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  1. #1
    Senior Member BorderLegionnaire's Avatar
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    China Finds Problems With U.S. Soybeans - hmmmm?

    Could China be shifting blame to take the spotlight off them???

    China Finds Problems With U.S. Soybeans

    http://www.foxnews.com/wires/2007Aug22/ ... ts,00.html

    BEIJING — China said Wednesday it had found pesticides, poisonous weeds, and dirt in shipments of imported U.S. soybeans, and a toy industry representative said U.S. manufacturer Mattel Inc. was partly to blame for lead tainting that caused massive toy recalls.

    China has gone on the defensive following discoveries of high levels of chemicals and toxins in a range of Chinese exports from toothpaste and seafood to pet food ingredients and toys. The government has responded by defending its safety standards and highlighting similar problems in other countries.

    China's General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said it has found "numerous quality problems" with soybeans imported from the United States. The quality watchdog said it had found pesticides, poisonous weeds, and dirt in the U.S. exports.

    The American Soybean Association says the beans _ crushed for oil and used as animal feed _ are the biggest single U.S. farm export to China, which has bought billions of dollars worth since the current market year began in September.

    Because a growing number of countries have rejected or recalled its exports, China has been forced to launch a campaign to both reassure its consumers at home and abroad.

    In the latest development, a distributor announced a recall in Australia and New Zealand of Chinese-made blankets found to contain high levels of formaldehyde, a potentially cancer-causing chemical preservative that gives a permanent press effect to clothes.

    Earlier this month, El Segundo, Calif.-based Mattel recalled 19 million Chinese-made items including dolls, cars and action figures around the world. Some were contaminated with lead paint. Others had small magnets that children might swallow.

    Two weeks before that announcement, 967,000 Chinese-made plastic preschool toys from Mattel's Fisher-Price unit were recalled because of possible lead-paint hazards.

    In an interview published Wednesday, Li Zhuoming, executive vice chairman of the Guangdong Provincial Toy Industry Association, said both Chinese manufacturers and American toy giant Mattel are both responsible for the recalls.

    Blame "cannot be pushed to either side," said Li, whose government-backed association is in the southern province of Guangdong, the center of China's massive toy export manufacturing industry.

    The region's exporters stand to lose billions of dollars from canceled orders if consumer confidence continues to decline. Popular Sesame Street, Barbie and Polly Pocket products made in the province were among those recalled.

    "The producers are responsible because they do not have tight controls over purchasing and production," Li was quoted as saying in the state-run Guangzhou Daily newspaper. "But the buyer Mattel cannot evade responsibility."

    Robert Eckert, Mattel's chairman and CEO, last week defended the measures the company has taken to ensure the safety of its toys, saying he was "disappointed in what has occurred and what has transpired."

    But Li said Mattel neglected to "do its job well in quality inspections." He did not give any details or say how the producers did not follow standards.

    Li said profit margins in China's toy industry are low and "it's hard to make money" because of the cost of labor and materials. He warned foreign companies run the risk of getting shoddy products if they demand too low a price from Chinese manufacturers.

    "If you give a high price for purchasing, the factories will use high quality raw materials to produce. But if the price is low, they can only use inferior raw materials," said Li,

    U.S. safety officials have said no injuries had been reported with any of the products and the broad scope was to prevent potential problems.

    Both cases hint at the long and murky supply chain making it difficult to trace the exact origin of components, chemicals and food additives produced by Chinese manufacturers.

    In the Fisher-Price recall _ which included Big Bird and Elmo toys with excessive amounts of lead _ Chinese media have reported the factory used "fake paint" sold by the maker's best friend.

    Cheung Shu-hung, who co-owned Lee Der Industrial Co., committed suicide after the recall.

    Police are investigating Lee Der and Hansheng Wood Products Factory, which made wooden railroad toys and set parts that were recalled by New York-based RC2 Corp. in June, for using "fake plastic pigment." Such pigments are a type of industrial latex used to make surfaces smoother and shinier.

