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Re: A Lawsuit Against McDonald's That May Actually Make Sense? [message #226898 is a reply to message #226897] |
Mon, 16 October 2006 14:06 |
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cheesesoda
Messages: 6507 Registered: March 2003 Location: Jackson, Michigan
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General (5 Stars) |
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I don't know. I see some merit to it, but a lot of it people are just asking too much. Sure, I can see where they're coming from, but this is still a (mild) case of people doing as they want as carelessly as they want until something happens, and now they want retribution. People don't want to be held responsible for their actions.
If the FDA cannot make restaurants provide information on allergens, I see no reason to put blame on McDonald's.
whoa.
[Updated on: Mon, 16 October 2006 14:07] Report message to a moderator
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Re: A Lawsuit Against McDonald's That May Actually Make Sense? [message #226901 is a reply to message #226897] |
Mon, 16 October 2006 14:41 |
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warranto
Messages: 2584 Registered: February 2003 Location: Alberta, Canada
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General (2 Stars) |
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The reason I'm stating it may make sense, is that the alledgedly lied about what the frying oil contained.
It's one thing to not mention something, it's another to state and advertises it doesn't exist (check the copy of the letter they have), when it does exist.
Quote: | "The real issue here is that McDonald's put these items on a list of gluten-free menu items," says Florida attorney Brian Smith, who currently represents about 50 individuals, mostly children, who suffer from milk allergies, celiac disease and autism.
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Re: A Lawsuit Against McDonald's That May Actually Make Sense? [message #226914 is a reply to message #226897] |
Mon, 16 October 2006 17:38 |
Matix
Messages: 128 Registered: July 2006
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Recruit |
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McDonalds rule!
Quote: | If the FDA cannot make restaurants provide information on allergens, I see no reason to put blame on McDonald's.
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Couldn't agree more. Also, McDonals were in business for a long long time, and for this first time (afaik) this has happened. Put the blame on the person who ate there, everyone else who eats there doesn't have any problems.
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Re: A Lawsuit Against McDonald's That May Actually Make Sense? [message #226934 is a reply to message #226914] |
Mon, 16 October 2006 20:33 |
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xptek
Messages: 1410 Registered: August 2004 Location: USSA
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General (1 Star) |
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Matix wrote on Mon, 16 October 2006 20:38 | Put the blame on the person who ate there, everyone else who eats there doesn't have any problems.
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So if Dairy Queen tells people their food doesn't contain peanut products and someone allergic to peanuts eats there and gets sick/dies, we're supposed to put the blame on the person allergic to peanuts?
I'm not following your logic.
cause = time
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Re: A Lawsuit Against McDonald's That May Actually Make Sense? [message #226955 is a reply to message #226934] |
Tue, 17 October 2006 02:51 |
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EvilWhiteDragon
Messages: 3751 Registered: October 2005 Location: The Netherlands
Karma: 0
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General (3 Stars) |
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Quote: | "The real issue here is that McDonald's put these items on a list of gluten-free menu items," says Florida attorney Brian Smith, who currently represents about 50 individuals, mostly children, who suffer from milk allergies, celiac disease and autism.
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From what I've heard about such gluten allergy is that just a tiny amount of non gluten free food can "poison a whole gluten-free meal, in such a way that people that are allergic t oit can simply die because of it. So I feel that is would be a strong case.
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Earlier this year, McDonald's acknowledged that its hash browns and french fries, which the restaurant chain historically had reported as allergen-free, in fact may contain wheat and milk ingredients from the oil they are cooked in.
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THey are even admitting it, so some kind of compesation would be in it's place.
BlackIntel admin/founder/PR dude (not a coder)
Please visit http://www.blackintel.org/
V, V for Vendetta | People should not be afraid of their governments.
Governments should be afraid of their people.
