Something as silly as a piece of plastic in one bit of their food (common sort of thing in low end producers, like hand made) equals a mass recall.
It's why food these days from McDonalds etc is so safe (from immediate harm)
Mass produced engineering is pretty cool.
-maybe the tiny piece is not the problem?
-maybe the tiny piece is not the problem but consumer
perspective and therefore cheaper to recall than
image damage?
-maybe the piece belongs to something wearing out
and the possibility of something (a chemical for example)
being introduce is a possibility (and therefore a
legal demand?)?
-maybe there is no problem, but is better to recall than
to have x reports on a non existing problem.Alternatively I can have a cheeseburger at Maccy Ds. I am confident that there's no real risk of food poisoning from the faux mayonnaise in the filling. The McMayo makeup is accurately detailed to within % points. It's jammed full of various preservatives, and indeed it can probably be stored for years without risk.
McMayo is safer, has detailed nutritional info, and is perfectly consistent.
Personally - I'll have the fresh mayonnaise every time, and strangely not knowing the amount of saturated fats doesn't trouble me in the slightest. To each their own.
Just posted a link to this on Facebook.
When I did, it auto-filled the headline as:
>Mars has 'widened its recall to 55 countries' - BBC News
and the teaser:
>The Netherlands spokesman for chocolate maker Mars says it has widened its recall of Mars and Snickers bars to 55 countries after bits of plastic are found in a product.
which don't match the actual article. Wonder what the deal with their caching is.
Check N°3 on this link https://developers.facebook.com/docs/sharing/best-practices
http://www.der-postillon.com/2016/02/ruckruf-unbegrundet-pla...