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Written by Stumo
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Wednesday, 05 September 2007 |
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Mattel's third recall
this summer for Chinese made toys with lead paint. (Yawn).
A locomotive and Barbie accessories. 773,900 toys. Mattel's Summer '07
Recall Trilogy. Memo to Mattel's procurement office: "Is
this stuff really so cheap now?"
And the China government is inviting foreign journalists to to on factory tours
to show what a good job they do. The catch(es)? You can't
visit plants tainted by recalls. And factory executives can't
talk about problems at competitor companies.
A little dark humor is good for the soul: Bill Maher commented on China toys on August 24:
New Rule: If you were surprised that the Chinese don't care about
toy safety, then the child who needs protecting is you. Over the last
couple of months, American consumers have been learning a shocking
lesson about supply and demand: if you demand products that don't cost
anything, people will make them out of poison, mud and shit. Now, since
April, approximately 17 million toys in the United States, all of them
made in China, have been recalled. Which is amazing considering that no
one in the Department of Justice can recall a thing. Okay.
Now, believe me, I was devastated when Mattel recalled almost
everything in my Barbie Dream Closet. Although I had suspected
something when Ken discovered a lump on his testicle.
Until recently, I never even worried about being harmed by the Chinese.
Unless they were in the left-hand turn lane. I kid. I love the...
But then we found out that their dog food was deadly and that they were
making toothpaste out of antifreeze, and that the Number 62A at the
Szechuan Palace is Beef with Bronchitis. They're the Chinese. They
don't care if your precious little Britney sucks a little lead. Because
in China, their kids aren't playing with the toys. They're the ones in
the factory all day making them.
Now, I know you're saying, "But, Bill, I don't have time to ponder
whether these $12 jeans are the product of child labor. I just know I'm
an American on a budget and our lifestyle is a blessed one. And I want
to look nice while I'm standing in line for my iPhone."
But, there is something to be said for thinking about why these
bargains are such bargains. Wal-Mart is the most American thing in the
universe, but all it sells is crap from China. Wal-Mart wouldn't exist
without the American consumers' endless thirst for the cheapest stuff
China has to offer. Like $30 DVD players and Jackie Chan.Yeah, you're
right, it was a great movie.
Anyway...in America, there is nothing more sacred than a bargain... And
Jackie Chan. And that even includes the war. Yeah, there's too much
lead in the kids' toys, but not nearly enough on the Humvees in Iraq.
"Let's have a war and cut taxes; what could go wrong?" "Let's give
mortgages to the homeless. Sounds like a plan." "Let's buy toys from a
Communist police state. You just know they'll put in a little extra
love."
Speaking of which, you know why today's modern Chinese capitalist puts
lead in the paint that goes on toys? Because it makes colors brighter.
You've got to love America, a country that's literally being killed by
the stuff that makes objects shiny.
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In the news
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CPA
holds the best seminars on trade, the CPA Issues Forums. Trust me. We
do. Charles Blum of IAS Group handles this part of CPA's sprawling
multinational operations.
The next CPA Issues Forum will be timely during this presidential
transition process, entitled the "2009 Fair Trade Agenda." Chris
Slevin, trade staffer for Senator Sherrod Brown will present. You are
guaranteed to know all details of what will happen in 2009 on trade
policy. Money back satisfaction guarantee. (Send all claims for your
money back, if you are dissatisfied, to our Marakesh office).
Save the date - December 17, 2008. Attend if you are in DC.
****
CPA's Eleventh Issues Forum
TOPIC: 2009 Fair Trade Agenda
SPEAKERS: Chris Slevin
Legislative Assistant to Sen. Sherrod Brown
National Co-Chair, Obama for President; former
TIME: Wednesday, December 17
10:30 until Noon
PLACE: Offices of Wiley Rein LLP
1776 K Street, NW (Room A/B, Main Conference Center)
Washington, DC
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