The "This product contains chemicals known to the State of California to cause cancer ..." warning is so common that I'm sure most people just ignore it.
The biggest problem is not even prevalence... it's the content-free message. What part of the product contains these chemicals? What chemicals are they? Will I be exposed just by touching the product, or only if the product is burned? etc. It's almost completely non-actionable information.
There have been significant changes to the law in the last few years. The chemical that causes cancer needs to be listed on the label. A lot of products that never should have had these labels don't have them anymore.
It also bothers me on a pedantic level that "the State of California" is portrayed as a sentient being.
I can't think of an equally concise but more accurate phrasing so long as a reference to California remains, but maybe brevity isn't such a high priority.
Surely there must be at least one federal or state judge who quietly whispers to himself 'I am the state' every time he/she signs a court document in that way
Not only that but I have nothing to base it off of. What concentration is thought to cause cancer? What concentration would I expect to be exposed to it?
The point isn't that cancer doesn't matter. It's that by putting cancer warnings on things with a 1-in-a-trillion lifetime chance of causing cancer, you desensitize people to cancer warnings on things that actually do pose a significant cancer risk.
Yup. The joke around here is that 'everything causes cancer in California'. Nobody takes those labels seriously because they're on everything and give 0 indication of risk level compared to other items with the same label.
One of the key problems with the California Prop 65 warnings is that there is no penalty for erroneously posting the sign. As a result, the sign is posted on nearly every building and establishment and many goods—without necessary need, in order to protect from lawsuits. It doesn't take much effort to see that this is roughly equivalent to not having the warning signs at all.
This isn't true anymore. The laws was changed, prop 65 warnings are required to have the specific chemicals listed. There are penalties if this is not done.
If you look at the list of chemicals, the signs probably aren't erroneous; almost all buildings will have at least trace amounts of one of those chemicals.
Your post is correct but overly generous. The aforementioned lack of penalty for erroneous sign postage means that even if the list was a single chemical, every building would still contain the notice 'just in case' and because it is cheaper to not bother to keep track of materials or to test.
There are of course other problems as well, including lack of context (do you need direct contact, exposure over time, etc), and lack of a requirement to list the particular chemicals. As a result, there's no actionable information and the signs are entirely devoid of meaning.
I can guarantee you that every building will contain something on that list. The problem is that Prop 65 requires notice of chemicals whether or not you'll actually be at risk from that chemical. For instance, BPA is in many plastics, such as those in light fixtures, but you're not at much risk of consuming it unless you drink warm/hot liquids from the light fixtures.
The light bulbs/tubes/LEDs also contain a number of P65 materials, as do all the electronics...
I agree that the signs are usually useless, but the parent says a/the problem is that there is no penalty for erroneous signs. The problem is that the law doesn’t take context into account, and those signs are actually required.
That's true, but it likely has more to do with pollution from industry and cars and harmful habits like smoking, and less to do with eating baked goods.
And a lot to do with eliminating a lot of death from infection, being prey to animals, and war. Cancer is largely a symptom of old age: it’s what’s left.
No doubt, the warning could be helpful. But when they are on literally everything, they get ignored. Am I just not going to eat or buy home appliances because "something" in the box or part of the build may cause cancer?
It goes even farther than that. "Not for sale in California" is practically a marketable feature on any chemical nobody expects you to ingest, anything that could cost you a limb if used wrong enough and anything powered by a small engine because it signals to the buyer that the manufacture didn't jump through a bunch of hoops, often compromising the product, for compliance.
Proposition 65 is such garbage that pretty much any manufacturer wishing to sell ANYTHING in the state of CA just puts a blanket warning on things. It's a real problem that they want to address, but a really lazy solution that doesn't accomplish anything.
GP was using "coffee" and "cigarette" as adjectives. In other words, asking "is this thing as carcinogenic as coffee, or as carcinogenic as cigarettes?", not "do cigarettes cause cancer?".
It's not an additive, it's byproducts of roasting.
And it's not just coffee you see these labels on. You see them all sorts of random places, and often not in a way that helps you make informed decisions.