I am looking this bright Easter morn at a Department of Homeland Security “Custody Receipt for Seized Property and Evidence.” Late last night, crossing the Quebec/Vermont border, my children had two boxes of “Kinder Eggs” (“Est. Dom. Value $7.50″) confiscated by Customs & Border Protection.
Don’t worry, it’s for their own safety. I had no idea that the United States is the only nation on the planet (well, okay, excepting North Korea and Saudi Arabia and one or two others) to ban Kinder Eggs. According to the CBP:
Kinder Chocolate Eggs are hollow milk chocolate eggs about the size of a large hen’s egg usually packaged in a colorful foil wrapper. They are a popular treat and collector’s item during holiday periods in various countries around the world, including those in Europe, South America and even Canada. A toy within the egg is contained in an oval-shaped plastic capsule. The toy requires assembly and each egg contains a different toy. Many of the toys that have been tested by the Consumer Product Safety Commission in the past were determined to present a choking hazard for young children.
And yet oddly enough generations of European and Latin American children remain unchoked. Gotta love that “even Canada,” by the way: Is that an implied threat that Kinder Egg consumption is incompatible with participation in NORAD or membership of NAFTA?
The Food and Drug Administration has issued an import alert for Kinder Eggs, because they are a confectionery product with a non-nutritive object imbedded in it. As in years past, CBP, the Food and Drug Administration and CPSC work in close collaboration to ensure the safety of imported goods by examining, sampling and testing products that may present such import safety hazards. Last year, CBP officers discovered more than 25,000 of these banned chocolate eggs. More than 2,000 separate seizures were made of this product.
Let’s see — CBP, FDA, CPSC. I’m impressed it takes a mere three agencies from the vast alphabet soup of federal regulation to keep us safe from the menace of confectionery products with non-nutritive embeds.
As Janet Napolitano would say, the system worked. I hope America’s chocolate soldiers are enjoying their seized eggs this Easter.
Bonus prediction: What’s the betting that the first jihadist to weaponize a Kinder Egg makes it on to the plane?
PS My kids asked the CBP seizure squad if they could eat the chocolate in front of the border guards while the border guards held on to the toys to prevent any choking hazard — and then, having safely consumed the chocolate, take the toys home as a separate item. This request was denied. Could have been worse. Could have been a $300 fine, plus a $250 fee for seized-egg storage.
PPS The real choking hazard is the vise-like grip of government.
Of course the request was denied. The bastids were in the back eating them themselves. I feel so much safer now with Janet in charge. TSA has to save us from every risk except those that count.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseMr. Steyn, please, please, PLEASE forward this story on to Rand Paul.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbusePerhaps Obama will go to Canada and apologize for this. He apologizes for America's existence, why not this ridiculous policy? And if these eggs constitute a choking hazard, why not go all out and ban food to American children? We may be heading there anyway.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseReading the FDA comment made me think of the old Monty Python "Crunchy Frog" sketch.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseConfiscated Kinder Eggs: $7.50
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseLife lessor for the kids on the nature of bureaucracy: Priceless
Janet was recently on O'Reilly telling us how the borders are getting more secure. Now I know why I'm sleeping more soundly at night.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseAnd they ask me why I drink...
Well, Mark, I guess you can be thankful that you and your kids weren't frisked (aka molested) to make certain you weren't hiding any more dangerous contraband on your person.
Happy Easter!
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI'll bet the seizure squad ate the chocolate.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseMark- Bringing those contraband eggs into the country means the terrorists have won.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThis is another example of anarcho-tyranny. The border police are great at stopping the infiltration of chocolate eggs. The millions of frostbacks that wander over the border, however, remain an unmet challenge.
The only good news is the blob eventually becomes so flabby and inefficient it collapses under its own weight.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseAnd here we thought Canada was leading the race to achieve the ultimate North American Nanny State, most especially when it's FOR THE CHILDREN? This would seem to put the U.S. safely, and we must emphasize SAFETY above all else, in the lead.
As a grandparent with kiddies on both sides of the World's Longest No-Longer Undefended Border, I've known of this particular bureaucratic tic for some time. I feel bad for your own children but what a teachable moment for their father to utilize.
It's only too bad that such teachable moments are becoming so very common.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI love those things. Always wondered why I couldn't get them here. What a ridiculous waste of our tax dollars.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseHow many objects are of such a size that they present a "choking hazard for young children"? And do the US and Canadian governments plan to confiscate and/or ban them all?
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIsn't this a classic example of how bureaucracies work?
Instead of focusing on the, big, important issue(s) they pick out something minute, utterly meaningless, and make a huge issue out of it.
Why? Isn't it to simply enforce the image of an ongoing "detailed" effort? We're "safe" because "nothing" gets by these people (except guns and knives in a multitude of tests). Experts are detail oriented. Picking out something obscure means you are "expert" then, no?
Its a game. A stupid and unproductive game but one that allows bureaucrats something to point to as being "effective" and "professional" when all they are doing is goofing around.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseFirst they came for my Kinder Surprise and we said nothing since our kids were older...
I guess we were lucky when our kids were younger we used to bring Kinder Eggs in from Canada by the dozen when we went to visit my family, if this idiotic law had existed then we would have all been thrown in jail for importing weapons of mass choking hazard.
My brother-in-law who arranges travel for the engineers working in a Canadian company with offices throughout the world told me of one incident where one of their engineers had inadvertently forgotten that he had an apple in his carry on bag was fined $500 for trying to import a banned piece of fruit, he wasn't given the opportunity to toss the apple out or even to eat it.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseTime for everyone crossing the border from Canada to the U.S. to have at least one Kinder Egg on their person, and to make a fuss over this violation of the Fourth Amendment if it's seized. Choke the system!
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThe best part of this story is the solution proposed by the children. Both brilliant and hilarious.
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abusejag is spot-on. And try not to wonder how many jihadis are slipping over our porous southern border while the federal government throws its resources at harassing Mark Steyn's children, that'll ruin your day.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseChocolates coming from Canada?
Stopped and seized.
Drug dealers, gangsters, and lawbreakers coming from Mexico?
Come on in.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseMethinks it might be time someone penned a children's book in which Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, the Tooth Fairy -- you know, all the usual suspects -- are "disappeared" and wind up in a special section of Gitmo, called to account for the many perils they have inflicted on The Children.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseMark, I know you're busy, but....