    In another instance, Early Light, a Hong Kong-registered company that makes its toys on the mainland, subcontracted the painting of toy cars to another company, violating Mattel's rules by using paint from an outside source. Some 436,000 "Sarge" cars based on the character from the movie "Cars" were part of the recalls.
    Our country's founders cherished liberty, not democracy.
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  2. #2
    Senior Member florgal's Avatar
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    We need to call it quits with communist countries.

  3. #3
    Senior Member BorderLegionnaire's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by florgal
    We need to call it quits with communist countries.
    I agree!!! But the corporate elites need 'em!!!

    You know cheap slave labor!
    Our country's founders cherished liberty, not democracy.
    -Ron Paul

  4. #4
    Senior Member BorderLegionnaire's Avatar
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    Wal-Mart Says Removed Chinese-Made Dog Treats Over Deadly Ch

    More fine products from our trade partner China!!!

    Wal-Mart Says Removed Chinese-Made Dog Treats Over Deadly Chemical

    http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,294059,00.html

    NEW YORK — Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) said it pulled two Chinese-made dog treats from its shelves nearly a month earlier, and tests now show they had traces of melamine, a chemical found in pet food that was blamed for the deaths of pets and led to a massive recall earlier this year.

    The two types of dog treats — Chicken Jerky Strips manufactured by Import-Pingyang Pet Product Co. and Chicken Jerky manufactured by Shanghai Bestro Trading — were removed from its stores on July 26, Wal-Mart spokeswoman Deisha Galberth said in a statement.

    After 17 sets of tests, "the latest advice from our testing laboratory shows trace levels of melamine," Galberth said.

    The products will not be sold anymore, and a computerized block has been placed on the product at cash registers as an added precaution, Galberth said.

    The Associated Press reported earlier that Wal-Mart had removed those two types of dog treats last month after customers complained that the products had made their pets sick.

    Earlier this year, thousands of people flooded the U.S. Food and Drug Administration with complaints of animals becoming ill or dying after consuming certain pet foods.

    The result was a recall of hundreds of brands of China-made pet food containing wheat gluten found to be tainted with melamine. That was followed by several others ranging from tires and toothpaste to toys and medicines.

    The latest in the line of Chinese product safety scares is recycled chopsticks — a Beijing factory sold up to 100,000 used pairs a day without any form of disinfecting, the Beijing News reported.
    Our country's founders cherished liberty, not democracy.
    -Ron Paul

  5. #5
    Senior Member azwreath's Avatar
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    Boy, things were so much easier and safer when we got everything we needed and wanted from our own country, produced by our own citizens, weren't they?

    What I'd like to know is just how long we've been exposed to tainted products from China and other foreign countries?
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  6. #6
    Senior Member sippy's Avatar
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    China's General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said it has found "numerous quality problems" with soybeans imported from the United States. The quality watchdog said it had found pesticides, poisonous weeds, and dirt in the U.S. exports.
    So is the harvesting of soy beans done by machine or man? If done by man, or more precisely illegal labor, this is just another fine example of the "good quality" work done by illegals.
    "Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the same results is the definition of insanity. " Albert Einstein.

  7. #7
    Senior Member BorderLegionnaire's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by sippy
    China's General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said it has found "numerous quality problems" with soybeans imported from the United States. The quality watchdog said it had found pesticides, poisonous weeds, and dirt in the U.S. exports.
    So is the harvesting of soy beans done by machine or man? If done by man, or more precisely illegal labor, this is just another fine example of the "good quality" work done by illegals.
    I believe soybeans are harvested by combines. But who handles them for shipping I don't know? I'm sure its touched by different hands anyway!
    Our country's founders cherished liberty, not democracy.
    -Ron Paul

  8. #8
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    When the Communists jump in bed with the Nouveaux Capilatists for the benefit of a narrow segment of both societies ... world beware.
    Globalism = bad. Transnational/Multinational organizations suck.

    (All the above IMHO...)
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