Posted on 11/22/2011 7:13:25 AM PST by IbJensen
When the European settlers hit Plymouth Rock in 1620, North America presented newcomers with pristine wilderness, pure water, fresh air and endless top soil for growing food. Across America, anyone could drink from every lake, river or stream without fear of being poisoned. Not one speck of litter of any kind dotted what was to become the United States of America, Mexico and Canada.
Today, in 2011, plastic, glass, rubber, chemicals, metal, paper, oil, gasoline and a growing number of contaminants cover North America. We Americans inject over 80,000 chemicals into the air, land and water 24/7. We toss our trash into rivers, lakes and streams 24/7. We litter the highways with so many booze bottles that driving into the setting sun can blind a driver from the reflected glass in Arizona. We leave old farm equipment, mobile homes and garbage in every nook and cranny of America. I estimate into the billions.
Millions upon millions of Americans have dumped roofing materials, cars, plastics, paints, chemicals, Styrofoam, tires, soiled baby diapers and other debris of every description into pristine forests, beautiful lakes and into every river on this continent.
Ten years ago, I canoed the Mississippi River. During my journey, I filled two bags of trash every day from Lake Itasca, Minnesota down to New Orleans. I saw tractors, cars, sofas, tires, blankets, oil cans and an endless line of glass, aluminum and plastic containers tossed into Old Man River. It disgusted me beyond comprehension. When I wrote a commentary for the Minneapolis-Star Tribune to encourage the Boy and Girl Scouts, Kiwanis, Rotary and Lions Clubs to sponsor massive clean-ups of the 642 miles of the river in Minnesota, they wouldnt print the 600 word op-ed. When I wrote a 200 word letter to the editor, they would not publish that, either. When I asked the publisher to support a 10 cent deposit/return law like Michigans highly successful lawthey wouldnt publish that, also. In other words, they love living in litter and they dont give a dam about the Mississippi River or the wildlife along it.
Its incredible the industrial and manufacturing forces in this country that will do everything they can to deter any kind of recycling laws in this country. I call it the Peter Coors Factor of Coors Beer, which I will discuss later.
As a youth, my dad charged my siblings and me with this rule, Always leave a place better than you found it when you go camping, hiking or swimming. To this day, I have picked up over a half million pieces of trash. But it doesnt do any good because billions of people toss their trash from the Arctic to Antarctica. When I lived and worked in Antarctica, workers at McMurdo threw their trash, too. I picked it up.
If you drive your car along I-70 west of Denver, Colorado, and you stop on the up and down ramps, both east and westbound of exit 254, (Where you get off for Buffalo Bills Grave and where you can see the live buffalo herd.)you will see my six signs, Please keep the scene clean respect the land and its beauty please take your trash to the next fuel-up. But every two weeks, I walk over 400 yards of rest area and pick up two bags of trash from truckers and automobile drivers. They stop on those ramps, read my signs, and toss their trash. (By the way, thanks goes to the trucker who dropped two $20.00 bills this past Saturday because I found them and will use them to pay for more plastic bags. Thanks for the pleasant surprise.)
In reality, North America has become a giant trash dump. If you travel through the South, you will see countless plastic bags tossed alongside the country roads, rivers and highways. Youll see old homes and mobile homes rotting everywhere along with the highways and river banks. Youll see dumps in old towns along the highway. Youll see homes with trash piled up in their yards. Ive pedaled my bicycle three times across the south and quite frankly, its sickeningespecially at 15 miles per hour and endless miles of junk laying everywhere along the routes I traveled.
But dont let the Northeast, Northwest or Southwest think their citizens are any better. West Virginia suffers horrible trash and cars tossed over the river banks and everywhere in those beautiful mountains. Fast food cups, spoons, tissues, wrappers and plastic bags from every McDonalds, Subways, Dominos, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Burger King, Jack in the Box and so many more dot the landscape in every corner of America.
Its like everyone looks beyond the abandoned oil derricks, old tractors, burned out houses and empty mobile homes. In many towns in New Mexico, junk lines the main street as old tractors, burned out cars and worse. I would mutter to myself, How can people live like this? One man I asked said, Theyre just used to it.
In this series, youre going to see the ugliness of American citizens, corporate leaders, fast food corporations, oil companies and above allbeverage companies. Youll find out that they dont care about the trashing of America and youll find out how Peter Coors of Coors Beer undermined Colorado voters to stop the recycling laws. Hes not alone.
You will find out how the lone state of Michigan provides the best leadership with 10 cent deposit laws (5 cents doesnt cut it in ME, NH, CN, OR and WA because its not enough financial incentive) and how the Wolverine State became the finest state in the Union to keep its containers from littering the land.
Additionally, youre invited to visit www.pickupamerica.com on their two year 3,600 mile trash picking journey across America. Please donate your time or money in their efforts as they speak to communities, schools and church groups to educate our youth and all citizens.
