imports

Buy Your Giant Snakes While They're Still Affordable

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(Photo: KhayaL)

Wired reports that the government is considering a ban on the import of Burmese pythons and eight other "injurious species" of snake, because loser pet owners in Florida keep releasing them into the wild where they breed and take over. If enacted, the ban would only affect imports, not sales by breeders in the US, but prices will probably shoot up. More Â»

RC2 Agrees To Pay $1.25 Million Over Lead Toys

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(Photo: Lee Jordan)

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has just worked out another penalty settlement with a toy company over those lead-tainted toys that graced shelves from 2005 to 2007. Reuters says RC2 will pay a $1.25 million civil penalty to resolve allegations that it "imported and sold Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway toys with paints and surface coatings that contained lead levels above legal limits." About two years ago, RC2 settled a class-action lawsuit over the same toys. More Â»

Watch Out For Fire Hazardy Knock-Off Christmas Lights

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(Photo: telethon)

CBS's The Early Show aired a segment last Friday about counterfeit holiday lights and extension cords, mostly from China and mostly available at dollar stores, that can cause fires. The problem is that the manufacturers use shoddy materials, and sometimes even fake UL stickers, to give the impression that they're following safety guidelines. You find out they're not when your tree goes up in flames. More Â»

Gibson CEO Takes Leave Of Absence From Rainforest Group While Feds Investigate Imported Wood

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When agents raided Gibson Guitar's manufacturing facility earlier this week, some articles pointed out that the company's CEO Henry Juszkiewicz was on the board of the Rainforest Alliance, a group that certifies businesses to sell their goods under an environmentally sustainable label. Now the group has postponed its annual certification of Gibson Guitars, and Juszkiewicz is temporarily stepping down from the board.  More Â»

Feds Raid Gibson Guitars

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Yesterday, US Fish & Wildlife Services agents issued a search warrant on Gibson Guitars' manufacturing plant in Nashville, TN. The Nashville Post writes that they "seized wood, guitars, computers and boxes of files from Gibson Guitar's Massman Road manufacturing facility."  More Â»

U.S. Balks At Prospect Of Imported Chinese Chickens

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China is itching to sell their processed chickens directly to the U.S. market, an idea that doesn't exactly thrill our regulators or representatives. Congress banned the import of processed Chinese chickens in 2007, ruffling Beijing's feathers to the point where they're now considering a retaliatory ban on U.S. chickens. Since we're in a recession and Congress doesn't want domestic chicken exporters to lose over a half-billion dollars next year, they may let the Chinese chickens come here to roost.  More Â»

Mattel Will Pay $2.3 Million Penalty For All Those Lead Toys

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Remember back when lead toys were all the rage? Oh, those dangerous days, when you couldn't lick a Dora the Explorer doll without fear of memory loss! Well, Mattel and the Consumer Prouct Safety Commission (CPSC) have reached an agreement on how much Mattel should pay for importing toys that exceeded U.S. lead safety guidelines, and the amount is $2.3 million. Maybe now the CPSC can use some of that money to grease the DC wheels and get their new chair nominee confirmedMore Â»

Use Free Trade To Promote Food Safety

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National Journal has an interesting article about the intersection of free trade and globalization with increased food safety abroad and at home. Rather than reject shipments of Chinese fish for being raised in disgusting environments, the US should require trading partners to set and enforce their own strict food safety standards and use globalization as a way to promote better standards worldwide, instead of a race to the bottom.  More Â»

Who's Watching Our Nation's Honey Imports? Pretty Much No One

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The Seattle P.I. reports that "two-thirds of the honey Americans consume is imported and almost half of that, regardless of what's on the label, comes from China." The first problem with that is some Chinese honey is "tainted with banned antibiotics" such as ciprofloxacin and chloramphenicol. The second problem, according to U.S. honey producers who are upset about the lack of oversight, is that whenever contaminated honey is discovered, many companies just sent it back to the importer and never tell the FDA—which means it can be resold elsewhere, including to other U.S. packers.  More Â»

If You Can't Find That DVD Set Anywhere Else, Maybe It's Pirated

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Phil found out that you don't order DVDs from websites that look like this, or that offer sets that aren't for sale elsehwere. Now his wife is the proud owner of some homemade discs with low-quality TV footage of the series and a "TBS" bug in the corner.  More Â»

Welcome To The Island Of Misfit Luxury Imports...

