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09 January 2008

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Comments

Lab Rat

Hear! Hear! I think this is your best post yet. I actually stopped someone from pitching an aluminum can in the trash and made a point of taking it to the proper recycling bin.

However, I don't feel guilty about garbage as much as I feel a little sad. The idea that the stuff we put into the trash bin is useless seems lazy to me. I understand economics may make the utilization of said trash difficult but GOD! think of all the already refined resources sitting in landfills. Mark my words; "Garbage dumps will be the gold mines of the future."

Oh, and I don't think just burning the trash for energy is reasonable either, just a lazy cop-out.

Carrie

Recycling at this point is a weak gesture, for sure. It's like quitting smoking on your deathbed. What it points to, and what your comment suggests, is that bad design is the main issue. Why make something out of finite resources that will then go on to sit in a landfill, benefiting no one?

Lowell

It's actually sad that people even think that their plastic water bottles, etc, will BE "recycled"... it might be temporarily re-purposed into a park bench or something, but in the end, it's toxic waste and will break up into small toxic pieces that can kill fish, birds and other wildlife over and over. We haven't even had it around all that long (plastics) in great quantity, but they already are a significant portion of the material floating at sea, choking and killing marine life and inexorably adding to the toxicity of the food chain...

Add to that the fact that plastic water bottles (PET, etc) contain pthalates and other nasty compounds -- some of which are known to totally mess up endocrine systems, producing sterility and/or premature adolescence, among a host of other issues -- and you should come to the conclusion that it's better to carry a good water filtration system when traveling abroad and use a better one for home. We just don't need more of that garbage in our environment.

Aluminum... we have enough in use to just keep recycling it, but the vested (bauxite mining) interests want to keep producing virgin material... contributing to destruction of rainforests in the Amazon's mineral-rich Guiana shield, among other nastiness. It'd be best to avoid drinking or eating ANYTHING that comes in aluminum packaging, anyway... and you certainly shouldn't cook in it. I think we have enough to keep the planet in nice, light bicycle frames for a long time.

We should tell the bloody multinationals pushing this crap on us that we don't want anything of theirs till they stop indiscriminately overproducing crap the planet just doesn't need! Buy local, buy organic, grow your own... reduce, re-use, and as a last resort: recycle! [ /rant ]

Carrie

Hi Lowell!

Thanks for your comment, which I completely agree with, by the way. Have you been reading Alan Weisman's The Earth Without Us? Or Cradle to Cradle? Great books that also have underscored the half-measures that recycling represents. If not, you'll love both

Well, LOVE probably isn't the word. Both books are highly disturbing when it comes to how we've spread our trash everywhere on the planet. But both inspire me to make better choices.

Plastic containers give me fits! I scan the grocery store for glass first and if I'm absolutely desperately in need of said product, I'll get the damn plastic.

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