Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am increasingly annoyed with the plastic packaging of everything. That seems like an easy fix and doesn't even demand that people change what they want to own or use. Like, why put a winter jacket inside a plastic bag to ship it? It's just lazy reliance.
Amen to that.
It's because of rodent and clothes mite damage from the factory to your home. This is actually one of the rare places where plastic might be useful, as long as garments are mass produced. Your clothes are perhaps more traveled than you. The fabric is produced in one place, cut in another, the garment is assembled elsewhere, finished in another place, and by the time it comes to your door it's been around the world. Meanwhile, rodents exist in all factories and shipping containers, and poop every 15 minutes. Studies were made that found a tiny amount of rodent excrement dust in all packaged cereal, for example. Clothes mites can ruin woollens in a day.
So. Unless you're buying from a seamstress who makes your clothes by hand in her own home, you might want that plastic bag.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am increasingly annoyed with the plastic packaging of everything. That seems like an easy fix and doesn't even demand that people change what they want to own or use. Like, why put a winter jacket inside a plastic bag to ship it? It's just lazy reliance.
Amen to that.
Anonymous wrote:I am increasingly annoyed with the plastic packaging of everything. That seems like an easy fix and doesn't even demand that people change what they want to own or use. Like, why put a winter jacket inside a plastic bag to ship it? It's just lazy reliance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:YES. A thousand times yes. But you can deny yourself most holiday plastic and still, by buying food for your own survival, contribute to greenhouse gas emissions (ex: beef is by far the most polluting food item to produce).
So it's too easy for me to fall into guilt and what ifs. That's what I'm mostly working on - how not to feel the burden of flying to Europe and Asia to visit my parents or my aunts. How to celebrate milestones and live my daily life with ease, but without polluting too much. What to buy to make the least impact on the planet.
Overall, it bears repeating that our greatest power lies in VOTING for politicians that will push through climate change and pollution mitigation. Each of our individual efforts doesn't even register compared to what governments can do, so it's useless to guilt-trip others into leading more responsible lives. What matters is convincing them that our species will not survive that easily if we don't act now on a global scale - and that means new legislation and enforcement.
I've become a single-issue voter - I will vote for the person who is most able to mitigate climate change.
Agree but individual effort does not hurt, it could even propagate a grassroots effort.
Anonymous wrote:YES. A thousand times yes. But you can deny yourself most holiday plastic and still, by buying food for your own survival, contribute to greenhouse gas emissions (ex: beef is by far the most polluting food item to produce).
So it's too easy for me to fall into guilt and what ifs. That's what I'm mostly working on - how not to feel the burden of flying to Europe and Asia to visit my parents or my aunts. How to celebrate milestones and live my daily life with ease, but without polluting too much. What to buy to make the least impact on the planet.
Overall, it bears repeating that our greatest power lies in VOTING for politicians that will push through climate change and pollution mitigation. Each of our individual efforts doesn't even register compared to what governments can do, so it's useless to guilt-trip others into leading more responsible lives. What matters is convincing them that our species will not survive that easily if we don't act now on a global scale - and that means new legislation and enforcement.
I've become a single-issue voter - I will vote for the person who is most able to mitigate climate change.