Author Topic: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves  (Read 1367 times)

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Lanya

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kimba1

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #1 on: August 22, 2007, 07:49:10 PM »
links not working

Lanya

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #2 on: August 22, 2007, 08:19:34 PM »
Here's the story:
Wal-Mart: Dog treats tainted

    August 22, 2007

A
www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-nat_treats_22aug22,1,5825040.story
LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS - Tests of two Chinese brands of dog treats sold at Wal-Mart stores found traces of melamine, a chemical agent that led to a huge pet food recall in March, a spokeswoman said Tuesday.

Wal-Mart quietly stopped selling Chicken Jerky Strips from Import-Pingyang Pet Product Co. and Chicken Jerky from Shanghai Bestro Trading in July after customers said the products sickened their pets. A company spokeswoman said 17 sets of tests done on the products found melamine, an ingredient in plastics.

Wal-Mart has urged customers who bought the products to return them to the nearest store for a refund.
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BT

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #3 on: August 22, 2007, 10:05:55 PM »
China has some serious quality control issues.

yellow_crane

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #4 on: August 22, 2007, 10:30:45 PM »
China has some serious quality control issues.


I heard Bill Mahr say more than once that China makes plywood for America that it does not allow in its country's borders because of the level of toxicity in the wood.

So, in this case, who is in charge of quality control?

Many times, American corporations get the products made overseas not only because of the cheap labor but also to escape the cost incurred by the restrictions here. 

And one wonders why one finds laughable the notion proffered by Neocons and Randlanders alike--complete destruction of governmental restrictions.  What they always leave out is the factor concerning human decency.



kimba1

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #5 on: August 23, 2007, 12:29:09 AM »
as I mentioned awhile back I eat this very popular dried fruit called moy
I recently offered it to my brother but he was skeptical of it
to ease him I told him it was made in china
for some reason that didn`t work.
moy done right give people siezures
I get one everytime I eat one
good stuff

BT

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #6 on: August 23, 2007, 12:49:20 AM »
Crane,

I doubt Fisher Price specified lead paint in its toys. Their brand name is worth far more than any particular toy it sells.

China has quality control problems and unless that is addressed it will come back to haunt them.




Henny

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China warns on U.S. soy as Chinese goods under scrutiny
« Reply #7 on: August 23, 2007, 08:15:20 AM »
And in the meantime, tit for tat...

China warns on U.S. soy as Chinese goods under scrutiny
Wed Aug 22, 2007 7:24AM EDT
BEIJING (Reuters) - China, the world's top soy importer, has accused the United States of exporting substandard soybeans even as its own exports come under growing scrutiny abroad over safety concerns.

"Recently, supervision bodies have found numerous quality problems in soybeans imported from the United States," the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said on its Web site (www.aqsiq.gov.cn) on Wednesday.

Harmful weeds and contaminated dirt had been found among the beans, which could threaten China's agricultural and forestry production and ecological safety, the quality watchdog said.

As an example, it said, a U.S. soy cargo in February was found to contain red beans and two types of pesticides that constituted a "great threat" to the safety of Chinese consumers.

China will strengthen its supervision over soybean imports to ensure the quality and safety of the beans, the quarantine authorities said.

The note sent shivers through the Chinese soy industry, which lost hundreds of millions of dollars in 2004 when the quarantine authorities turned down many arriving soy cargoes from Brazil because of what they said were quality problems.

Still, many industry officials said it was unlikely to have a major impact on Chinese soy imports, especially as Beijing is already worried about inflation due to high food prices and possible reductions in the country's 2007 crop, including soy.

Industry officials saw the move as an attempt by China to make a diplomatic point by noting that U.S. products also have quality problems. That view seemed supported by the fact that China highlighted one problem cargo that had arrived back in February, while more than a hundred U.S. cargoes have arrived since.

Official data showed China imported 16.88 million tonnes of soybeans during the first seven months of this year, including 7.84 million tonnes from the United States.

China has been criticized for safety lapses involving food, drugs and other exports ranging from toys and clothes to toothpaste. Officials have been quick to say that the vast majority of the country's exports meet standards.

"They (Chinese government officials) are just scrambling around to find some quality problems from shipments from the U.S. to balance the thing out," said Phillip Laney, China country director from the American Soybean Association, in Beijing.

"This is nothing new. These things happen occasionally, sometimes from the U.S., sometimes from South America. I don't think it should have any impact on the trade," he told Reuters.

A senior trader at a major international grains house agreed, saying: "It is in the interest of China not to make life difficult because grains and oils prices now are very high in China. We cannot afford to have import disruptions."

Still he added: "We are watching very closely. This is a card China can play. We are watching this very closely."

