Author Topic: STuff and Food Made in China  (Read 3283 times)

Butterbean

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STuff and Food Made in China
« on: November 24, 2010, 07:15:31 AM »
Are they doing this stuff on purpose?

Mellamine in the dog food
Lead and cadmium in childrens toys and drinking glasses
etc etc
Also apparently pine nuts from there leave a metallic aftertaste in your mouth...who knows what they are putting in there

I went through my coffee mugs and pans and threw away those made in China.  Put some smelly Christmas decorations outside.  Wonder about clothing made there.

R

Princess L

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Re: STuff and Food Made in China
« Reply #1 on: November 24, 2010, 07:46:25 AM »
Are they doing this stuff on purpose?

Mellamine in the dog food
Lead and cadmium in childrens toys and drinking glasses
etc etc
Also apparently pine nuts from there leave a metallic aftertaste in your mouth...who knows what they are putting in there

I went through my coffee mugs and pans and threw away those made in China.  Put some smelly Christmas decorations outside.  Wonder about clothing made there.



Bastards  >:(

I check everything for the dogs before giving it to them, but I guess I'm not as careful  with other stuff.  Never thought to look at pine nuts (which I only use for pesto which is rare)
:

Migs

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Re: STuff and Food Made in China
« Reply #2 on: November 24, 2010, 06:09:27 PM »
pine nuts are good in stuffings and bread.  even used them in cookies before. 

w8m8

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Re: STuff and Food Made in China
« Reply #3 on: November 25, 2010, 04:24:15 AM »
It's been going on for years .. I find it suspect that it can't be solved .. but this old article says only 1% of food products are checked .. so how much more is sneaking in ?

Quote
While Americans are still recovering from a scandal over poison pet foods imported from China, FDA inspectors report tainted food imports intended for American humans are being rejected with increasing frequency because they are filthy, are contaminated with pesticides and tainted with carcinogens, bacteria and banned drugs.
Last month, like most months, China topped the list of countries whose products were refused by the FDA – and that list includes many countries, including Mexico and Canada, who export far more food products to the U.S. than China.

Some 257 refusals of Chinese products were recorded in April. By comparison, only 140 were from Mexico and only 23 from Canada.

Refused by the FDA in April because they were "filthy":

salted bean curd cubes in brine with chili and sesame oil
dried apple
dried peach
dried pear
dried round bean curd
dried mushroom
olives
frozen bay scallops
frozen Pacific cod
sardines
frozen seafood mix
fermented bean curd
Among the foods rejected because they were contaminated with pesticides:

frozen eel
ginseng
frozen red raspberry crumble
mushrooms
Frozen catfish was stopped because it was laced with banned antibiotics. Scallops and sardines were turned away because they were coated with putrefying bacteria.

Toothbrushes were rejected last month because they were improperly labeled. And last week the FDA found Chinese toothpaste contaminated with a chemical used in antifreeze – the same chemical that killed people in Panama last year when it turned up in cough syrup.

Just three days ago, the U.S. warned consumers not to buy or eat imported fish labeled as monkfish, which actually may be puffer fish, containing a potentially deadly toxin called tetrodotoxin. Two people in the Chicago area became ill after consuming homemade soup containing the fish. One was hospitalized due to severe illness.

The FDA is also on the lookout for vegetable proteins contaminated with melamine – the chemical that killed American cats and dogs when it was imported from China in pet food.

In the past year, the FDA rejected more than twice as many food shipments from China as from all other countries combined.

Most times reason listed is simply "filthy," the official term used when inspectors smell decomposition or gross contamination of food.

Officials say FDA inspectors examine only a tiny percentage of the food imported from foreign countries – about 1 percent -- meaning most of the contaminated products make it inside the country and to the shelves of retailers.


Butterbean

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Re: STuff and Food Made in China
« Reply #4 on: November 25, 2010, 08:40:12 AM »
It's been going on for years .. I find it suspect that it can't be solved .. but this old article says only 1% of food products are checked .. so how much more is sneaking in ?



 :P

I'm going to try not to buy anything from there.  It's very difficult though...  I wonder if there have ever been reports about clothing from there. 
R

Montague

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Re: STuff and Food Made in China
« Reply #5 on: November 25, 2010, 05:42:07 PM »
I wonder if there have ever been reports about clothing from there. 


In 2007, the New Zealand govt. issued a recall of blankets made in China based on findings that there were excessive levels of formaldehyde found in the clothing - up to 900x the amount allowed by law.

source: http://babyclothes.about.com/od/frequentlyaskedquestions/f/BabyClthsChina.htm




Butterbean

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Re: STuff and Food Made in China
« Reply #6 on: November 29, 2010, 06:43:11 AM »

In 2007, the New Zealand govt. issued a recall of blankets made in China based on findings that there were excessive levels of formaldehyde found in the clothing - up to 900x the amount allowed by law.

source: http://babyclothes.about.com/od/frequentlyaskedquestions/f/BabyClthsChina.htm



:-[Are they purposely putting this stuff in these products?  
R

Butterbean

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Re: STuff and Food Made in China
« Reply #7 on: November 29, 2010, 06:52:33 AM »

In looking for baby clothes articles I came across this one from 2007

Toxic Toothpaste Made in China Is Found in U.S.
By WALT BOGDANICH
Published: June 2, 2007
Consumers were advised yesterday to discard all toothpaste made in China after federal health officials said they found Chinese-made toothpaste containing a poison used in some antifreeze in three locations: Miami, the Port of Los Angeles and Puerto Rico.