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If you're looking for a photograph to illustrate how our economy has changed over the past few months, take a look at this. No, that's not a parking lot in a town where everyone has the same taste. It's the Port of Long Beach, where "thousands of cars worth tens of millions of dollars are being warehoused," unwanted by the dealers who used to sell them. They're imports -- Mercedes-Benz, Toyota, and Nissan orphans.   More Â»

Video: Turning Illegally Logged Wood Into A Walmart Toilet Seat

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It's hard to think of an object that isn't made of wood or packaged or encounters wood at some point in its journey through the economy. Any number of household items that you can buy at Walmart, like a toilet seat for instance, may very well be made from Russian wood.  More Â»

Restoration Hardware Shifting Nearly All Of Its Furniture Production To China?

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If what this alleged Restoration Hardware employee says is true, the home furnishings chain may have just sacrificed its last remaining claim to distinction—high quality, American-made furniture—in an effort to increase profits. Supposedly, shoppers will see the effect of outsourced furniture through lower prices. RH furniture was always known to be fairly good stuff, if not cheap—can we now expect cheap but not good?   More Â»

EPA Moves To Ban Potentially Dangerous Pesticide From Domestic And Imported Food

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The EPA has announced that it intends to ban a pesticide, carbofuran, from both domestic and imported food because of the danger it poses to "general population" particularly small children. The pesticide isn't commonly used in the United States but is popular in developing nations and is sprayed on "crops including rice, bananas, coffee and sugar cane," according to the Washington Post.  More Â»

Winco Frozen Fish: The Big U.S. Flag Tells You It's Made In China!

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A reader in Redding, California was shopping at the local Winco and saw this ultra-patriotic bag of frozen tilapia—if it were any prouder to be an American it would have to start singing country music. But when glugory turned the bag over, the phrase "Product of China" was stamped across the bottom. "So now these bastards are lulling you into a false sense of patriotism in order to sell their commie fish," writes glugory. That might be overstating it a bit, but we're fans of overstating things here at Consumerist, so... yeah! Damned commie fish! Remember: never trust packaging. It's just marketing you can hold.  More Â»

The Web Betrays Importer Of Digital Photo Frames

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Brian found this funny juxtaposition of a news story and a "deal" on a digital photo picture frame on techbargains.comMore Â»

Mice Found On United Airlines Flight

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United Airlines Flight UA897 from Washington to Beijing landed in China with a mice infestation onboard, reported a Chinese state official on Monday: "Eight mice, dead and (alive), were found at last ... hidden in pillows." An "emergency team" boarded the craft and "put rat poison and mouse traps at every possible corner on the aircraft, including the cockpit... the surviving mice were sent to labs for testing."  More Â»

China Pulls Carcinogenic US Pringles From Hong Kong Shelves

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Ah, the game is afoot, China! See how the worm turns! Cliché #3 should go here! China has pulled some unofficially imported (from the U.S.) Pringles chips because they contain potassium bromate, a preservative that we Americans happily ingest in order to breed a race of lumpy super-capitalists—but that China, Hong Kong, and other countries have banned "because tests have found it to be carcinogenic."  More Â»

White House Is Proposing Its Own Version Of Product Safety Plan

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Today the White House will announce its own plan for how to tighten the country's slack product safety practices. The proposal is being offered as an alternative to the one Congress has come up with, which the White House—along with industry trade groups and Consumer Product Safety Commission head Nancy A. Nord—think is too mean to manufacturers.

The White House version suggests stationing inspectors in other countries to inspect goods before they are shipped to U.S. shores, because "with $2 trillion in imports annually, inspections at the ports had become ineffective." We're not sure how the math works on that one—unless sharks or pirates consume large amounts of imports during transit, the same number of goods leave foreign ports and arrive at ours, and having inspectors all in one place where they can work together, instead of spread out in each foreign country, seems a more efficient use of resources. But we're probably just stupid from too much lead.  More Â»

Robots And Science Will Keep Our Food Safe

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The Administration envisions a future where science and technology keep our food supply safe and secure. The multi-agency working group tasked with improving food safety has yet to agree on final recommendations, but both interest groups and the Administration seem dead set against new inspectors. Instead, the working group wants to build upon the current system of random inspections to better target potential dangers among the $2.2 trillion worth of goods imported each year.  More Â»