Here's a REALLY weird one.

I'm using the format below to lay out a number of forms (actual CSS 
doesn't matter I don't think). I've removed some crap for simplicity.

<div class="frmROW"><label for="mystate">State</label>
     <cfinput name="mystate"  value="" />
</div>

In one case, I need two YES/No radio buttons where the label normally 
is. As far as layout goes, it works fine. Function, in IE is as 
expected. But, in Firefox, you can ONLY select the "Yes" radio button. 
Trying to click the "No" button returns focus to the "Yes" button. 
There's no javascript on the page. What you see below is what you get:

<div class="frmROW"><label>
    <input name="m2" type="radio" value="Yes" checked="checked" /> Yes
    <input name="m2" type="radio" value="No" /> No</label>
<cfinput name="option1" value="" class="txtinput" /></div>

In this case the "yes/no" buttons sorta ARE the label, and I know it's 
not exactly valid syntax, but still, why it doesn't work is curious.
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