A mother whose three-year-old girl’s hair was ripped out by an electric cleaning brush says the internet giant Temu “does not care about the safety of people”.
Amy, 36, from Norwich, bought the brush online for £4 to “make life easier” with housework, but it caught in her daughter’s hair when the child took it out of the box.
She reported the item as it appeared on the shopping site to Norfolk Trading Standards, who said Temu had now removed it from sale in the UK.
A spokesperson for the Chinese-owned site told the BBC: “We are deeply concerned to hear about this incident and wish the child a full and speedy recovery.”
They added: “The safety and wellbeing of our customers are always our top priority, and our customer service team is in contact with the family to offer assistance.”
…
I’m sorry your shitty mom ass let your child play with a power cleaning tool and you let your kid get hurt. Quit projecting out over your own fuck up.
While the brush was apparently low quality and flew off, it is the responsibility of the parent to ensure their kids stay safe, not temu. The negligent cunt of a mother admitted she let her kid operate a cleaning power-tool, she had no business of getting her hands on. The mother clearly endangered her three year old and now shifts the blame on the seller. Be an adult and take responsibility for god’s sake.
I think you’re being overly harsh, but I agree that this was the parents’ fault.
I have something similar (not from Temu)–it’s basically just a small electric drill. Should all electric drills stop being sold because a kid could hurt itself with one? Or should we not let theee-year-olds pick up power tools?
My the logic of the mother all power tools should be banned from sale in case a child gets their hands them.
Buying from Temu is not caring about safety lol
there’s very few things i would buy from temu. this would be one thing i wouldn’t buy
I see that people is blaming Temu without reading the article or even seeing the product photo.
That’s not for hair brush, it’s a power tool for cleaning appliances (bathtubs, kitchen…)
The kid picked the tool and use it on her hair, the mother is blaming the online store for the product instead of having more careful leaving power tools with kids.
Not saying that Temu products are good or not. But if you leave power tools with kids and something happens don’t blame the store
What are you talking about? Everyone in here is blaming the mother.
While she’s not wrong about Temu’s approach to consumer protections (if they can be said to have one), it’s hardly their responsibility to ensure her kid doesn’t operate tools she shouldn’t.
If her daughter had lost a hand to a powered electric saw she should have been nowhere near, would that also somehow be Black & Decker’s fault?
With that said, I do wish people would stop buying cheap products of dubious quality - regardless of who sells them.
Best take.
Hard lessons taught for the kid - mum is a dumbass, and stay away from rotary tools.
I’d agree except that clearly the parents learned nothing.
We can’t afford anything more expensive and in too many cases the quality of those more expensive things isn’t better.
Do you need an ‘electric cleaning brush’? We have this cheap, battle-tested commonly available device called a broom. It’s sometimes combined with an ergonomically shaped piece of metal or plastic called a ‘dust pan’ to great effect. Lasts practically forever, and as a bonus neither will spontaneously scalp your three year old child (or catch on fire).
I realize you weren’t necessarily talking about this particular product, but I’m trying to illustrate how no product is often times preferable to a cheap one. We got by before these things existed, somehow.
We got by in the days before smartphones existed too. And internet. And electricity. Doesn’t necessarily mean we want a return to those days.
Sounds like it was light enough for a child to use, powerful enough to scrub all her hair off. Cheap. 5 stars.
So? I could come up with almost infinite things a child could activate, but definitely shouldn’t. Temu isn’t in this lady’s home and ‘good parenting’ isn’t a product they sell. This is entirely her responsibility.
Now, if we’d been taking about - I don’t know - children’s shoes full of BPA, chromium and lead, then yes - that would absolutely been on the manufacturer and partially on Temu (and I wouldn’t be at all surprised to find they sell something like that too), but…
Please link to us a similar device of higher quality made in the UK or USA.
You appear to be missing my point by a wide country mile. Also, either pay me or do your own work.
She allowed a 3 year old to play with power tools, and blames the manufacturer?
That 3 year old should be playing with a loaded handgun! I thought this was America!
First word of the post title:
UK
You must be fun at parties.
Just did a quick search and you can buy similar power cleaning brushes from most online retailers as well as brick and mortar hardware shops in the UK. Temu are a scummy company, but this is a case where I don’t think you can really blame them.
Why the heck would someone use a brush that has the words “tile, sink, wash basin, bath/showers” on it and let their small kid play with it? Generally tools and kids don’t mix well. You’re supposed to stow power tools and bathroom cleaning supply out of reach. Same goes for other motorized things, even a handheld electric mixer in the kitchen, we also got youtube videos about how they rip out hair of stupid teenagers.
Articles (or headlines) like this are nothing more than “China bad” clickbait.
It’s one of the reasons I left reddit/FB/Twitter etc., and it’s something that’s been popping up on Lemmy gradually last couple of years. Critical thinking is an afterthought.
I think that’s a general societal trend and we’re not exempt from any of that. But yeah, I wish we’d focus on quality and discuss things, not stir up simple emotions.
Appeal to emotion is one of the biggest fallacies perpetrated on social media. Guess we just go back to downvoting and blocking to keep the feed sane ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Yeah, It won’t do anything, though. That dynamic is baked in to the core of social media. You’re supposed to doomscroll and get some small but constant dopamine hits. It’ll tingle a bit once you’re offended or get your perspective validated. I don’t think it’s a fallacy, that’s the core dynamics, and what we incentivise people to do by designing platforms like this.
(I think the framing is a bit stupid, because it takes away from the valid criticism of TEMU and there’s enough of it. This is more like the good old story of how someone dried their dog in the microwave and now we need stickers to tell people how reality works.)
While there is reason to blame Temu for a lot of things, including the safety of many of their products, in this specific case, I don’t really see it. If parents put boxes with potentially dangerous objects (even when they are in boxes) in areas that are in easy reach of a 3 year old, and then said child unboxes an electric gadget… They are lucky that it’s only ripped out hair.
Don’t buy from Temu lol
Why not, you could also buy the same thing from the official store: https://domostil.com/products/cordless-electric-cleaning-brush-magic-brush-5-in-1
Never have, never will.
That’s a clean bald spot. I see Temu marketing this power took to balding men by the Christmas season.
Don’t let these dumbasses near any scary things like a cordless drill!
Such ‘incidients’ have been occuring frequently with products from Temu, Shein, and the like. I am wondering why something like that never happens with products bought, say, at local shops or other points of sale where strict product safety laws apply?
Are you saying a power tool bought at a local shop would NOT harm a kid playing with it?
He is saying that, or more accurately saying “he never heard of it happening”, which I guess is enough to assume it doesn’t!
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Pay cheap shit money, get cheap shit product.
It probably works pretty well if it can rip hair out.
That is what you get for using temu, poor child.









