Out-Law / Your Daily Need-To-Know

A toilet brush that warns users "Do not use for personal hygiene" has won an annual contest for stupid product warning labels. The event is run by a consumer watchdog to increase awareness of how a litigation explosion is hurting America.

Michigan Lawsuit Abuse Watch (M-LAW) has been running the contest for eight years. Second place in this year's event was for a warning on a children's scooter: "This product moves when used."

In third place was a warning on a thermometer: "Once used rectally, the thermometer should not be used orally."

Other labels included an electric blender: "Never remove food or other items from the blades while the product is operating."

"Warning labels are a sign of our lawsuit-plagued times," said Robert B. Dorigo Jones, M-LAW's president. He says the litigation culture has made the warnings so long that few people read them anymore – "even the ones we should read."

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