Yes it is, even if its sterilized so its no longer contaminated with all kinds of diseases, bacteria, fungi and parasites, its still going to have a witches brew of heavy metals etc.
Well, that would be analogous to a cheap and cheerful small gadget that occasionally electrocutes you, wouldn't it?
The post is getting a bit gritty now
Well, to be honest, I wouldn't mind eating rat meat if I knew it was a wild one, and not say Nth generation sewer rat. So
rat is not the offensive part; the offensive part is that typical rats are full of diseases, chemicals, bacteria, viruses, and parasites with their own bacteria, viruses, and parasites. EU didn't ban chlorine washed chicken because it was dangerous, but because it is only needed when you grow your chickens in insane conditions ignoring all basic hygiene.
In electronics, having there be cheap chinesium USB wall warts that usually won't zap you or your devices on the market is not the problem; the problem is when you cannot tell which ones are reliable and which ones are those dangerous cheapies. (I don't buy anything like those from fleabay for exactly that reason.)
By extension, having LED lamps and USB wall warts that are okay and cheap is not a problem; the problem is when you assume that that is the best we can do, and plan accordingly.
Even in the software world, the fact that most programs are not that reliable, and occasionally crash and lose your data, is not a problem. It only becomes a problem when it becomes the norm and expected, even when it could be easily avoided. (I mean, I don't expect perfect software. I just expect users to complain if the software crashes too often, instead of just shrugging that oh well, there went your data, nothing I can do, thanks for your money and pity that happened to you, computer says no, bye.)
Finding out the limits of actually what is possible right now, if nothing else, gives some perspective to examine what we have accepted as a norm, and a point to compare to.