The Food and Drug Administration has significantly altered its stance on public health safeguards, easing restrictions on unauthorized vaping products and reversing a proposed ban on minors using tanning beds.
The Crown's New Impositions: When Public Health Becomes a Matter of Royal Prerogative
The Food and Drug Administration has significantly altered its stance on public health safeguards, easing restrictions on unauthorized vaping products and reversing a proposed ban on minors using tanning beds.
Why it matters: The administrative maneuvering on vaping and tanning beds represents more than a routine policy adjustment; it is an unsettling echo of historical grievances where central authority, under the guise of "regulations," imposed burdens upon the populace. Much as in a previous age, the rationale of "consumer access and choice" or a "lack of resources" now serves as the convenient, respectable nomenclature under which new forms of public detriment are not merely permitted, but subtly sanctioned. It is a testament to the enduring wisdom that "names will not change the nature of things." This pattern of seemingly minor concessions, driven by external pressures rather than scientific consensus, risks eroding the foundational trust in regulatory institutions designed to protect collective well-being. When the body entrusted with safeguarding health prioritizes expediency or market forces over established risks, particularly for vulnerable populations, it sets a dangerous precedent, inviting the very "new servitude" that arises when the "most watchful attention" is allowed to wane.
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