| By
Irv Weinberg
'Tis
the season to be careful. Recently, recalled toys have become
big news: So far this year Mattel has recalled almost 19 million
toys for inherent dangers from lead paint, to small loose parts
particularly magnets that can be easily swallowed. If two or more
are swallowed they can play havoc with a child's internal organs.
From Thomas the Tank Trains, to Dora the Explora, and even Sesame
Street, this holiday season its buyer beware and who can you trust,
like never before.
Did
you know that every one of the 24 kinds of recently recalled toys
were manufactured in China where 70-80% of all toys come from?
Did you know that these toys are not only potentially dangerous
to those who get them, but to those who make them? If lead exposure
is toxic to a single child, how much more toxic must it be for
the workers exposed in the manufacture of the millions of recently
recalled toys, in an inadequately ventilated factory where temperatures
routinely reach over 100 degrees? It's a job that pays the average
Chinese toy worker about .23 cents and hour for a 13-15 hour shift
without paid overtime.
When
you look at the growing list of recently recalled toys, it can
be discouraging. But all is not gloom and doom in Toyland.
The
good news is there's a whole new world of gifts and toys that
are good in every way, for the giver, the getter and the maker.
You can find a Santa's sack full of exciting, fun, stimulating,
non-toxic and safe gifts and toys readily and easily available
for every gift giving occasion at e-retailers like Taraluna (
www.taraluna.com).
Taraluna
is a women-owned, family-run business dedicated to changing the
world one purchase at a time. Owner, Penny Schafer's motto in
business and life is, "When you shop wisely and buy fair
trade, sweatshop-free, organic and natural gifts, you are saying
NO to exploitation and YES to humanity."
Here
are some important questions Penny suggests you ask yourself before
buying a toy or gift.
- Have
I chosen a toy or gift made with organic materials, non-toxic
(lead-free) paint or varnish or one that is toxic?
- Does
this toy have small, easily swallowed parts?
- Is
the packaging dangerous? The plastic protection bags toys come
in should always be disposed of under adult supervision.
- Is
the toy "age appropriate"?
- Does
this crib gift have a string longer than 6 inches that could
strangle an infant?
- Does
this toy meet U.S. safety standards or better yet higher European
standards?
- Are
they mindful or mindless? Do they educate as well as entertain?
- Are
there sharp edges?
- Did
I check out the list of recently recalled toys on the Consumer
Product Safety Commission's website at http://www.cpsc.gov/?
Penny
especially believes in and promotes fair trade toys and gifts.
Much like fair trade coffee that has started to enter the consciousness
of coffee drinkers everywhere, fair trade gifts and toys promote
many similar issues. Living wages for workers. Safe working conditions.
Respect for the rights of individual workers.
According
to Penny, "We have a lot of power as consumers, why should
we settle for less than the best? If a company isn't behaving
in a way that you find appropriate, vote with your dollars. Stop
buying their products and let them know you want them to clean
up their act."
If
you think that fair trade, safe and non-toxic toys and gifts need
to be boring, think again. Taraluna proves that safe and fair
trade can be fabulous. Here are some of her favorites this season:
- Mind-expanding
puzzles and math and reading games for small kids. Xeko games
for youth and young adults. They're entertainment that educates.
-
Organic teething toys for infants that are safe and toxin-free.
Taraluna
also offers a beautiful selection of fair trade, gifts that are
as fun to give as they are to receive.
- Fair
trade, heirloom-quality holiday ornaments.
The kind that will be displayed for years. "These ornaments
are absolutely beautiful. They'll surely be passed down for
generations to come," Penny says.
- Certified
organic, fair trade and vegan chocolates.
Doing good tastes really good.
- Luxurious
spa products like the Body
Coffee Gift Set. You'll love them a latte.
- Hand
knit, hemp/wool hats
and gloves that even men and teens will love.
- "Garden
in a Bag" so even brown thumbs can grow green ones
and brighten up any window in the home. They're a great way
to keep summer going even in winter.
- A
fido-fabulous Doggy
Beauty and Travel Bag that's the cat's meow.
- Elegant,
fair trade stationery
that will make your message even more meaningful.
As
we head into the holiday season when our thoughts should be turning
to peace on earth and good will to all, Penny reminds us that
this needs to extend all the way to the workers who make our gift
giving possible.
The
list of recently recalled toys not only represents a hazard to
our kids, but to the workers producing them. "When people
aren't making a fair wage, and they are made to work in hostile
or unsafe conditions for long periods of time, there isn't much
love going into the toy you purchase if it's made from another
person's suffering," she says. Penny continues, "If
workers are
treated well, have a stake in the business, have an opportunity
where perhaps none existed before, I believe they care about the
products they are making. I would rather purchase products that
help lift people out of poverty than products that take advantage
of them."
This
season thinking a little ahead and thinking a little green will
keep the happy in everyone's holidays and give what a gift is
supposed to. Happiness that's harmless.
Irv
Weinberg is a nationally known Marketing & Advertising Executive
and writer with more than 30 years experience at the highest echelons
of America's best known advertising agencies. Since relocating
to Santa Fe, NM, he has combined his green, socially responsible
and organic lifestyle with his marketing skills and now devotes
his energies to helping green companies emerge and prosper. His
company, Mind Over Markets (www.MindOverMarkets.com),
helps clients both large and small achieve success, recognition
and sustained growth. Irv is also a well-published writer and
blogger on green issues.
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