WARNING: This product contains nicotine.

Nicotine is an addictive chemical.

Help Us Improve

How do you think our site and what can we improve? Color, picture, navigation, loading speed, etc..

index_new_18

Consumer Responds to Tobacco Control

03/12/2020

Philippe Poirson has written a strongly worded letter to the Tobacco Control journal regarding last week’s “vile” study. It looked at vapers’ Twitter posts and categorised them as being part of a tobacco industry campaign. The journal has chosen to ignore Philippe and not publish his response – but Planet of the Vapes is reproducing his submission here.

Poirson is an ex-smoker who used vaping to escape from tobacco in 2014. He set up and runs the French language Vapolitique blog and has no financial link of interest to the tobacco industry. Like all vaping advocates, his motivation comes from a desire to spread understanding about alternative nicotine products and to promote tobacco harm reduction.

The recent Bloomberg/CRUK funded study [link] from researchers at the Bath Tobacco Control Research Group claimed: “Individuals and organisations with connections to Philip Morris International used Twitter to push pro-vaping messages.”

Philippe Poirson numbered among those being slurred by the study team in Tobacco Control. He replied as part of the rapid response feature, but the journal has not published the letter:

The toxic mobbing on my free speech about right to harm reduction behind this article

This paper, based on some tweets, is immoral, erroneous and is an attempt to intimidate

volunteer activists for asserting the fundamental right to harm reduction. In the paper

SMKD

researchers vilify at least 44 volunteer vaping advocates for their political opinions. These

volunteers and a tobacco company are baselessly lumped together. This is malicious and

unfounded. By misleading its readers, the paper is protecting the toxic economic interests

that interfered at FCTC COP 8 in October 2018.”

Political surveillance out of control

I am directly affected because I was reported on by the Bath Tobacco Control Research

E-liquids.com

Group for no other reason than my political opinions. Two elements attest to this. First, I

found traces of electronic surveillance left by Ayush Joshi, co-author of this paper.

“Secondly, in an overview of his preliminary findings at the ECToH in Berlin on February 21,

Joshi falsely presented me as a member of a tobacco industry influence network. This pure

slander has damaged my reputation, particularly for my voluntary activities to help people

Vapouround

quit smoking.

“I had alerted the Ethics Committee at the University of Bath, chaired by Prof. C. Eccleston,

to these serious deontological breaches and it is an aberration that the paper was still

published.”

Smoking interference

These serious violations are made even more worrying by Bath TCR’s links with GGTC, an

Titus.One

organisation based at a Thai university. Thailand is governed by a military dictatorship and

the Tobacco Authority of Thailand is a state-owned tobacco monopoly.

“Also deeply concerning is the American billionaire Michael Bloomberg’s $20m funding for

Bath TCR. Bloomberg’s business ties with India, the world’s second-largest tobacco

producer where the government owns 28% of the tobacco company ITC, are well known.

TMBNotes

Bloomberg’s methods of censorship and harassment to privilege his business relationships

are also well known. However, Bloomberg’s own country has not ratified the FCTC4.

“Through crude amalgamation this article tries to hide the real interference from the major

tobacco nations at COP8, amongst them India and Thailand, who aggressively defended

their interests as tobacco producers and sellers against vaping there.

Teslacigs

“Publishing a paper based on what is clearly out-of-control surveillance, intended to smear

citizens defending the right to protect their own personal integrity with harm reduction is

ethically vile. Politically, this paper sides with the tobacco industry, whose victims number

nearly one million in India and more than 80,000 in Thailand each year. Both countries have

banned vaping to protect their cigarette trade.”


News from: https://www.planetofthevapes.co.uk/news/vaping-news/2020-11-30_consumer-responds-to-tobacco-control.html