Vaping carries long-term risk of vaporisation


USERS of vapour cigarettes have a significant chance of being vapourised themselves, research has shown.



Tick, tick, tick, tick, boom


Electrical feedback causes users to become negatively charged over time, resulting in a short circuit which completely vapourises the body and leaves only a pair of smoking shoes.
Joanna Kramer of Blackpool said: “One minute my husband was sucking on his stupid E-cigarette, the next moment there was a blinding flash and he was nothing but a dissipating column of ions.
“If I’d known this would happen I would have kept him on the fags. At least with cancer you get a few months’ warning.”
Similar events are being reported around the country, with taxis suddenly left driverless and nightclub doors unmanned as vapers vanish, leaving only the haunting odour of liquorice, vanilla or Hawaiian Fruit Punch on the wind.
Scientist Dr Helen Archer said: “The science of vaping is largely unexplored because there’s no funding interest in how the underclass kill themselves.
“Given what we know, it’s possible that if two charged vapers came into physical contact the resulting implosion would probably destroy a city the size of, and ideally the actual city of, Birmingham.
“There’s little chance of that, however, because vapers are solitary people who prefer the narcotic kiss of machine-delivered nicotine to the touch of a human.”