Duckie wrote:But yet even after that disease outbreak from Europe (in a nation far, far smaller than China with far less agricultural surplus, so outbreaks should happen proportionally less as there is less food being produced), Organic German food is not considered suspect. Why does China have all of its failures remembered but nobody once worries when eating a brussel sprout from some farm in Germany?
You're talking to someone who hasn't brought fresh spinach in the US for a number years since that
E. coli outbreak we had. I actually
do hold certain US agricultural products suspect. That's why I grow my own leafy greens rather than buy them. It happens just too damn often here for me to be comfortable. Since I spent a week in the hospital in 2005 with norovirus I've got a lot more suspicious of food.
With China, it's not ONE outbreak, or even a few. There was the pet food melamine contamination of 2007 which was
global, not localized to China, and the Chinese first response wasn't "we'll have to look into this and see what's causing it" but complete denial the protein was export from China at all. By May of that year there was evidence that animal feed for animals intended for human consumption exported to North America had been contaminated (so far as I know, no human illness arose from it). The contaminated toothpaste in 2007 from China went global, and quite a bit of it was "counterfeit", having brand name labeling and packaging though not manufactured by those companies. Then there was the Sanlu milk contamination of 2008, which resulted in over 240,000 ill babies in China, and there were still occasional contaminated products showing up in 2010 in the provinces. 240,000 sick infants - way to go. When was the last time North America or Europe had 80,000 ill from contaminated food (divided by 3 under the notion that both N. America and Europe have roughly 1/3 of China's population)
A few others were White Rabbit Creamy Candy (formaldehyde in 2007, melamine in 2008); the contaminated heparin of Baxter, Corp in 2008 (19 deaths in the US alone); the 2007 Mattel toy recall because some of the paint used on the toys was up to 11% lead, FAR exceeding permitted levels, and surprise! it all came from Chinese factories; in 2005 excessive levels of lead were found in artificial Christmas tress manufactured in China - this is all just in the past few years. And this is aside from concerns like tilapia filets from China that are products of Chinese fish farms and possible heavy metal contamination in them, and the "pine mouth" issues with China exporting pine nuts from species that are unsuitable for human consumption - granted the latter is more an annoyance than serious health problem, but really, it's just one more aggravation on top of it.
Basically what you are saying is "Chinese people (not certain companies, but all people with that skin colour!) have made bad products before, so the entire nation is suspect", yet this doesn't seem to apply this to any other countries who have had tainted food problems or corrupt building codes.
We're discussing China here, not other countries, but it's not like I haven't spoken out about corruption and problems elsewhere in other threads. I don't really understand this leap to "Broomstick hates yellow people" or whatever, when there are actual problems that have resulted in actual illness and death to people. If I said I went through a period where I refused to eat any meat product from Britain due to mad cow concerns would you have leapt immediately to "Rar! Broomstick hates white people!"? Or is this a kneejerk assumption that white people are someone more prone to bigotry than those of other skin colors?
When my spouse and I recently started a small business and found we would have to go to China for certain supplies we didn't give up on the whole matter, we looked at likely candidates and spent a few weeks researching them to determine if they were trustworthy or not. As it happens, we've been
very happy with what they've sent us. Likewise, in my current paying job we see a LOT of shoes made in China. Some manufacturers are clearly getting a quality product that's well made. Some others are getting utter shit, seriously, drunk monkeys could do better work. I had to re-attach 6 shoe soles yesterday that were falling apart because of
grossly insufficient levels of cement used in the original manufacture. New shoes, falling apart, because someone was too fucking cheap to use enough glue. Let be a little more clear - when soles are glued to a shoe you're supposed to coat the
entire surface of the sole where it contacts the shoe in cement. I'm seeing shoes where all the glue used is the equivalent of a pencil line squiggled down the center of the sole.
It's gross incompetence and the only rationale I can think of is "save money on glue". Funny, though - certain brands you can trust to be made correctly and wear well, clearly marked "made in China", and others it's a crapshoot if the shoe or boots will last a week - also "made in China". I suspect that in the former cases the companies ordering the product are keeping an eye on things, whereas in the latter they either using the most utter shit companies, or they don't give a shit. And that's what I mean by
they aren't consistent. Which all of you conveniently seem to ignore. It's not that I categorically reject Chinese made products, it's just that I feel I have to fucking research every goddamned little piece, whereas I can rely on, say, a Toyota product to be quality until proven otherwise.
And while you're going on and on about Japanese being equated to quality these days I remember when it wasn't so - back in the 1960's "Japanese made" was a synonym for "cheap ass junk". The Japanese turned that around. How? Hard work and
quality control. They fixed their problems. I sincerely hope the Chinese do likewise, but the facts remain they do have problems with material substitutions, product adulterations, and contamination right now. This isn't something I've pulled out of my ass, it's been in headlines around the world for a number of years. 2007 in particular seemed to be a bad year for Chinese products.