PDA

View Full Version : Chinese Toys Deliver Date Rape Drug



LoungeMachine
11-08-2007, 12:14 PM
http://www.news.com/8301-10784_3-9813475-7.html


Toy delivers 'date-rape' drug when ingested
Posted by Michael Tiemann

The CNN article about the Aqua Dots product recall says:

U.S. safety officials have recalled about 4.2 million Chinese-made Aqua Dots bead toys that contain a chemical that has caused some children to vomit and become comatose after swallowing them.

We immediately did our own product recall, removing the unsafe toy from our house last night after our daughter went to bed. But how did this product get into our house in the first place?

The CNN report continued:

Scientists have found the highly popular holiday toy contains a chemical that, once metabolized, converts into the toxic "date rape" drug GHB (gamma-hydroxy butyrate), U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) spokesman Scott Wolfson told CNN.

Children who swallow Aqua Dots "become comatose, develop respiratory depression, or have seizures," the CPSC warns in a statement issued Wednesday.

This is not the kind of "kids and tech" story I ever expected to report, let alone comment on. I say "report" because as of this moment, the news has made it to the financial pages of Yahoo, but nowhere on the front pages of Google News or CNET.

This summer was a litany of news about toy recalls due to lead content, fire risks, and other factors. Products that had been safe or seemed safe for years are clearly becoming unacceptably unsafe, which is a pretty harsh judgment coming from me: I was the one parent in our daughter's class who believed that poison ivy on the school campus should be left in place as a valuable teaching tool.

After this summer's bitter harvest, however, I have been thinking much more carefully about product safety. But I could not imagine that Aqua Dot beads, which look to me like multicolored salmon roe (or some other form of caviar) would be dangerously toxic.

But the problem is even more perplexing than just the pharmacological one. In their never-ending efforts to score political points while avoiding difficult issues, Congress keeps passing "tough on crime" laws.

One particularly bizarre case is that of a substitute teacher who used a poorly maintained computer to send e-mail to her husband, and after returning from the restroom found that malware had caused pornographic pop-ups to litter her screen. The teacher was convicted in January of four felony counts of risking injury to minors and faced 40 years in prison, though she was granted a new trial this summer.

The teacher's testimony that she was a complete "techno-noob" did not exonerate her from the responsiblity of handling a techno-meltdown enabled by a technically incompetent school administration. According to news reports, her lawyers asserted that the pop-ups were a result of spyware and adware on the machine, expired antivirus software, and an expired firewall license.

Might the DEA charge millions of households with crimes for possession of date-rape drugs? Might they pile on charges for making these drugs available to minors? It's impossible to imagine, unless your name is Julie Amero and you are a substitute teacher. Then anything is possible.

The first order of business Congress should address is better safety standards for our toys. But while they are busy with that, we should be more mindful of the ways in which our laws, like hand grenades, can explode and injury anyone in their blast radius.

We have so many ways of criminalizing so many behaviors; I don't think we need many more. We need more focus on using the tools, the science, and the good common sense we have. More criminalization won't fix bad safety protocols, and it may yet ensnare more innocent victims of a system that is badly maintained.

Ellyllions
11-08-2007, 12:17 PM
http://www.stillmadeinusa.com/

No way I'm buying Chinese made goods for Christmas presents this year. I'd have to hang myself if a toy I gave ended up making someone's child sick.

I'll be using the link above among others to buy Christmas presents.

It's out of hand and it's getting more and more dangerous.

LoungeMachine
11-08-2007, 12:23 PM
Just be aware WAR may try and slip one of these into your Egg Nog, dear...

:gulp:

Ellyllions
11-08-2007, 12:26 PM
Why War?

FORD
11-08-2007, 01:45 PM
<object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/mis-DpbUFyY&rel=1"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/mis-DpbUFyY&rel=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object>

WACF
11-08-2007, 01:59 PM
This is getting ridiculous already.

The companies bringing this stuff over need to be held accountable...

Nitro Express
11-08-2007, 04:38 PM
Originally posted by WACF
This is getting ridiculous already.

The companies bringing this stuff over need to be held accountable...

Yes and you can do so by not buying any of it. Kids have too many toys nowdays anyways. We tried to buy all US or Canadian made stuff for Christmas last year. We have all girls and it's hard when American Girl dolls are now made in China. We bought dolls made in a small shop in Utah and yes they were expensive but better quality than American girl.

People just need to stop buying so much mediocre shit and save and buy a quality item of what they want. If we don't buy it, they can't manipulate us.

Nobody is going to regulate shit. The UN wants to reduce the population. What better way than letting dangerouse imported food and toys do us in. Those in power want to kill us. That's why drugs and medicine are becoming unaffordable to everyone except for the rich. They will have their miracle life sustaining drugs and healthcare and the rest of us will die sooner and sooner and more and more. That's the big UN plan and they don't even hide it.

Ellyllions
11-09-2007, 07:33 AM
I honestly think it has more to do with discount retailers like Wal-Mart. They force vendors to sell their products to them for cheap, and after a year or two they force them to go even lower. In turn, the vendors research to find ways to manufacture their products cheaper which leads to sub-standard qualities of materials.

Shopping for the best price doesn't start with the consumer, it starts with the manufacturer, and especially if their being bull-dogged by the largest retailer in the country.

Nickdfresh
11-09-2007, 08:36 AM
Originally posted by Ellyllions
http://www.stillmadeinusa.com/

No way I'm buying Chinese made goods for Christmas presents this year. I'd have to hang myself if a toy I gave ended up making someone's child sick.

