(DAY 2) GOOD COP / BAD COP | RegWatch (Live)

Day 2 of the Taxpayers Protection Alliance’s “Good Cop / Bad Cop” counter-conference to COP10 the World Health Organization’s Conference of the Parties to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control happening Feb 5 to Feb 10 in Panama City, Panama.

Guests: Dr. Konstantinos Farsalinos (Greece), Mark Oates (Uk) and David Williams, Martin Cullip (TPA)

Only on RegWatch by RegulatorWatch.com

Live Streamed: Feb 6, 2024
Produced by Brent Stafford

This episode is supported by DEMAND VAPE

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3 COMMENTS

  1. Invention of the E-Cigarette. An early approximation of the current e-cigarette appeared in a U.S. patent application submitted in 1963 by Herbert A. Gilbert and was patented in August 1965 (U.S. Patent No. 3,200,819) (Gilbert 1965) FACTS FACTS FACTS FACTS FACTS!!!!!!!!!!!
    I smoked 43 yrs., quit thanks to Sotero Case in 2009 that stopped the FDA/PHARMA from blocking the importation of this novel device re-invented in China by Hon Lik. I have vaped without a cigarette since 2013. MY HEALTH IMPROVED, I LIVE IN THE BODY THAT I SPEAK OF!

  2. Hope it doesn’t seem like I am spamming. At 51:16, I would like to suggest a money saving plan be set aside for older Americans who succumb to the ravages of smoking related diseases. It almost seems otherwise, they are being blamed for the healthcare financial cri$i$. Relative to the cost of the manufacture of a package of domestic cigarettes @ .26 pr. pk., the taxation is nearly 35 times that amount? Excerpt from google query.
    [How much does it cost to produce one pack of cigarettes?
    According to an annual report from Philip Morris (2012), it costs the company 26 cents to manufacture one pack of Marlboro Gold. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company annual report (2013) shows that it costs them 23 cents to make one pack of Winslow Light cigarettes.] After Master Settlement Agreement, for all 50 States (United), each of the states was granted a huge portion of each and every sale of a pack of cigarettes. The stipulation in the agreement did not ever specify how each state would or SHOULD spend one cent of the the billions of dollars they make annually off of the sale of domestic tobacco cigarettes. Perhaps some new politicians can write new legislation that would require that portions of the taxation monies from the MSA, be set aside for ailing smokers, populations that age, with smoking related ills, and possible more even environmental chemicals from jet trails, or the places they may have been employed over their lifetimes. Even house cleaning supplies. What a mess the healthcosts have become! Unfortunately greed has out-paced those costs.

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