"The number of children who ingest laundry detergent packets in Alabama is on the rise"
my mums terrified of those lil deterget packets around my little brother, just use liquid or powder and keep it out of reach of children its not that hard
Honestly these things looks a lot like teething rings to young kids. I think there should be a major rule against having these things colored. http://alphamom.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/gel-rings-e1380698181562.jpg
Also with Fabuloso, this is a cleaning product that looks like a bottle of juice.
Also with Fabuloso, this is a cleaning product that looks like a bottle of juice.
https://i.ytimg.com/vi/x6kLS0HpauM/maxresdefault.jpg
some of those bottles are a bit questionable but the one on the right straight up looks like a bottle of fruit punch
uh i dont know, show your kid a laundry detergent packet and say "THIS DOESNT GO IN YOUR MOUTH" and then if you find they are eating them (why the fuck would they do that) you smack them in the head and ground them.
ILLEGALELEPHANTGUNuh i dont know, show your kid a laundry detergent packet and say "THIS DOESNT GO IN YOUR MOUTH" and then if you find they are eating them (why the fuck would they do that) you smack them in the head and ground them.
Just fyi that doesn't work for children under 2. The biggest issues here are poor labels/coloring, and parents not putting stuff out of reach of children. Logically explaining that they shouldn't put stuff in their mouth will 100% not work unless by circumstance if they're under 2 and highly unlikely to work under 4.
As far the main questions of the thread. Buy liquid or powder laundry detergent that isn't brightly colored and sweet scented (free and clear are usually clear and scent free), keep it out of reach of young children, if a child is capable of reaching a high cabinet they're likely old enough to be told and explained why they shouldn't eat/drink laundry detergent which after that point you need to hope they listen / not retarded.(in this final case getting a lock should help a lot.)
Just fyi that doesn't work for children under 2. The biggest issues here are poor labels/coloring, and parents not putting stuff out of reach of children. Logically explaining that they shouldn't put stuff in their mouth will 100% not work unless by circumstance if they're under 2 and highly unlikely to work under 4.
As far the main questions of the thread. Buy liquid or powder laundry detergent that isn't brightly colored and sweet scented (free and clear are usually clear and scent free), keep it out of reach of young children, if a child is capable of reaching a high cabinet they're likely old enough to be told and explained why they shouldn't eat/drink laundry detergent which after that point you need to hope they listen / not retarded.(in this final case getting a lock should help a lot.)
I think my mom put a lock where our laundry detergent was but I never had a thought of eating it in the first place so seems like the best idea there.
ComangliaILLEGALELEPHANTGUNuh i dont know, show your kid a laundry detergent packet and say "THIS DOESNT GO IN YOUR MOUTH" and then if you find they are eating them (why the fuck would they do that) you smack them in the head and ground them.
Just fyi that doesn't work for children under 2. The biggest issues here are poor labels/coloring, and parents not putting stuff out of reach of children. Logically explaining that they shouldn't put stuff in their mouth will 100% not work unless by circumstance if they're under 2 and highly unlikely to work under 4.
As far the main questions of the thread. Buy liquid or powder laundry detergent that isn't brightly colored and sweet scented (free and clear are usually clear and scent free), keep it out of reach of young children, if a child is capable of reaching a high cabinet they're likely old enough to be told and explained why they shouldn't eat/drink laundry detergent which after that point you need to hope they listen / not retarded.(in this final case getting a lock should help a lot.)
if you cant keep chemicals out of your kids mouth then wtf are you doing having kids in the first place.
Just fyi that doesn't work for children under 2. The biggest issues here are poor labels/coloring, and parents not putting stuff out of reach of children. Logically explaining that they shouldn't put stuff in their mouth will 100% not work unless by circumstance if they're under 2 and highly unlikely to work under 4.
As far the main questions of the thread. Buy liquid or powder laundry detergent that isn't brightly colored and sweet scented (free and clear are usually clear and scent free), keep it out of reach of young children, if a child is capable of reaching a high cabinet they're likely old enough to be told and explained why they shouldn't eat/drink laundry detergent which after that point you need to hope they listen / not retarded.(in this final case getting a lock should help a lot.)[/quote]
if you cant keep chemicals out of your kids mouth then wtf are you doing having kids in the first place.
ILLEGALELEPHANTGUNComangliaif you cant keep chemicals out of your kids mouth then wtf are you doing having kids in the first place.ILLEGALELEPHANTGUNuh i dont know, show your kid a laundry detergent packet and say "THIS DOESNT GO IN YOUR MOUTH" and then if you find they are eating them (why the fuck would they do that) you smack them in the head and ground them.
Just fyi that doesn't work for children under 2. The biggest issues here are poor labels/coloring, and parents not putting stuff out of reach of children. Logically explaining that they shouldn't put stuff in their mouth will 100% not work unless by circumstance if they're under 2 and highly unlikely to work under 4.
