phillymatt53
Well-known member
A fee to dump recycleable stuff?I hear that Best Buy takes old electronics for disposal, although a fee may be involved?
Greed lurks everywhere.
A fee to dump recycleable stuff?I hear that Best Buy takes old electronics for disposal, although a fee may be involved?
No fee at Best buy to drop off electronics for recycling Dadoes. Many municipalities also designate a day for it.I hear that Best Buy takes old electronics for disposal, although a fee may be involved?
Bwahaha... "deflection circuit"... I much prefer the black boxes we have nowadays, no annoying 30hz hum from the vertical circuit, no pincushion or purity to deal with... no possiblity of a 25kV arc when the flyback cooks out all the wax! Ooh, that smell! But at least you could fix one when it quit.I wish we knew that before we got rid of it. A Philips 37 inch LED Smart tv replaced it. We still have it.
Banning gas stoves is counterproductive to the income revenue to the gas companies, and would likely result in gas companies voting against such banning.The utter nonsense of politicians trying to ban gas stoves because inner city kids who spend nearly their entire lives inside high rises have athsma more than those of us who grew up in the country, and were able to get outside and get dirt under our nails is, well, nonsense. Let's quit allowing these morons to dictate every aspect of how we'll live our lives.
Take my gas stove over my dead body, get outta my kitchen! Those idiots in NJ & NY tried to get them banned, petitioned the EPA to make them illegal... that went over like the proveriable turd in a punch bowl, didn't it?Banning gas stoves is counterproductive to the income revenue to the gas companies, and would likely result in gas companies voting against such banning.
Plus, consumers would get into the act as well, since some prefer gas, over electric.
Bottom line, it would be a stupid move to attempt.
But then again, a lot of legislation is stupid.
Your lizard brain is just fine, no need to worry about it.Maybe it's just my lizard brain, but a lot of the jabbering about kids getting sick because of a damn gas stove is nothing but ignorant blather. Yes, if the thing is misadjusted and spewing fumes, or has a leak, maybe so... I believe it's the fact that they don't spend enough time outside, breathing cleaner air and getting exposed to pollen, germs, etc. That's how we grow an immune system... We're born with very little of that, and need to be exposed to the world to live a healthy long life.
We're doing the environment a major service by burning the naturally occuring gas, in it's unburnt state it's a far worse greenhouse gas than CO2,
This air polution stuff was originated decades ago, and has slowly increased in intensity into what we hear about today.The argument should be exactly how much pollution is created by our collective lifestyle, and how bad is the real damage to the environment. No politics, no fake science for the sake of government control -grants written to get the money, that give results the grantor was looking for no matter the truth. No lying billionaires trying to get you and I to sit at home eating soylent green instead of tasty cows while they flit about the globe in their private jets dining on wagu. Recycling is a great means of reducing our effects, but in the case of glass and plastic, doesn't actually save much energy or emissions. I think it should be done even if the only benefit is reducing landfill waste... Plastic is a tough dog, because it's embedded in nearly everything we produce, and various polymers need sorted and processed differently.
I found a pic online some years ago, "Ilan Samson's Problem", which compared the total emissions of all the vehicles worldwide upon the earth's atmosphere, to 10x10x20 room, asking how many matches one would need to light in that room over a year, to produce an equivalent (scaled) contamination. No answer, not even a reference online to the question any more, it's been expunged from the internet as far as I can tell. I'm pretty sure the answer was a single match, but the dude passed away a year or so ago, and there's no way to force Google to cough up that data now... The AI answer misunderstands the question, trying to calculate how many matches would equal the year's emission concentrated in the room.
I have to agree that a lot of humans are slobs, and always have been a part of society.I'll never try to argue that humans aren't basically pigs... we trash almost everything we touch. I will say that the EPA, like every other government agency is a living organism, bent upon living and growing. What started out as a necessary effort to curb our collective impact on the environment has turned into a 7 headed monster with a mission to eliminate all sources of pollution, no matter how small. Every few years, the demands get tighter and tighter, the perception seems to be that we must get to zero impact no matter the financial or human cost. It'll never happen until we exterminate ourselves... We used R12 in untold millions of refrigeration systems, the vast majority of which has entered the atmosphere. It was used as a propellant in everything from paint to hair spray. That needed to stop, and it has. We now use refrigerants that have a miniscule impact on ozone, but we're starting to use hydrocarbons that are said to contribute to the greenhouse effect, and are flammable if they leak. Every few years, the regulations tighten and a new crop of patented, ever more expensive refrigerants are specified. More expensive tooling... for what? Have you heard a single word in the media about the ozone hole in the last five years? As it turned out, it's pretty much healed, and the theory is that it has always been subject to annual changes... might not ever have been a problem. And yet we march onward demanding more every year.
One thing I know, we as a group are helping. Keeping an existing appliance, car, or building in use is far better than replacing it with new. Yes, some efficiency gains are often there, but the impact of manufacturing, shipping, selling, delivering new is far greater. (your new fridge or front loader might cost less to run, but that will never, ever repay the purchase price! It's like spending $35,000 on a new car to save $15 a month on gas.) This seems to be lost on the EPA, EU and other government agencies.
