Asda Recall Chinese Bottles
|
Re: Asda Recall Chinese Bottles
Before I clicked the link, I thought they were some kind of ceramic vase
|
Re: Asda Recall Chinese Bottles
Quote:
Could have stuck it up before I went shopping at the asda. :) |
Re: Asda Recall Chinese Bottles
There has also been a recall of millions of Chinese manufactured toys as you have probably heard on the news. Dodgy lot these Chinese, they will take our jobs and turn out cheap s**t. They don't know the meaning of Health and Safety.
|
Re: Asda Recall Chinese Bottles
I began checking labels some time ago. If the item is made in China, I won't buy it.
|
Re: Asda Recall Chinese Bottles
they know the meaning of "Health and Safety" now whistler,the factorys closed down n the owners topped himself.;)
|
Re: Asda Recall Chinese Bottles
As I recall the Veterans’ Lapel Badge was made in China and it was sub standard in that it had two dents in the face. I won’t even mention the clasp that was difficult to undo with old arthritic fingers. The fact that in all likelihood it would be old and arthritic fingers trying to affix the badge to a lapel seems to have escaped someone’s notice. In spite of my continued complaints about the badge the procurement office carried on accepting substandard goods from China. A distant friend of mine recently got the lapel badge and it was exactly the same as mine. I guess they were cheaper than if made in the UK.
As for the ‘bottles’. What puzzles me is why it happened. Does no one in the UK inspect the goods as they arrive and before they go on sale? Sorry I forgot – extra profit is god here. Mattel have recalled millions of toys because of the lead in the paint. Meaning that no one checked the first batch. Maybe it was this ubiquitous god of profit that prevented an inspection. |
Re: Asda Recall Chinese Bottles
re. this toy recall for lead painted toys .........I'm more concerned about the affects of Plastics , considering they have only been around for a couple of generations, not really long enough for long term studies on exposure.
How many people can say they know someone personally that has been harmed by lead , seems to me at one time every house in the country had lead water pipes , and I'm sure 90% of males aged over 40 played with lead toy soldiers/cowboys/indians etc. and even inhaled the fumes when melting them down on the gas stove , every plumber in the country whoever soldered a pipe should be sick or simple by now from lead exposure. Have studies been done to find out if we are all walking timebombs ,(apart from the remains of a few dead Romans who ate off lead plates )? seems to me this is a complete over reaction just to sell newspapers :confused: :confused: |
Re: Asda Recall Chinese Bottles
Quote:
Quote:
There is further information at http://www.doh.wa.gov/topics/lead.htm I know of a few people whose illness and eventual death was attributed to lead poisoning. None more so than the guy who got a lead bullet in his head. Health authorities and government scientists have inevitably littered their warnings with cans, mights and maybes, even more so these days. It is very rare to read a health warning that is absolutely positive. Even today many of the warnings on cigarette packets include the word ‘may’. |
Re: Asda Recall Chinese Bottles
seems cheap chinese textiles are now under the microscope for containing dangerous levels of formaldehyde in childrens clothes
FT.com / In depth - Poison pyjamas add to China export scares seems the sensible thing to make sure you give new clothes a good wash before using |
Re: Asda Recall Chinese Bottles
Major western corporations have no sense of loyalty ... all they wish to do is increase their profits, without increasing the quality of their products. The Japanese seem to have a different industrial philosophy ... they increase their profits by manufacturing better stuff. It is not surprising that the top automobile manufacturer is Toyota ... they make damn fine cars at a reasonable price. Western corporations increase their profits, not by making better quality goods but by out-sourcing jobs to areas where wages and safety standards are low. The same thing happened in the shipping industry. Owners register ships in Liberia and Panama. Why?, because ships registered there are not subject to strict safety standards. The globalization of the economy results in crappy products, atrocious working conditions ... near slave labour in some cases. The Americans are actually importing this system into their own country by turning an almost blind eye to illegal immigrants who work for p**s poor wages in rotten conditions.
It's not really the Chinese who are to blame; it's western corporations such as Mattell. |
All times are GMT. The time now is 00:35. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.1
© 2003-2013 AccringtonWeb.com