omg I'm such a ball of anxiety I never do anything dangerous
If I had to think of something it would probably be the entire time I was friends with druggies- I took THREE PUFFS of a bay leaf cigarette, ONE PUFF of a vape, and ONE GULP of alcohol I'm really cool and dangerous for that ik ik
The only dangerous thing I can think of wanting to do is a backflip but I'd break my neck so nty
ON AN ENTIRELY DIFFERENT FUCKING NOTE THE DRUGGIE FRIENDS STOLE FROM CLAIRE'S LIKE WHO TF DOES THAT OF ALL THE PLACES IN THE WORLD YOU CHOSE CLAIRE'S
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clawsextended · 2 months ago
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“holy shit.”
easily frightened as she isn’t, the cat jumps out of her skin. death itself dissipates in shadow (selina knows she’s offended her. good. she was getting bored.) and suddenly the hairs on her neck stand up. she finds her eyes darting to find where she’s been, desperate to discover the difference between shadow and the creature itself. panic fills her veins afresh and it’s cold.
that boo is a BOO to her. the case drops and it’s enough to almost let out a little shout before she recedes easily to an annoyed furrow of her brow. hmph. her eyes roll.
“bitch, seriously, what the fuck?”
she exhales a puff through her nose. her hands itch. she can feel the urge to extent claws, the way she wants to take them over skin, swift, protective. she doesn’t. she does flick a tiny black bar from her utility belt and takes a hit, the vape briefly humming before she lets out a slow stream of smoke, one that dissipates quickly.
fucking jesus. fucking jesus, she swears her blood pressure just spiked. (yet she meticulously removes a huge piece, black and shiny and dull at once, and another, another.) she’s screwing bits together, easily fastening a scope to the end of the disassembled gun. too big to carry — not that it matters, she’s ditching it after this. borrowed and discarded, the catwoman way.
“you’re going to give me a heart attack one of these days.”
the scar over her mangled heart feels like it beats, throbs. she remembers what it was like every time — pain beyond pain beyond pain, pain so bad, so inescapable her screaming had become incoherent. she remembers it — a realm of something no mortal was ever meant to feel, blood pouring out of her body as she’d watched. she remembers it and she forgets it as quickly as she can. move on. the sight of her heart outside of her body before it all faded stays where it is, a still image, a lock screen she can’t change.
she hates distractions. one eye closed, lines up the shot.
“eight ball, corner pocket.”
the guard at the door drops with a muted tch, a pool of red spreading beneath. she’s not sure where that shot connected — gut, she realizes, gauges the size of that puddle as it grows. she chances a look at her slightly unwanted companion.
“i gotta go grab a hard drive. it’s in a safe. keep up.”
up, goggles down. she’s moving again.
“oh my god. you’re so irreverent. do you have no decency?”
it’s mocking and high. loud. an antagonistic pitch that might border on valley girl californian. she rolls her eyes with a purposeful constancy. she wonders if she could push death into it — what it is to die by the hand of death, if its paradoxical for such a thing. she wonders if it would be difficult or if it would be like everything else about god — hateful and full of quiet consequences you only find behind the curtain. she’d goad the entity into it if she felt like it.
half does. half doesn’t. she flip flops, checking her comms and her headset. click click click. she’s taking a glance at the whip coiled around her hip, opening compartments in her belt. check check check. she has whatever she needs. goggles whirr down, screen her gaze ruby red behind soft brown eyes.
“i’m committing fucking espionage.” she’s traveling in great strides up a hill that stilettos should not be able to navigate. and yet. her shoulders square like a jungle cat, tremendous in their set as she lies down to survey the compound in front of her. “unless you’re planning on helping me, fuck off. you’re going to get my ass caught. i didn’t come here to make your job easier. —hand me that case.” the tremendous black thing, a huge square beast of an object hidden in the brush. she dips her head aside without looking, expectant. annoyed.
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cashcounts · 7 years ago
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JUUL Threatened by Powerful Groups in Washington
A letter sent to the FDA by six tobacco control organizations demands the agency “take immediate action to protect the nation’s young people, and the public health, from the dramatic rise in teen usage of Juul electronic cigarettes.” The letter reiterates the groups’ demand in their lawsuit against the FDA that the agency reverse its decision to postpone premarket approval for existing vapor products until 2022.
The letter asks the FDA to shut down JUUL’s online sales, despite having no evidence that the company has sold products to minors through its website. In fact, JUUL Labs restricts sales to those ages 21 and above, even in states that allow sales to 18-year-olds.
The letter also claims that JUUL has released e-liquid flavors since the August 8, 2016, naming Mango and Cool Cucumber specifically. No vaping product can be legally marketed after that date without a marketing order from the FDA, which requires submission and acceptance of a premarket tobacco application (PMTA).
The six groups that authored the letter are the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids (CTFK), Truth Initiative, American Academy of Pediatrics, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, American Heart Association and American Lung Association.
Even though JUUL is surging in popularity among young people, many are unaware that they always contain nicotine. https://t.co/zemO9TLEBD pic.twitter.com/kju7cCdvVt
— Truth Initiative (@truthinitiative) April 18, 2018
“Juul is putting kids at risk of nicotine addiction and threatens to undermine decades of progress in reducing youth tobacco use,” says the letter. But youth smoking is at its lowest recorded level. with just 4.2 percent of high school seniors smoking daily in 2017, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. That more than an 80 percent decline from 1997, when 24.6 percent of 12th graders smoked daily.
The letter emphasizes results of a study conducted by the Truth Initiative, published today in the journal Tobacco Control, which the groups claim shows alarming trends in JUUL use and awareness by young people. However, the study showed that just 25 percent of 1,012 surveyed 15 to 24-year-olds even recognized a JUUL, and just 10 percent had used one (including just one puff ever). Among 15 to 17-year-olds, 21 percent recognized the device.
