Like how they let Jimmy Seville get away with it for so long.They need to divert our attention from what's really important.
Like how they let Jimmy Seville get away with it for so long.They need to divert our attention from what's really important.
...as in bodd.They

And the rest of them. And they still are.Like how they let Jimmy Seville get away with it for so long.

Im not that bothered. What bothers me is the time a needless effort involved.So it was OK for us to get a naming rule which rode roughshod over traditional naming practices in other countries, but the reverse is not OK?
So you approve of this product. Did the EU tell you to approve of this product or did you figure it out by yourself?I just wish we'd change our labelling rules so that added orange juice, if used, cannot be counted as fruit content.
These people know how to do it:
View attachment 411923
Sugar, Seville oranges.
That's it.
No, your head is stuffed with pro EU idolatry.I figured it out for myself, because I have room in my head to do that as I haven't stuffed it full of anti-EU bigotry and fantasy nonsense.
Looks like the court case was in the US, that said some jcb tools seem more orange than before. The bloke who runs jcb seems to have his head screwed on and would doubtless fight B&D if he thought it was right to do so.JCB Pro 18V Combi Drill 160Nm, Brushless, An... – Power Site https://share.google/rV0AyOcyFlFf6sHG0
No, your head is stuffed with pro EU idolatry.

I think you'll find labels already get printed every day of the week.Im not that bothered. What bothers me is the time a needless effort involved.
It’s as if bodd and others think their marmalade will become some kind of hostile EU spread, because of clarifications in the labelling.I think you'll find labels already get printed every day of the week.

There is no official C E Chinese Export mark. Any use of it is intentional misrepresentation.You can't go wrong if it's got a CE mark.
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There is no official Chinese government definition for a distinct "China Export" logo; rather, it is a commonly used, often unauthorized, variation of the European CE mark