I'll be using the link above among others to buy Christmas presents.

It's out of hand and it's getting more and more dangerous.

People at ToysRUs are already training their retail people on identifying which toys are made anywhere BUT China, for people who ask...

WACF
11-09-2007, 11:55 AM
Originally posted by Nickdfresh
People at ToysRUs are already training their retail people on identifying which toys are made anywhere BUT China, for people who ask...


We need more of that...

Nitro Express
11-09-2007, 03:41 PM
Originally posted by Ellyllions
I honestly think it has more to do with discount retailers like Wal-Mart. They force vendors to sell their products to them for cheap, and after a year or two they force them to go even lower. In turn, the vendors research to find ways to manufacture their products cheaper which leads to sub-standard qualities of materials.

Shopping for the best price doesn't start with the consumer, it starts with the manufacturer, and especially if their being bull-dogged by the largest retailer in the country.

The consumer is still boss. If people were smart they wouldn't the the shit period and save the money. Americans are so dumb they buy Chinese made poisonouse shit on credit paying 18% intrest on something at Wal-Mart that costs $12.98. If these people end up slave labor in some FEMA ran camp in the near future they almost fucking deserve it.

Fuedalism is comming back and Aqua Balls and other Wal-Mart shit are poor excuses to get in debt with the fuedal lord.

Ellyllions
11-10-2007, 07:57 AM
Nitro, it's a downhill progression.
This year, things are fine, but as WalMart demands cheaper prices manufacturers seek cheaper resources. In turn, leading to cutting quality and/or trying to sidestep health and environmental rules.

What you buy from Wal-mart today might be ok, but 2 years from now it's not.

The consumer has no way of knowing that until the worst happens.

Sure, we could all turn on big discount retailers right now but it wouldn't change the damage done.

I'm not buying Chinese made goods anymore so shopping at Wal-Mart is mostly a thing of the past. And I believe it's the beginning of a trend.

Baby's On Fire
11-11-2007, 01:17 PM
Originally posted by Ellyllions
I honestly think it has more to do with discount retailers like Wal-Mart. They force vendors to sell their products to them for cheap, and after a year or two they force them to go even lower. In turn, the vendors research to find ways to manufacture their products cheaper which leads to sub-standard qualities of materials.

Shopping for the best price doesn't start with the consumer, it starts with the manufacturer, and especially if their being bull-dogged by the largest retailer in the country.

The answer is right there in your post. Don't buy ANYTHING from Wal-MArt. Period. Not even a pack of bubble gum.

If everyone would stop buying from Wal-Mart and big conglomerates, things would change, and fast.

Baby's On Fire
11-11-2007, 01:20 PM
Originally posted by Ellyllions
Nitro, it's a downhill progression.
This year, things are fine, but as WalMart demands cheaper prices manufacturers seek cheaper resources. In turn, leading to cutting quality and/or trying to sidestep health and environmental rules.

What you buy from Wal-mart today might be ok, but 2 years from now it's not.

The consumer has no way of knowing that until the worst happens.

Sure, we could all turn on big discount retailers right now but it wouldn't change the damage done.

I'm not buying Chinese made goods anymore so shopping at Wal-Mart is mostly a thing of the past. And I believe it's the beginning of a trend.

Things would change almost overnight if the dumbass consumers would stop buying from Wal-Mart.

The public could wipe Wal-Mart off the map in no time flat, and send a clear message to all the other corporate assholes who behave that way.

Everybody who steps foot into a Wal-Mart is equally guilty.

Ellyllions
11-12-2007, 07:58 AM
Hubby and I were saying this very thing this morning. We've got a chance to send a clear message to these big discount retailers and manufacturers and we should.

We should be looking closer at the Chinese culture as it appropriates to their children. I remember back in the early 80's hearing that they're over-population was really getting out of control. It was the first time I'd heard about the government restricting parents to one-child per household and the result of finding girl babies in the waterways. I can't say with certainty as to whether or not this is true, or where I heard it from. I just remember thinking how horrible it was that because they didn't have a boy, they'd drown the baby girl just so they could try again.

But given that, and the fact that they're in the market to be wealthier, and more militarily powerful than the US; is it really smart for us to consume products made there? There are things in this world that we shouldn't ignore. The evil that man is capable of shouldn't completely escape us. It's pretty obvious that they honestly don't give a shit about us so should we really be shopping for toys for our children from them?

If so, why do we tell our kids never to take candy from a stranger?

It's time we made a loud noise and put a stop to this. It'll be better for our own country, and it might put a hurting on all of this overseas slave labor.

LoungeMachine
11-12-2007, 09:38 AM
The only problem is with the customers of Wal-Mart themselves...

Most of us here could / would do just fine without a Wal-Mart to go to, and we might even be able to affect the newer ones that have been put near middle-class neighborhoods...

But remember the old Wal-Mart stores, those that have been there for more than a decade or so, have done 2 things.

One, they've driven out most if not all of the locally owned stores [mom and pops] that those lower-income areas would need to go to now...

Two, the die-hard wal-mart customers, their bread and butter, are so reliant on them now, and so tied in with the whole culture of fast, cheap, convenient, would never listen to, let alone participate in any boycott.

They simply can't anymore. Or wont.

Unfortunately in this America we have now, there will always be a Wal-Mart. [unless of course the supply dries up]

Imagine for a moment, China's reaction to stiffer tariffs.

yow.