The study also showed that of the 25 percent that recognized the device,only 25 percent of those (63 people) said that people their age use the word “juuling” to describe the use of a JUUL. That’s just 6.3 percent of the total sample group — which seems very low for a product they claim is experiencing “skyrocketing popularity” among teens.
So far, the campaign against JUUL has generated hundreds of newspaper articles and TV news spots — along with the study, press releases and letters seen today — but no evidence of a real increase in teen vaping or smoking as a result of JUUL’s commercial success.
The groups are preemptively indoctrinating the public before the release of major national surveys in June — which may show no significant increase in teen vaping — by claiming that the JUUL name is so tied to its use that many teens don’t recognize “juuling” as being vaping at all. Thus, the logic goes, perhaps teens won’t consider juuling to be vaping when they answer survey questions about vaping or e-cigarette use.
“These groups have implicitly and explicitly claimed that JUUL’s growth and increase in market share is due to the extreme popularity of the product with teenagers,” Amelia Howard told Vaping360. The University of Waterloo (Ontario) sociologist is currently studying the JUUL phenomenon.
“They support this with a concocted narrative in which JUUL is special relative to other vaping products,” says Howard. “They say it attracts new and very young consumers, who would never ever vape or smoke, but are helplessly drawn to the JUUL, and are so infatuated by the brand that they’ve made it into a verb: juuling — which also prevents them from understanding that they are vaping.”
Some claim concerns about youth use of #Juul e-cigs is an “orchestrated” panic. It’s not. Just ask media and educators reporting widespread use of Juul in schools. The problem is serious and real. What’s orchestrated is the effort to downplay it. @FDATobacco must protect kids.
— Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids (@TobaccoFreeKids) April 13, 2018
In a separate but coordinated action, Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin and 10 Democratic colleagues sent similar letters to the FDA, and also to JUUL Labs. The letters were announced in a CTFK press release, which summarized the demands being made of the FDA and JUUL Labs.
“Your company’s popular vaping device and its accompanying flavored nicotine cartridges are undermining our nation’s efforts to reduce tobacco use among youth and putting an entire new generation of children at risk of nicotine addiction and other health consequences,” said the letter from the Senators to JUUL Labs’ CEO Kevin Burns.
The tobacco control groups urged the FDA to take the following actions:
Immediately ordering the removal of any Juul flavors, including the popular “mango” and “cool cucumber” flavors, which were introduced after August 8, 2016 without first seeking required FDA review and authorization. Such review is required for new or changed products under the FDA’s 2016 rule extending the agency’s authority to e-cigarettes. According to Juul’s own social media posts, the “mango” and “cool cucumber” flavors were not introduced until 2017
Ordering the removal of Juul-like e-cigarette products that have recently been introduced by other manufacturers without required FDA review
Suspending internet sales of Juul until stronger rules are established to prevent sales to kids and step up enforcement to prevent underage sales by brick-and-mortar retailers
Reversing the FDA’s 2017 decision that allows e-cigarettes that were on the market as of August 8, 2016, to stay on the market until at least 2022 without undergoing review by the FDA. Health groups last month filed suit challenging the FDA’s delay, arguing it is unlawful and harms public health by leaving on the market products that appeal to kids
“If Juul fails to take the steps necessary to curtail youth use before the start of the next school year in fall 2018, the FDA should take strong, additional enforcement action up to and including suspension of Juul sales until it does so,” the letter says.
Amid all the hysteria over JUUL, @AGIowa Tom Miller, whose anti-tobacco cred can’t be questioned, is a rare voice of sanity. https://t.co/J8esqN576g
— Joe Nocera (@NoceraBV) April 18, 2018
But one longtime tobacco control leader isn’t marching in lockstep with the crusaders. Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller, who sits on the Truth Initiative board of directors, issued a statement questioning many of the Truth study’s claims, and urging everyone concerned to slow down and look more closely at what is happening.
“We have enough information to be concerned, but not to make policy decisions,” wrote Miller. “Anecdotal information/stories are never enough to make good policy.”
“The company has achieved remarkable growth among e-cigarette users.” he said. “The current estimate for adult smoking prevalence for 2017 is 14.1 percent. This is the lowest ever recorded and is dropping at an accelerated rate. The most plausible explanation for at least part of this dramatic decline is smokers switching from cigarettes to e-cigarettes, including JUUL.”
JUUL chief executive Kevin Burns seemed conciliatory in his response to the attack. “I share the concerns expressed in this letter about youth access and believe no young person should ever try JUUL,” Burns said in a statement. “I look forward to discussing and working with members of Congress, the FDA and others about how we can make progress on preventing youth from ever using JUUL or other nicotine products.”
Burns, who until recently ran Chobani Yogurt, may not be fully aware of the situation he’s in. His company is threatening two large industries — the cigarette industry, and the tobacco control industry — with possible extinction. And the FDA Center for Tobacco Products is fully funded by tobacco company user fees.
“This needs to be understood in light of the politics of disruptive innovation,” says Amelia Howard. “Vaping solves the problem of smoking, and stands to make cigarettes — and the treatment of tobacco addiction — obsolete. JUUL, as an attractive mass market product, is particularly threatening to existing interests, and a perfect target.”
Burns and JUUL have no friends to throw them a lifeline. The more successful JUUL is at reducing the number of cigarettes sold, the more opposition they’ll face. “Working with” their opponents will be a fruitless task. JUUL needs to steel itself for a fight. And it needs to stop apologizing for doing nothing wrong.
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