Recycling

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Amen!

"If they really wanted to DO something, bring back deposit bottles that can be returned."

This is something I feel very strongly about - single-use plastics and other wasteful packaging have become very firmly entrenched in our society, to the point that no one any longer even stops to consider that there used to be another way.

I grew up in a world of biodegradable cardboard boxes, reusable glass bottles, rustable "tin" cans, waxed paper milk cartons, and many other things many people today have never even seen. It came down to far more - and far better - use of renewable resources than is the case today, where Corporate America appears to be hell-bent on using as much non-renewable petroleum as possible for the greatest number of non-essential uses conceivable.

I personally would like to see a return to some of the old ways; no one died of hog cholera back in the day from drinking a Coke from a sterilised, re-used deposit bottle instead of a plastic bottle or aluminium can. The milk in waxed paper cartons didn't spoil any faster. The canned goods tasted no worse and lasted just as long on the shelf. Powdered detergent in cardboard boxes got clothes clean. There is no reason for today's overuse of plastic except fashion.

As it is, all I can do is govern my own purchasing choices to include as much packaging that meets my personal standards for biodegradability and use of renewable resources as possible. I buy Oxydol because it's a powder in a cardboard box, and it performs like gangbusters. I buy Chase & Sanborn coffee in a tin can (when I can find it; thank God I recently discovered that Menard's carries it) instead of Folger's or Maxwell House in a plastic canister. I keep pop purchases down to a minimum, and when I buy it, I get 2-litre bottles instead of individual servings, so that I can at least minimise the amount of plastic involved (I'd buy glass-bottled pop if the price wasn't so outrageous, and if sugar-free choices were more readily available). Stuff like that. (I also don't buy anything new if it's available used in reasonable shape, but that's a whole 'nother topic.)

I wish this country had a packaging czar or office as part of its Federal gummint, tasked with permitting - or not permitting - packaging types according to their use, sustainability and necessity. We are going to have to get serious about this kind of waste, very soon, and the expense of recycling (some localities have stopped recycling efforts during the recession, because they can't afford it) has shown that it's not the total answer. I would also like to see a return to common sense among consumers - one example is bottled water, which many people are drinking because of concerns with their drinking water supply. It seems to me that the solution to bad drinking water (in most cases) is ousting one's city management and replacing them with competent people, not creating a gazillion plastic bottles, filling them with water, and trucking them all over hell's half acre.

We used to have a pretty good little planet here. I'd like to get it back.
 
Probably about 80% or more of our stuff is recycled. One bin for "containers", bottles, cans etc and another one for "fibre" which is cardboardy or paper of any sort.
There isn't much can't go in our bins now. We can't barely fill 1/2 a trash bag per week anymore.
 
What bothers me is the fast food places that provide the huge plastic "Big Gulp" type of soda cups. They are recyclable, but are just thrown in the trash with everything else from the tray. I think it's time to get some sort of recycling system going in all fast food restaurants.
 
There's a brilliant dialog on BloggingHeads

about why conservative Americans and fundamentalist Christians oppose all forms of environmental protection. Well worth listening to, I really never looked at it that way.

It's in the second part of the diavlog, but the whole thing is very worth listening to.

There's not much to be gained from being able to point our fingers as liberals and saying "we told you so" after the whole planet is ruined. It's a real shame this has become a culture-wars issue.

 
consider this...

I find it sad that so many 'conservatives' oppose recycling.

The number one conservative in America was Teddy Roosevelt, father of the National Parks System. (And an incredible hunter, too).

Most conservatives aren't very. They are merely inflexible and intolerate. True conservatives aren't that way at all.

Hunter
 
Europe is light-years ahead of us.

I remember Greece back in 1973, would re-fill your own containers with Coca-Cola.

My father had to explain recycling, convservation, small country, limited resources, to me back then when I was a kid.

Good luck trying to force corporate AMerica to have that happen here............

NYC has recycling, stopped it for a short while(budget constraints), then modified the program and went back to it.

My little village on Long Island recycles; has various pick ups 5 days a week! But then again sanitation workers make 6 figures a year!

M. Lawn waste
T. Regular garbage
W. Recycling (all in one bin)
Th. Bulk pick-up (10 items max)
F. Regular garbage.
 
What is the word for *dumpster-diving* in Japanese?

oh, appliances go out on Tuesday with regular garbage and there is limit of 2 per week.

..... and you know when they go out in (laundry) pairs, one of them usually works..............
 
~It's in the second part of the diavlog, but the whole thing is very worth listening to.

IIRC "the devil" in Spanish and Portuguese and Italian is "Diablo", in French "Diable" and in Greek "Diavolos"

So your posting of "diavlog" being "the devil's" log is quite interesting..........

oh I do amuse myself..........
 
Black-topped bins (today dusted with snow!) for non-recycleable waste. Most people just have either one big one, or one small one. We're a family of six + 2 pets, and we get one of each.

Collected by the council once every other week.

VintageHoover++12-16-2009-08-00-11.jpg
 

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