Pick Up America is the brainchild of 25-year-old Jeff Chen and 26-year-old Davey Rogner who are self-proclaimed "pick up artists." Thus far, their crews along with volunteers have picked up 132,000 pounds of trash. Please realize that they are picking up trash on only one road across America.
"Baltimore, there was a lot of liquor bottles ... you notice these trends," said Chen. "The Eastern Shore of Maryland is always going to be known to us as the home of Natty Light drinkers. The Western Shore of Maryland is ... Bud Light drinkers."
"You notice people drink lots of Pepsi and Coke products," Rogner said. "In Virginia, it's all Mountain Dew; that continued pretty much through Ohio."
We must ask ourselves as a country, with the projected addition of 100 million people by 2035, do we want the commensurate trash that will come with those numbers. We must implement financially based incentive laws for recycling. What are your ideas for that? Send them to me.
One man said, This is the best way to explore America. I didnt know that America was so polluted.
Human beings who do this are themselves nothing but trash!
I just bought some land this year, and have been surprised by the little “dump sites” I keep finding. Really strange things, to boot.
“Not one speck of litter of any kind dotted what was to become the United States of America, Mexico and Canada.”
Sorry I cannot believe this unless of course there was no one here — in which case there is no reason to compensate native Americans.
Same here. But tipping costs at the local dumps are outrageous and I understand why people dump in other places. It was cleaner when dumps were free.
i’ve got a friend with 80 acres of wooded land. every time i go out i find more trash. it’s appalling how many people pitch stuff out the window, or trespass and leave all kinds of garbage.
That was indeed a rather stupid observation of a non event!
First of all there weren’t that many natives and they didn’t have cans and other containers to tote their pemmican around in.
This, of course, doesn’t compare with the millions of American Honkeys that throw used diapers out their car windows because they don’t want to put up with the smell. Then we’re they’re finished drinking their beer those containers sail out the car window as well.
Some things have gotten a lot cleaner since the 70s. My brother used to live near the Crayola Crayon factory in PA in the 70s. The creek behind the factory was a dead creek, it was so polluted. He moved away and 15 years later came back to visit and actually fished on the creek. There had been a massive cleanup and the dumping from the factory had ceased.
Other point— it’s not like there was no trash before the pilgrims came. I read an article about the Everglades (maybe here on FR?). The clumps of trees that occur in the wide expanse of grassy swamp are only there because they grew on what was originally Native American trash heaps.
How about the mattresses and couches that get dropped off alongside the road?
There is no such thing. Wilderness is in a continuous state of change and the Asian immigrants who inhabited North America at that time had themselves radically changed the wilderness.
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Across America, anyone could drink from every lake, river or stream without fear of being poisoned.
Doubtful. Not every natural source of water is safe to drink.
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Not one speck of litter of any kind dotted what was to become the United States of America, Mexico and Canada.
No manufactured products, perhaps, but Asian immigrants discarded refuse without regard to safety, sanitation, or sightliness.
Sometimes that’s not dumping... sometimes that’s someone moving, getting to their destination, and saying “oh, sht! where’s my mattress!?”
Here is the truth. There are three sinks. Air, water, and earth. The environmentally ill haven't a clue this is what is available to everyone. As long as there is industry there has to be an acceptable level of pollution otherwise there is no industry if all pollution is unacceptable.
Recycle? Yes.
Will the problems be cured by recyling? No.
Solution? Find a forth sink, or ban all industry.
Not trying to be difficult. Just stating the truth. Unless Quantum Mechanics will solve this problem.
Archeological digs find prehistoric litter all the time. In fact archeologists seek it out.
"Not one speck of litter of any kind dotted what was to become the United States of America, Mexico and Canada."
Sorry I cannot believe this unless of course there was no one here
Neither do I believe it.
I'm pretty sure archeolgists don't believe it, either.
“native” Americans had dumps, otherwise we would have nothing in those piles for archeologists to look through.
Our Lions’ Club cleans a two mile stretch of road. When I was a member back in the 90s, there were many times we would find $1.00 - $20.00 bills along the road with the trash. I clean a two mile stretch of local city street when I walk the dog. I’ve found money near the area where the golf course crossings are that probably blew out of golfers carts. I recycle the aluminum cans I find.
I remember when the Cuyahoga river caught on fire due to the heavy concentration of flammables and other effluents.
Today it, as well as Lake Erie, is much cleaner.
I honestly believe that the profusion of litter is due to the mentality of America’s permanent underclass.
Those ‘native’ Americans took dumps.
Reminds me of the astonishment of archeologists finding certain human artifacts much “ealier” in the rock layers than they expected,
and another guy saying “hey, what if they BURIED their garbage like we do?”
..and the people who dispose of trash "properly" are "unnatural"
Actually, there are a lot of references indicating that the ‘native americans’ were prolific litterers.
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