As far the main questions of the thread. Buy liquid or powder laundry detergent that isn't brightly colored and sweet scented (free and clear are usually clear and scent free), keep it out of reach of young children, if a child is capable of reaching a high cabinet they're likely old enough to be told and explained why they shouldn't eat/drink laundry detergent which after that point you need to hope they listen / not retarded.(in this final case getting a lock should help a lot.)
This user has never been around kids
Most kids are actively trying to kill themselves until the age of 10 or so
Just fyi that doesn't work for children under 2. The biggest issues here are poor labels/coloring, and parents not putting stuff out of reach of children. Logically explaining that they shouldn't put stuff in their mouth will 100% not work unless by circumstance if they're under 2 and highly unlikely to work under 4.
As far the main questions of the thread. Buy liquid or powder laundry detergent that isn't brightly colored and sweet scented (free and clear are usually clear and scent free), keep it out of reach of young children, if a child is capable of reaching a high cabinet they're likely old enough to be told and explained why they shouldn't eat/drink laundry detergent which after that point you need to hope they listen / not retarded.(in this final case getting a lock should help a lot.)[/quote]
if you cant keep chemicals out of your kids mouth then wtf are you doing having kids in the first place.[/quote]
This user has never been around kids
Most kids are actively trying to kill themselves until the age of 10 or so
the worst when i was a kid my dad would put cleaning shit in empty sprite bottles
thinking about it now is pretty scary LOL
thinking about it now is pretty scary LOL
ILLEGALELEPHANTGUNif you cant keep chemicals out of your kids mouth then wtf are you doing having kids in the first place.
its easy to watch someone for 8 hours. its hard to do it for 24 hours without sleeping and keep it up for years and years
if you cant keep chemicals out of your kids mouth then wtf are you doing having kids in the first place.[/quote]
its easy to watch someone for 8 hours. its hard to do it for 24 hours without sleeping and keep it up for years and years
eeeILLEGALELEPHANTGUNif you cant keep chemicals out of your kids mouth then wtf are you doing having kids in the first place.its easy to watch someone for 8 hours. its hard to do it for 24 hours without sleeping and keep it up for years and years
yea but you should know the responsibilities that are required bringing a child into this world.
if you cant keep chemicals out of your kids mouth then wtf are you doing having kids in the first place.[/quote]
its easy to watch someone for 8 hours. its hard to do it for 24 hours without sleeping and keep it up for years and years[/quote]
yea but you should know the responsibilities that are required bringing a child into this world.
atidereeeeyea but you should know the responsibilities that are required bringing a child into this world.ILLEGALELEPHANTGUNits easy to watch someone for 8 hours. its hard to do it for 24 hours without sleeping and keep it up for years and yearsComangliaif you cant keep chemicals out of your kids mouth then wtf are you doing having kids in the first place.ILLEGALELEPHANTGUNuh i dont know, show your kid a laundry detergent packet and say "THIS DOESNT GO IN YOUR MOUTH" and then if you find they are eating them (why the fuck would they do that) you smack them in the head and ground them.
Just fyi that doesn't work for children under 2. The biggest issues here are poor labels/coloring, and parents not putting stuff out of reach of children. Logically explaining that they shouldn't put stuff in their mouth will 100% not work unless by circumstance if they're under 2 and highly unlikely to work under 4.
As far the main questions of the thread. Buy liquid or powder laundry detergent that isn't brightly colored and sweet scented (free and clear are usually clear and scent free), keep it out of reach of young children, if a child is capable of reaching a high cabinet they're likely old enough to be told and explained why they shouldn't eat/drink laundry detergent which after that point you need to hope they listen / not retarded.(in this final case getting a lock should help a lot.)
I'm now very curious if you or illegalelephantgun have ever been around kids for more than a day. Also are you omni-present? Doubtful.
I hope you're just simply taking eee's quote out of context here.
-edit-
actually looked at the thread here it looks like eee removed the context of illegalelephantgun quote of mine.
-edit2-
added context
Just fyi that doesn't work for children under 2. The biggest issues here are poor labels/coloring, and parents not putting stuff out of reach of children. Logically explaining that they shouldn't put stuff in their mouth will 100% not work unless by circumstance if they're under 2 and highly unlikely to work under 4.
As far the main questions of the thread. Buy liquid or powder laundry detergent that isn't brightly colored and sweet scented (free and clear are usually clear and scent free), keep it out of reach of young children, if a child is capable of reaching a high cabinet they're likely old enough to be told and explained why they shouldn't eat/drink laundry detergent which after that point you need to hope they listen / not retarded.(in this final case getting a lock should help a lot.)[/quote]
if you cant keep chemicals out of your kids mouth then wtf are you doing having kids in the first place.[/quote]
its easy to watch someone for 8 hours. its hard to do it for 24 hours without sleeping and keep it up for years and years[/quote]
yea but you should know the responsibilities that are required bringing a child into this world.[/quote]
I'm now very curious if you or illegalelephantgun have ever been around kids for more than a day. Also are you omni-present? Doubtful.
I hope you're just simply taking eee's quote out of context here.
-edit-
actually looked at the thread here it looks like eee removed the context of illegalelephantgun quote of mine.
-edit2-
added context