QUOTE(fatboythin @ Jul 2 2015, 03:55 PM)
Instead of banning, I presume they will come up with proper regulations and begin taxing all e-cig related products. In a way, this could be a good thing because:
1) The tax from e-cigs allows the government to make some money from it, instead of introducing a blanket ban and losing out in taxes
2) Regulation comes at a good time as frankly, no one knows what ingredients local brewers use in their juices and in what conditions the juices are brewed at (cleanliness, safety, R&D on side effects of certain ingredients)
3) As e-cigs will then no longer be a grey market, there will be a proper channel for disseminating information on e-cigs instead of relying merely on word of mouth. Eg; "My friend say you must try Nickel build at 0.01ohm, best cLoUdZZ!" without ensuring the friend he's talking to has a TC mod and battery rated to safely sub-ohm.
4) People will stop sharing annoying fake news about the dangers of e-cigs exploding in your face once they know that the government actually regulates it and it is safe (minus cases of user error and ignorance)
Just my 2 cents

What make you think that Malaysia won't ban vape when Australia, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Hong Kong, Mexico, Panama, Singapore, UAE & etc had banned the sales of e-cig ??
Are these country government not smart enough to make money from vape, instead of introducing a blanket ban and losing out on taxes ???
??