Nearly 20 percent of China's farmland has been hit by drought or flood so far this year, sparking fears the country's grains crop may drop for the first time in three years, triggering further price increases and higher inflation.

(Additional reporting by Nao Nakanishi in Hong Kong)


Amianthus

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #8 on: August 23, 2007, 11:08:50 AM »
Yeah, and the first time they found melamine in Chinese products a couple months ago, China banned US beef. Tit for tat.
Do not anticipate trouble, or worry about what may never happen. Keep in the sunlight. (Benjamin Franklin)

yellow_crane

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #9 on: August 23, 2007, 09:50:32 PM »
Crane,

I doubt Fisher Price specified lead paint in its toys. Their brand name is worth far more than any particular toy it sells.

China has quality control problems and unless that is addressed it will come back to haunt them.






People who inspect paint for levels of lead wear white coats, have chemistry sets, and make NO decisions about the products.   They simply measure.

If a corporation here issues products that contain high levels of toxicity, do they get to point downstairs and out by the tool shed to the quality control room, thereby escaping responsibility for peddling toxic products?

If a company in that corporation sits in China, they get to point to the whole of China as the culprit.  The corporations goes over, sets up, and hires the cheapest labor possible.  Is that cheap labor also a failure of responsible quality control?

If a corporation's company, not here but over there, issues lead paint contaminanted products, do they get to point to the whole of China, as a way to avoid responsibility for product failure?

There is bad paint in the mattel factory in China; must be the coolies snuck in and somehow polluted the corporate product.

Just another issue wherein business, who always professes to be able to monitor themselves better than the government, eventually prove that, given no restrictions, there is no monitoring. 

Must be a bottom line thing.

The lead paint on toys from a corporate factory in China is due to corporate malfeasance, and not a matter of national failure on the part of China.

BT

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #10 on: August 23, 2007, 10:15:37 PM »
Quote
The lead paint on toys from a corporate factory in China is due to corporate malfeasance, and not a matter of national failure on the part of China.

I never made that claim. But when the owner of the factory in China that made the faulty Mattel products commits suicide methinks that decisions he made were onerous enough for him to do himself in.

However the economy in China is state controlled, to a far greater extent than the rest of the capitalist world.
Perhaps they need their own Upton Sinclair. Otherwise made in China will become a stigma.

And just as the Japanese worked decades to overcome the perception that "made in japan" meant cheap and shoddy the Chinese need to do that same hard work. Especially when the products they make and are assumed to be safe are just the opposite.



 



crocat

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #11 on: August 24, 2007, 10:37:55 PM »
I have been reading several articles lately about China and it's quality control.

Someplace I read that traffic cops are very short lived because of the terrible air quality.

That big shot fell on his sword regarding the toy recall and then it was exposed that the working conditions in the factories was nothing short of inhumane.

They have stopped many from driving while they try to clean the air ready for the games.

The cough syrup was killing kids

The pet food is killing animals.

and soon they will be running the world.

Scary

kimba1

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #12 on: August 25, 2007, 12:05:25 AM »
and soon they will be running the world

they were

but now it`s been put on hold

kinda hard to run the world if nobody is buying your stuff(both meanings)

Plane

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #13 on: August 25, 2007, 08:02:19 PM »
Quote
The lead paint on toys from a corporate factory in China is due to corporate malfeasance, and not a matter of national failure on the part of China.

I never made that claim. But when the owner of the factory in China that made the faulty Mattel products commits suicide methinks that decisions he made were onerous enough for him to do himself in.

However the economy in China is state controlled, to a far greater extent than the rest of the capitalist world.
Perhaps they need their own Upton Sinclair. Otherwise made in China will become a stigma.

And just as the Japanese worked decades to overcome the perception that "made in japan" meant cheap and shoddy the Chinese need to do that same hard work. Especially when the products they make and are assumed to be safe are just the opposite.



 





I am glad you mentioned Upton Sinclaire , was the "Jungle" good for the US?

I think it was , but one would have to be Upton Sinclaire and Chineese at once in China to write a "Jungle " there and this may not be possible.

Henny

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Re: WalMart pulls tainted dog treats from shelves
« Reply #14 on: August 27, 2007, 09:02:46 AM »
Someplace I read that traffic cops are very short lived because of the terrible air quality.

Interesting. And believable, too. I'm now working in the aluminum industry. When analyzing our cost per lb to produce and comparing it to China's cost per lb, I've found that it is impossible for America to compete with Chinese aluminum. They have no pollution standards in their smelting factories, thus minimizing their overhead costs. This is just one industry sector - imagine the damage being done by all the others, combined.