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[Updated on: Tue, 17 October 2006 02:54] Report message to a moderator
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Re: A Lawsuit Against McDonald's That May Actually Make Sense? [message #226982 is a reply to message #226897] |
Tue, 17 October 2006 10:06 |
fl00d3d
Messages: 1107 Registered: August 2003 Location: Iowa, USA
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General (1 Star) Viva la Resistance! |
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ROFL, my gf said,
fl00d3d's GF |
So now McDonald's is supposed to test all of its food on handicipped children, like lab rats?
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Ahhh, ha ha ... classic.
I just think this is another case of people being retarded (regardless of whether there is validity to it or not). People are always looking for attention and money. Not to mention they'll probably declare that water causes cancer in a few years.
Also, if you have a mentally handicapped child (which is almost an oxymoron term for an autisitc child, but you get the point) shouldn't you be spending your extra money on healthy food rather than clogging your kids arteries?
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Re: A Lawsuit Against McDonald's That May Actually Make Sense? [message #226997 is a reply to message #226897] |
Tue, 17 October 2006 11:34 |
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cheesesoda
Messages: 6507 Registered: March 2003 Location: Jackson, Michigan
Karma: 0
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General (5 Stars) |
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I agree that McDonald's should have retribution for their lying, but it is not their responsibility to hold the consumer's hand. If the consumer has any food alergies, they should ask about that being in their food prior to their ordering and consuming the product. McDonald's, or any company/restaurant, should not expect to know everything about their individual customers. Their main responsibility is to provide their product within federal quality guidelines and sell them to their customers. Other than that, they shouldn't be held responsible. People have allergies to certain foods, but that is not the fault of any restaurant, nor the consumer, but it IS the CONSUMER's responsibility to ensure that they don't aggitate their allergies.
Edit: Would you blame a cat for aggitating someone's allergies? No, you would blame the person for having a cat. The same goes for this situation. You don't blame the company for selling their product, you blame the person for not being smart about their decisions to purchase the goods being sold.
whoa.
[Updated on: Tue, 17 October 2006 11:37] Report message to a moderator
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Re: A Lawsuit Against McDonald's That May Actually Make Sense? [message #227028 is a reply to message #226897] |
Tue, 17 October 2006 13:38 |
Matix
Messages: 128 Registered: July 2006
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Recruit |
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McDonalds should get sued and should lose the case because they lied in the first place, and if the parents of the kid, or even the kid would know himself, he is allergic to something in the food, but the company lied about it, he wouldn't know, he would just go eat it. McDonalds lied = shame
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Re: A Lawsuit Against McDonald's That May Actually Make Sense? [message #227084 is a reply to message #226897] |
Tue, 17 October 2006 16:30 |
fl00d3d
Messages: 1107 Registered: August 2003 Location: Iowa, USA
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General (1 Star) Viva la Resistance! |
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Matix (teh-pwnerer) what are you alergic to so I can feed it to you and watch you die. Oops, was that too harsh? Fucking faggot - man I get worked up just seeing your name on these forums. Lying, cheating, piece of shit. Seriously ... just go die in a corner already.
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Re: A Lawsuit Against McDonald's That May Actually Make Sense? [message #227244 is a reply to message #226897] |
Thu, 19 October 2006 03:55 |
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Sniper_De7
Messages: 866 Registered: April 2004 Location: Wisconsin
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Colonel |
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Why would it be lying if this were true?
Quote: | "No scientific research has consistently shown a connection," says Dr. Ami Klin, one of the country's leading autism experts and an associate professor at Yale University's School of Medicine. "It's a popular hypothesis, and something that is circulated among a group of individuals that have a grip on parents as to the importance of those things. But the reviews of that subject have not turned up any solid evidence."
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If it's true that there is no real solid evidence, then I'm pretty sure McDonalds doesn't have to say "Well there's no solid evidence to support that such and such foods interacts with autistis folk. If a leading autism expert says that there is no solid evidence to suggest that it does anything bad, then I can't see why McDonalds would be at fault, if they were just listening to a leading autism experts statement.. I may be reading the whole thing wrong, but that's what I get out of it.
Oderint, dum metuant.
It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat. - Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt
[Updated on: Thu, 19 October 2006 03:55] Report message to a moderator
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