Dumb warning labels
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As I got onto the motorway one day there was a sign that said "sign not in use".0
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:sick:0 -
I think the worst are TV commercials that say "professional driver, closed course" for the lamest things.0
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smantha32.....um ......ouch.....:noway:0
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On Ambien (sleeping pill), caution may cause drowsiness....:huh: ZzzzzzZzzzzz
Really???0 -
smantha32.....um ......ouch.....:noway:
I know, right?
But the scary part is that it's probably on there because some moron tried it.0 -
This WARNING was on the water cooler in the Drs office waiting room.
I have to share this with my daughter. She is a nurse in a dr office:laugh:
she'll appreciate it.
i asked, "is this REALLY such a huge problem that you had to post this??" the staff cringed and uniformly said, "yes" "youd be surprised.". lol0 -
On Ambien (sleeping pill), caution may cause drowsiness....:huh: ZzzzzzZzzzzz
Really???
WAHAHAHAHAHAHA! That's too funny.0 -
This WARNING was on the water cooler in the Drs office waiting room.
I have to share this with my daughter. She is a nurse in a dr office:laugh:
i asked, "is this REALLY such a huge problem that you had to post this??" the staff cringed and uniformly said, "yes" "youd be surprised.". lol
ok.. eeeeeeeeeeeeeewwwwwwwwww! :noway:0 -
One of those campling toilet seats that you can attach to the bumper of a truck......
label says "Caution, do not use while driving"
I have this image of the Beverly Hillbillies in my head now. :happy:0 -
I saw a stove that said: "Don't use open flame to search for leaks."
...0 -
in college I worked at a kitchen store, and we were selling those antimicrobial cutting boards (popular item in the late 1990's early 2000's with the germ fears antimicrobial everything)....
The manufacturer had to start putting warning labels on the cutting boards saying something to the effect of "These items must be washed" people weren't washing the cutting boards and were getting sick.0 -
in college I worked at a kitchen store, and we were selling those antimicrobial cutting boards (popular item in the late 1990's early 2000's with the germ fears antimicrobial everything)....
The manufacturer had to start putting warning labels on the cutting boards saying something to the effect of "These items must be washed" people weren't washing the cutting boards and were getting sick.
... I am seriously worried for the world.0 -
... I am seriously worried for the world.
Like someone else said.. they should leave off the warnings and let these idiots take themselves out of the gene pool.0 -
I saw a stove that said: "Don't use open flame to search for leaks."
...
OMG That is hilarious!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!0 -
arewethereyet wrote:
I acted quickly and removed his clothes immediately so he'd stop cooking.
I agree you did the right thing. Unfortunately, a lot of people would now be scared to do that with another person's child.
Oh then too! It was instinct but I shook for an hour afterwards. Also, note I left without leaving my name.
I bet you would have done the same thing
Most states actually have what are called "Good Samaritan Laws" that protect individuals who try to help in emergencies. As long as you don't do something like a tracheotomy when you are not a doctor, you do have SOME protection. Until the damn lawyers get involved.0 -
miriamwithcat wrote:
Most states actually have what are called "Good Samaritan Laws"
When you say 'states' do you mean 'member states of United Nations'?0 -
All these warnings came about due to the abundant USA appetite to sue all and sundry.... as it's always "someone else's fault"
The Lawyers lap it up.. and make the problem worse.
I recall the incident with a Camper van style vehicle, where the driver, put it on auto drive and then went in the back to make a drink.
Next minute he/she had crashed.
Successfully sued the vehicle manufacture for not having a warning that "auto" didn't mean fully automatic drive itself.
Vehicle maintenance manual was amended to add such a warning!0 -
viper_7 wrote:
I recall the incident with a Camper van style vehicle, where the driver, put it on auto drive and then went in the back to make a drink.
Meets the criteria of urban legend. See what Snopes says about it:
http://www.snopes.com/autos/techno/cruise.asp0 -
...my dad (aaages ago) worked at a place and a woman tried to return the microwave oven because it killed her dog.
I heard that story too. Then I found Snopes lists it as an urban legend:
http://www.snopes.com/horrors/techno/microwavedpet.asp
I'm sure all of the stories are not made up, even if you see something on snopes. When I was a kid, my mom was babysitting two of my cousins. They were terrorizing a kitten (they were really bad kids) and my mom walked in the house just as they were putting it in the microwave. Thankfully she walked in when she did.
