Politicians are all over the vaping issue, like packrats on pet food.
The House Oversight and Reform Subcommittee on Economic and Consumer Policy, C‑SPAN explains, held a hearing on the relationship between e‑cigarettes and an outbreak in lung disease. Government experts spoke. There was only one empaneled pro-vaping witness, Vicki Porter, who said that vaping was “a health miracle to me,” since it got her off of smoking tobacco.
Rep. Debbie Wasserman-Shultz (D – Fla.) insisted that the record show that she was not to be trusted, since she merely expressed her own opinion as to the superiority of vaping over smoking, noting that Ms. Porter “is not a public health expert.”
But it was Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D – Mich.) who really came out swinging for the interventionist government. Her main concern, writes Robby Soave at Reason, appeared to be Porter’s direct challenging of “the tortured logic of the Oversight and Reform Subcommittee hearing.”
Rep. Tlaib said she “wanted to know more about you,” to Ms. Porter. “You call yourself a ‘converted conservative,’” Tlaib stuttered, “and a reformed Marxist.
“Are you a conspiracy theorist?”
Wh-what?
Ms. Porter answered reasonably. Then Tlaib questioned her regarding why she had winked at one of her colleagues. Porter said they knew each other.
In the 1960s, the CIA pushed the phrase “conspiracy theorist” as a way to publicly marginalize anyone who questioned official pronouncements on the JFK assassinations and even trickier subjects, like UFOs. Rep. Tlaib is either one of those who bought into the CIA line, or is part of some less-than-transparent agenda.
So, are you a conspiracy theorist?
My answer might have been, not until right about now.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
—
See all recent commentary
(simplified and organized)