Posted on 02/15/2024 2:21:22 PM PST by ChicagoConservative27
Well put!
Islets throughout the Asian Pacific archipelagos are loaded with mountains of plastics, probably dumped by Chinese or Russian Mafias. Leaching into the food chain.
Yes. We’ve know... Since the BS started...
Glass? Paper? Wood? Plant fiber based cellulose? Those are relatively easy to compost, break down, or otherwise reuse...
Plastics? Not so much. That’s why China just dumps it in the ocean...
One word, plastics…
On the other hand they are great fuel sources.
Yet another “Green Energy” hoax.
By the way, again, what exactly is fossil fuel? Everybody keeps using this term. According to estimates I have seen, from 1969 to 2018, a fifty-year span, the world has consumed 1.306 trillion barrels of oil. Over 1.3 trillion barrels are estimated to have been used, just since 1969. About how many dinosaurs where there roaming the earth? Hint: there is no such thing as fossil fuel.
Bring back the giant incinerators. Take all of your trash there and just throw it in. Watch the smoke go up. It’s a better way.
George Carlin’s amazing “Earth with Plastics”:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rld0KDcan_w
Wonderful stuff.
Same with Hershey bars -- they were in simple foil-lined paper that slid into a paper sleeve. Today they are packaged in impossible-to-open plastic packaging.
I remember my Dad's "Veto" deodorant which came in a squat, white glass jar with a metal lid.
My Opa gave my dad his WW I safety razor blade sharpener. It was back in the era of the first safety razors with disposable blades (at least they were steel).
I bought my first outdoors water bottle around 1973. It was plastic with a simple screw-on top, but I used it thousands of times refilling from water fountains and spigots.
Of course, I'd be happy with the old black desk phone with the tangled cords.
Bookmark.
A couple of nukes and it will be vaporized
90% of “recycing” is about behavior control.
They may not be able to be turned into other plastics, but they can still be turned in asphalt.
And, hmmmmmmm, I wonder what is used to make them in the first place........ I momentarily bought in decades ago but quickly realized it was 🐂💨💩
All plastics can be recycled using pyrolysis, which a company in Kansas did for awhile. But the procedure is much more expensive per barrel of oil than drilling.
But, if you really want to get rid of plastic, that is the way.
On a trip through Italy a few years back I was amazed this small tourist spot had a dozen recycling cans taking up the sidewalks. I watched as tourists dutifully sorted their plastics, papers, food, etc in to the appropriate bin like well trained little monkeys. When the trash truck came they tossed all the bins in to the general trash and drove it to the landfill. I was just laughing and when I asked the restaurant server why they bother with all the cans. He said the tourists revolt and leave their “recycleables” laying around all over the place because they are so offended by putting something “recycleable” in the regular trash can to be disposed of. So, they keep the recycle bins out and just dump it all in the same trash truck for the well trained tourists.
I am told that plant based light packaging is a good alternative to soft plastics, and that needs to be looked at.
Add paper and glass recycling to the list.
Recycling became cool in the 80s and you had the government get involved.
What happens when the “gubbermint” gets involved in anything?
There are a few things where recycling makes sense, aluminum for example. But much of the recycling programs we have today have become endless tax and pay programs (subsidies) for companies making billions off trash in the name of environmentalism. Most of it is make belief feel good nonsense where someone ends up cashing in.
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