• Apepollo11@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Well, UK Parliament did discuss the matter and concluded that because the choking was a result of playing with a toy with small parts, not to do with the fact that it was in an egg originally, that a ban would naturally extend to any toy with small parts.

    None of the kids accidentally ingested the toys while eating the eggs - if you’ve ever had one you’ll know why that would be impossible.

    So I’d get rid of the ban. That law was not put in place to stop Kinder Surprise Eggs - it’s an unforeseen side effect of a law that was genuinely intended to protect people when it was written.

    • brbposting@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      Ohhh great insight of theirs, very interesting!

      Just thinking about it for a second I wonder if those same parents would’ve handed those same kids the same size toy. Maybe those kids did have equivalent size toys in the house in which case I would wonder if there was some kind of contextual “I eat chocolate, this toy was in chocolate” kind of issue.

      Pure speculation so if neither of those points mattered then maybe I would unban as well.

      typo edit: “hate” to “eat”

      • Apepollo11@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        To be fair, there is another aspect to this. The children involved were mainly 3, and the eggs do say for ages 3+.

        Most people don’t buy teeny tiny toys for their three year olds.

        It’s a tricky one. I think the problem could largely be addressed by slightly raising the age to 4+, the same as Lego.