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On a Sears hairdryer:

Do not use while sleeping. (that's the only time I have to work on my hair).

On a bag of Fritos!

..You could be a winner! No purchase necessary. Details inside. (the shoplifter special)?

On a bar of Dial soap:

"Directions: Use like regular soap." (and that would be how?...)

On some Swanson frozen dinners:

"Serving suggestion: Defrost." (but, it's "just" a suggestion).

On Tesco's Tiramisu dessert (printed on bottom):

"Do not turn upside down." (well...duh, a bit late, huh)!

On Marks & Spencer Bread Pudding:

"Product will be hot after heating." (...and you thought?...)

On packaging for a Rowenta iron:

"Do not iron clothes on body." (but wouldn't this save me more time?)

On Boot's Children Cough Medicine:

"Do not drive a car or operate machinery after taking this medication." (We could do a lot to reduce the rate of construction accidents if we could just get those 5-year-olds with head-colds off those forklifts.)

On Nytol Sleep Aid:

"Warning: May cause drowsiness." (and.. .I'm taking this because?...)

On most brands of Christmas lights:

"For indoor or outdoor use only." (as opposed to...what?)

On a Japanese food processor:

"Not to be used for the other use." (now, somebody out there, help me on this. I'm a bit curious.)

On Sunsbury's peanuts:

"Warning: contains nuts." (talk about a news flash)

On an American Airlines packet of nuts:

"Instructions: Open packet, eat nuts." (Step 3: maybe, uh...fly Delta?)

On a child's superman costume:

"Wearing of this garment does not enable you to fly." (I don't blame the company. I blame the parents for this one.)

On a Swedish chainsaw:

"Do not attempt to stop chain with your hands or genitals." (..was there a lot of this happening somewhere?)

On T-Rat (Military food):

Its not for Human Consumption, Animals and Military Use only... (Umm yeah... isn't military also human?)

I hijacked this from a friend on Fanfiction.net. I thought all of these were hilarious. The bold part is my friends' responses to the statements.

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on a chocolate-dipped biscuit stick packet: Warning- Produced in a factory that handles nuts, peanuts, other nuts..... (I didn't know that nuts were different from other nuts......i guess they refer to their staff as nuts, too..... :P:lol:)

This is totally real.....I found it yesterday when snacking..... :D

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and in terms of other funny lawsuits, i heard that a robber broke into a house, stole something, fell into the stairs, broke his foot, than sued the owners of the house!

oh my....that's just crazy!!! :lol:

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On a hammer: Warning: Product may cause damage if you hit yourself in the head.

Man calls 911 because Burger King doesn't have lemonade.

Woman calls 911 because she wants the "cutest cop she's ever seen" to arrive.

Hope you accept stupid 911 calls.

Man gets stuck to toilet at Home Depot. Sues for $1.3 million.

Man backs dump truck into his own car. Sues for $72,000.

Man is walking on train tracks and gets hit. Sues for $3 million.

Man has heart problems while watching Fear Factor. Sues for $50,000.

Woman is startled by teenagers with cookies. Sues for $12,000.

Man loses pants at dry cleaners. Sues for $67 million.

EDIT: Stupid lawsuits.

Edited by filly678
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As well as all these stupid product labels, there are many dangers that are not listed on labels that should be. For instance, Dihydrogen Monoxide (DHMO) is a very dangerous chemical if handled wrong, and yet you never see any of these warnings on their labels:

DHMO:

*is a major component of acid rain

*contributes to the greenhouse effect

*is fatal if inhaled

*contributes heavily toward erosion

*accelerates corrosion of metals

*may cause electrical failures

*has been found in tumors of cancer patients

There have been active attempts to outlaw Dihydrogen Monoxide, yet the government does not see DHMO in the same view as the rest of the people.

Dihydrogen Monoxide

2*hydrogen, 1*oxygen

2H+1O

H2O

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As well as all these stupid product labels, there are many dangers that are not listed on labels that should be. For instance, Dihydrogen Monoxide (DHMO) is a very dangerous chemical if handled wrong, and yet you never see any of these warnings on their labels:

DHMO:

*is a major component of acid rain

*contributes to the greenhouse effect

*is fatal if inhaled

*contributes heavily toward erosion

*accelerates corrosion of metals

*may cause electrical failures

*has been found in tumors of cancer patients

There have been active attempts to outlaw Dihydrogen Monoxide, yet the government does not see DHMO in the same view as the rest of the people.

Dihydrogen Monoxide

2*hydrogen, 1*oxygen

2H+1O

H2O

I know this one!!!! it's a total :lol: .....:D

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As well as all these stupid product labels, there are many dangers that are not listed on labels that should be. For instance, Dihydrogen Monoxide (DHMO) is a very dangerous chemical if handled wrong, and yet you never see any of these warnings on their labels:

DHMO:

*is a major component of acid rain

*contributes to the greenhouse effect

*is fatal if inhaled

*contributes heavily toward erosion

*accelerates corrosion of metals

*may cause electrical failures

*has been found in tumors of cancer patients

There have been active attempts to outlaw Dihydrogen Monoxide, yet the government does not see DHMO in the same view as the rest of the people.

Dihydrogen Monoxide

2*hydrogen, 1*oxygen

2H+1O

H2O

My history teacher did that to us! There was an article in the newspaper that day about water powered computer batteries and he started going on about having problems with it in class, problems in the city (we had a bit of flooding that year), can be ingested, . . . Then he offered to gives us a pass to go get some.

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i am in college and my writing 102 professor tried the DHMO thing with my class and gave us a several page packet. only thing she forgot to take into account is that the majority of students at my college are premed and/or science majors. needless to say as soon as she showed us the packet all but 2 or 3 kids knew right away it was water. it was funny for us but the professor was slightly dissappointed. ^_^

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In the instruction manual for a drip-coffee percolator:

"warning - milk from the fridge added to your coffee will decrease the temperature of your coffee"

Interestingly enough, this warning was only in English. None of the other 10 or 15 languages had a problem with this!

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