Originally posted by JohntheBike
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Boris gets the check book out.
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostBut if it is the exporting country's standard not to label this, you would accept the UK importing it and selling it to consumers?Comment
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Originally posted by JohntheBike View Postwell, I'd guess the UK would demand that the products were labelled in accordance with US rules. So the question might not arise.Comment
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Originally posted by AtW View PostFTFYComment
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Originally posted by JohntheBike View Postwell, I'd guess the UK would demand that the products were labelled in accordance with UK rules. So the question might not arise.Comment
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Originally posted by JohntheBike View Postwhy would you think that? Toys from China are labelled well enough for parents to determine if there is any risk in buying them. But as I've said, plenty of fags are still being sold, even considering the warnings.
Your position appears to be, let in anything we like even if it does not conform to our standards and let the public decide. If a child catches fire because their parents bought substandard pyjamas you seem to think that that is on the parents’ risk and that the state should not interfere by mandating minimum standards?
History has shown that the public is not very good at deciding, and that companies are very good at deceiving.Comment
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Originally posted by meridian View PostThey are labelled with a CE mark to show that they conform to European regulations, including safety standards.
Your position appears to be, let in anything we like even if it does not conform to our standards and let the public decide. If a child catches fire because their parents bought substandard pyjamas you seem to think that that is on the parents’ risk and that the state should not interfere by mandating minimum standards?
History has shown that the public is not very good at deciding, and that companies are very good at deceiving.Comment
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Already starting: https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/ent...ef=uk-homepage“Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.”Comment
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Originally posted by meridian View PostThey are labelled with a CE mark to show that they conform to European regulations, including safety standards.
Your position appears to be, let in anything we like even if it does not conform to our standards and let the public decide. If a child catches fire because their parents bought substandard pyjamas you seem to think that that is on the parents’ risk and that the state should not interfere by mandating minimum standards?
History has shown that the public is not very good at deciding, and that companies are very good at deceiving.
yes, so why wouldn't that be the case for chickens from the USA?
"Your position appears to be, let in anything we like even if it does not conform to our standards and let the public decide. If a child catches fire because their parents bought substandard pyjamas you seem to think that that is on the parents’ risk and that the state should not interfere by mandating minimum standards?"
that a great leap of assumption from you. Look at what I said about fags. Despite the warnings, many are still sold.
What I'm saying is that all these imports should be labelled appropriately under UK standards and it will be for the public to decide if they buy them. What everyone appears to be suggesting is that chickens from the USA will not carry any information which will allow the consumer to decide whether or not to buy them. I don't think this will be the case.
In Tesco's I buy small green beans every week. Some are labelled as grown in Egypt and some in Kenya. I buy those from Kenya, because they seem to taste better. That's just an example of labelling which helps my choice of product.
"History has shown that the public is not very good at deciding, and that companies are very good at deceiving."
agreed, but this situation has changed to a certain extent in recent years.Comment
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Originally posted by JohntheBike View Post"They are labelled with a CE mark to show that they conform to European regulations, including safety standards"
yes, so why wouldn't that be the case for chickens from the USA?
"Your position appears to be, let in anything we like even if it does not conform to our standards and let the public decide. If a child catches fire because their parents bought substandard pyjamas you seem to think that that is on the parents’ risk and that the state should not interfere by mandating minimum standards?"
that a great leap of assumption from you. Look at what I said about fags. Despite the warnings, many are still sold.
What I'm saying is that all these imports should be labelled appropriately under UK standards and it will be for the public to decide if they buy them. What everyone appears to be suggesting is that chickens from the USA will not carry any information which will allow the consumer to decide whether or not to buy them. I don't think this will be the case.
In Tesco's I buy small green beans every week. Some are labelled as grown in Egypt and some in Kenya. I buy those from Kenya, because they seem to taste better. That's just an example of labelling which helps my choice of product.
"History has shown that the public is not very good at deciding, and that companies are very good at deceiving."
agreed, but this situation has changed to a certain extent in recent years.Comment
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