Although there are no reports of anyone being harmed by the toothpaste, the Food and Drug Administration warned that the Chinese products had a “low but meaningful risk of toxicity and injury” to children and people with kidney or liver disease.

The United States is the seventh country to find tainted Chinese toothpaste within its borders in recent weeks.

Agency officials said they found toothpaste containing a small amount of diethylene glycol, a sweet, syrupy poison, at a Dollar Plus retail store in Miami, sold under the brand name ShiR Fresh Mint Fluoride Paste. The F.D.A. also identified nine other brands of Chinese toothpaste that contain diethylene glycol, some with concentrations of 3 percent to 4 percent.

Previously, only a few brands had been identified by health officials around the world as containing diethylene glycol and all of them listed the chemical on the label.

But diethylene glycol was not listed on the label of the toothpaste found in the Miami store. Its presence was detected only because the F.D.A. began testing imported Chinese toothpaste last month. That precaution was prompted by the discovery in Latin America of tens of thousands of tubes of tainted toothpaste made in China.

Over the years, counterfeiters have found it profitable to substitute diethylene glycol for its chemical cousin, glycerin, which is usually more expensive. Glycerin is a safe additive commonly found in food, drugs and household products. In toothpaste, glycerin is used as a thickening agent.

Chinese regulators said Thursday that their investigation of toothpaste manufacturers there had found they had done nothing wrong. Chinese officials also said that while small amounts of diethylene glycol could be safely used in toothpaste, new controls would be imposed on its use in toothpaste.

The F.D.A. said diethylene glycol in any amount was not suitable for use in toothpaste.

The agency said two Chinese companies, Goldcredit International Trading and the Suzhou City Jinmao Daily Chemicals Company, made the tainted brands found in the United States.

In a statement yesterday, federal health officials called diethylene-glycol poisoning “an important public safety issue.” The Panamanian government last year inadvertently mixed the poison made in China into 260,000 bottles of cold medicine, killing at least 100 people, prosecutors there said.

In that case, Chinese regulators acknowledged on Thursday that two companies in China had “engaged in some misconduct” in the way they labeled and sold the diethylene glycol, but they said a Panamanian importer bore most of the blame.

Last month, after publicity over the poisoning deaths from the cold medicine, a consumer in Panama noticed that toothpaste in a store listed diethylene glycol as an ingredient and notified the authorities. Eventually it was traced to China, and since then countries around the world have been on the lookout for the product.

In addition to the United States and Panama, tainted toothpaste has been found in Australia, the Dominican Republic, Costa Rica, Honduras and Nicaragua.

Chinese exports of toothpaste to the United States account for $3.3 million out of a $2 billion-dollar market in America, F.D.A. officials said. “The scope of this is fairly small when you look at all the toothpaste that is consumed in the U.S.,” Doug Arbesfeld, an agency spokesman, said.

The agency said Chinese-made brands with diethylene glycol were typically sold at low-cost, “bargain” retail outlets. A man answering the phone at the Dollar Plus store in Miami, identified by federal officials as selling the Chinese toothpaste, said he did not want to be interviewed because his English was poor. The man, who did not give his name, said federal inspectors came to his store yesterday.

Mr. Arbesfeld said that six tubes were confiscated there and that several more were found at the store’s distributor. Those tubes were destroyed. F.D.A. officials also said they had confiscated several brands of toothpaste at the Port of Los Angeles and at a retail store in Puerto Rico.

The agency said toothpaste containing diethylene glycol was sold under the names Cooldent Fluoride, Cooldent Spearmint, Cooldent ICE, Dr. Cool, Superdent, Clean Rite, Oralmax Extreme, Oral Bright, Bright Max, and ShiR Fresh Mint.

R

Montague

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Re: STuff and Food Made in China
« Reply #8 on: November 29, 2010, 05:39:44 PM »
:-[Are they purposely putting this stuff in these products?  


Is there any indication that it's accidental?


loco

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Re: STuff and Food Made in China
« Reply #9 on: November 30, 2010, 07:51:09 AM »
From what I've read, since China has slowly gone from an very strict Communist, atheist nation to a more relaxed, Capitalist(still atheist) nation,  Chinese business men are becoming very greedy and corrupt.  In order to produce extremely cheap products, they cut corners and replace basic ingredients and materials with toxic, poisonous and radioactive ingredients and materials.

Montague

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Re: STuff and Food Made in China
« Reply #10 on: November 30, 2010, 06:52:08 PM »
:-[Are they purposely putting this stuff in these products? 

From what I've read, since China has slowly gone from an very strict Communist, atheist nation to a more relaxed, Capitalist(still atheist) nation,  Chinese business men are becoming very greedy and corrupt.  In order to produce extremely cheap products, they cut corners and replace basic ingredients and materials with toxic, poisonous and radioactive ingredients and materials.


Regardless of the motive(s), the pattern and volume certainly negate the notion that it's "accidental."