Also:
Shin pads cannot protect any part of the body they do not cover." -- On a pair of shin guards made for bicyclists0 -
katy84o wrote:
I'm sure all of the stories are not made up, even if you see something on snopes. When I was a kid, my mom was babysitting two of my cousins. They were terrorizing a kitten (they were really bad kids) and my mom walked in the house just as they were putting it in the microwave.
The Snopes link addressed that specific point:
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"Although there have been a few verifiable cases of pets subjected to microwaving, each of them were deliberate acts of cruelty, perpetrated by twisted souls who knew all too well what they were doing. Micropoochings arising from a lack of understanding of the technology, however, are still incidents of lore
only."
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Urban legends can be true or false. False ones rely on 'capability to be true'. True ones don't have to, of course.
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http://urbanlegends.about.com/od/errata/a/urban_legends.htm
Urban legends are popular stories alleged to be true and passed from individual to individual via oral or written (e.g. forwarded email) communication. Typically, said stories concern outlandish, humiliating, humorous, terrifying, or supernatural events — events which, in the telling, always seem to happen to someone other than the teller.
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any type of coffee cup that has to say caution may be hot .... damn people and there crazy lawsuits for spilling coffee on themselves cause they where driving, texting and holding coffee all at the same time
That started with an elderly lady in a McDonald. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liebeck_v._McDonald's_Restaurants
The fact she had over $10 k in med bills in 1994 makes me wonder how hot it was.
It made for some great Seinfeld episodes
The woman had incredibly bad burns and had to have skin grafts. She was in the hospital for a long time. The coffee was WAY WAY WAY too hot...Its used as the classic example of the frivolous lawsuit but that's just because McDonald's won the PR war with the case. They were wrong.
I watched a great documentary about this case, and others, called Hot Coffee, highly recommended.....from what I remember, that McDonald's had also been warned several times that their coffee was WAY too hot....
http://www.hotcoffeethemovie.com/0 -
This tells me some idiot tried to use those as sounds, WOW0 -
My favorite was I bought a blow dryer that said
Do not use while showering or sleeping....
Really? I can't wash my hair and dry it at the same time? And if I resist that, I can't even just dry it for EIGHT HOURS while I am sleeping? Man, that sucks!0 -
arewethereyet wrote:
I acted quickly and removed his clothes immediately so he'd stop cooking.
I agree you did the right thing. Unfortunately, a lot of people would now be scared to do that with another person's child.
Oh then too! It was instinct but I shook for an hour afterwards. Also, note I left without leaving my name.
I bet you would have done the same thing
Most states actually have what are called "Good Samaritan Laws" that protect individuals who try to help in emergencies. As long as you don't do something like a tracheotomy when you are not a doctor, you do have SOME protection. Until the damn lawyers get involved.
What if you do a tracheotomy and it saves the person's life? :happy:0 -
I can explain the not using the hair dryer while sleeping one. My very own mother is responsible for this one. We were very poor when I was younger. Not because of a recession or anything, but because she was a drug addict, and all the money went for that. But anyway, she came home one night, and we didn't have any electricity in the house, and it was very cold. But thankfully, our neighbors let us run a single extension cord from their house. Well, my mom took the extension cord, plugged a hair dryer into it, and stuck the hair dryer under her blanket and went to sleep. She was so F***ed up, that it didn't even wake her as the hair dryer burnt a whole into her leg, nearly to the bone. And did my mom sue? Oh yes, yes she did. She loves to sue people. I think she got something like $10,000 for that little fiasco.0
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omg this haha0 -
Lol!
Love some of the posts.
I love how toiletries say do not eat etc0 -
arewethereyet wrote:
I acted quickly and removed his clothes immediately so he'd stop cooking.
I agree you did the right thing. Unfortunately, a lot of people would now be scared to do that with another person's child.
Oh then too! It was instinct but I shook for an hour afterwards. Also, note I left without leaving my name.
I bet you would have done the same thing
Most states actually have what are called "Good Samaritan Laws" that protect individuals who try to help in emergencies. As long as you don't do something like a tracheotomy when you are not a doctor, you do have SOME protection. Until the damn lawyers get involved.
What if you do a tracheotomy and it saves the person's life? :happy:
Well if it is MY life, or that of my child, your warning label would be "Watch out for that lady behind me she will KICK YOUR AZZ if you try to hurt me" Then I would follow you around looking like this
:laugh:0
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