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.

  • @diffusive
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    014 hours ago

    If flavors don’t incentive addition, why do you think manufacturers are pushing back? Why there is a black market?

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
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      9 hours ago

      Because people enjoy flavors other than tobacco or menthol, and manufacturers will make more money if people have more choices.

      It would be like the government saying bakeries can only use chocolate and vanilla as flavors.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      -110 hours ago

      Because flavors are a potential (idk i don’t vape) way of differentiating brands.

      I am not saying these companies aren’t doing it for the addiction primarily, but there are non evil reasons that could be applied if these were food/beverage companies.