Posted on 03/29/2015 9:11:18 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
I smuggled $100 worth of illegal goods across the Canadian border last week. To be fair, the illegal goods were chocolate Easter eggs and I didnt know I was doing anything wrong. But after I got home, I found out I could have been fined thousands of dollars if Id been caught.
You see, my 4-year-old daughter is obsessed with Kinder Surprise Eggs these little chocolate shells the size of a regular egg with a tiny, mystery toy inside. She discovered them on YouTube, where there are thousands of videos showing children (and lots of adults, surprisingly) cracking open the shells on camera to reveal whats inside. Dont ask me, I dont get the fascination, but apparently its a big thing because many, many, many of these videos have more than 150 million views.
Last Easter I searched all over for Kinder eggs and couldnt find them anywhere. Thats when I found out you cant get them in this country because theyre illegal. Apparently, the toy inside makes it a choking hazard. Not that kids would put a Kinder Egg anywhere near their mouths the chocolate tastes like crayons and usually ends up ditched.
In 1997, a commercial shipment of Surprise eggs made it into the states by mistake. The Consumer Product Safety Commission, which regulates such things, put out an alert and recalled all 5,000 of them.
But the real problem is a provision in the Food and Drug Administrations Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act forbidding non-nutritive objects embedded inside confections. U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, enforcing laws on the FDAs behalf, confiscated 13,758 of them last year.
I wholeheartedly believe we need consumer protections. If we didnt have them, Im certain there are people out there who would box up broken glass and call it breakfast cereal if they could make a buck at it. But can we please slap a warning label on these suckers and call it a day?
While were on the subject, do you know whats really dangerous? Actual breakfast cereal. Apple Jacks have 13.7 grams of sugar per serving. The first ingredient is sugar, followed by three types of processed flour and corn syrup. There is also a tad of dried fruit in them so they can legally be called Apple Jacks, and we can all pretend they wont someday give our kids diabetes. But I digress.
If youre not up for the illegal trip to Walmart in Fort Erie, Ont., there are a couple of ways to approximate the Kinder experience at your house this Easter. You can buy them online, but thats still illegal, and youll pay $6 per egg as opposed to $1.50 Canadian. So youre left with:
Yowie ($3.99 apiece). These Australian chocolates are bigger than the standard Kinder egg and shaped like a bigfoot-type creature. The patented, childproof capsule inside the chocolate allows it to skirt the FDA ban. You can get them at ITSUGAR in the Fashion Outlets of Niagara Falls.
Choco Treasure ($1). The container inside the chocolate has a plastic ridge that separates the two halves, beating the ban by a technicality. The toys inside are CPSC-safe (read: boring), so youll probably hear cries of Its not the same! (You were a kid, you know how it is.) But at least you can get it at Dollar Tree.
DIY. Using a chocolate egg mold and melted chocolate, make your own. Bonus: You can make sure your kid doesnt end up with any of the dreaded duplicate toys.
It’s a USA liberal thang. Even Canada isn’t that uptight, weirdly enough.
That’s why I bought my toilets there.
We still have King Cake babies to choke on.
To all- please ping me to Canadian topics.
Canada Ping!
It’s not just US, but Canada as well.
You cant cross the border with food that did not originate in the other country.
When I was a kid I had an entire collection of items fond in these eggs.
I remember little crocodiles were the most prized content.
You mean I can’t get some Tim Horton’s poutine?
you have to make your own poutine, or visit canada
Absolutely not true Jonty. I declare it at customs and am allowed to do it all the time. Most recently three days ago.
While my kids were, well, kids I was bringing dozens of these back from Europe every trip, enough for them to share with friends and classmates at school. The chocolate they’re made of (milk on the outside of the shell and white chocolate on the inside) is typically European, i.e. richer than anything made here, and the little toys were complex, clever, and always worked. Never tried to bring them over from Canada but never had trouble getting them through customs in any of the three or four airports I’d fly through coming back from Europe. Always declared the value and showed “chocolates” on my landing card. Customs officers along the north border, both sides, seem to have peculiarly rugged sticks up their a$$e$.
“Thats why I bought my toilets there.”
Loose lips sink sh$@s.
My nieces and nephews love them. I’d say almost more than the ipads, etc.
If anyone from the government with an f’n brain actually looked at these eggs, they’d realize there is no way to choke by unknowingly eating them. It’s just another case of bureaucrats interpreting law to make work for themselves.
The inedible part is inside another hard plastic egg that can’t be swallowed and is a pain to crack open. Small kids (who might choke on toys) can’t open it and bigger kids often ask for help.
A few years ago I found a German gift shop/candy store in Washington D.C.(of all places) that sold these. I wonder if they are still in business? I long ago forgot the name of the store.
They sell them in lots of European stores but shhhhhhh...
I agree with your assessment that customs officials on both sides of the border seem fairly unfriendly. Ours seem to be worse. The last CBSA encounter I had was pretty funny. He asked me if I was bringing anything I didn’t plan to take back. I told him a gallon of milk and a five gallon can of gas that I was giving as a gag gift. He laughed and waved me on.
I don’t know about Kinder eggs but I definitely cross over the Niagara river to get my Swiss Chalet chicken ever since they closed them all here in Buffalo. That chicken is addictive I tell ya!
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