Melania Trump has grabbed vaping by the Juuls. On Wednesday the Truth Initiative gathered a sampling of teen vape quitters in the White House’s Blue Room to discuss their experiences and how and why they quit. They met with the first lady and two other adults, person of interest Kellyanne Conway and Alex Azar, moderator and health and human services secretary.

The students sat far away from the listeners. They were leaving a few yards for the Holy Spirit, I suppose, or perhaps the camera’s vantage. Conway started off the chat by telling a little story she heard through a friend of a friend named Meme Internet, probably, saying, “A friend of a friend’s child said, ‘In my school the high schoolers say: Who thought to put toilets and sinks in the vaping room?’ How fascinating.”

Trump made meaningful eye contact and asked clarifying questions as the kids shared their stories with her, prompted by Azar. “How did you feel when you were vaping?” Trump asked one boy who said he started vaping when he was 12. He said it made him feel “cool” and like he was “going against the rules.” The ghost of Nancy Reagan smiled down upon them all, blessing this new war on a new-ish drug, which is in some ways like the old war, one we definitely won once and for all, in a good way.

“It’s important. We need to be proactive before this gets out of control,” she said, noting with approval how “some stores” obscure vaping products. It is great. We do need to be proactive. Vaping is extremely silly, and it’s extremely serious. Melania Trump is not wrong.

For all the hemming and hawing over developing her childhood “wellness” program, Be Best, the tightly maintained and publicized schedule would suggest the First Lady is making up for lost time. Besides holding a vape chat, she spent some time in Wyoming recently, rafting down a river, meeting a bunch of Boy Scouts, and photo-op-ing in front of an antler arch—all in an effort to bring attention to getting outdoors for one’s health. Once home on Monday, she visited the Drug Enforcement Administration headquarters to talk about drug abuse and the dangers of the drug trade. The following day she shoveled some dirt where a White House tennis pavilion will go.