Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there recycling bins in Wheaton Plaza?
Or White Flint Mall. Maybe that’s why Amazon laughed at Maryland after being dragged through that ghost town.
Maryland already lost most of the military hospitals to Virginia, Johns Hopkins is incrementally leaving Baltimore, and NIH is moving to Virginia. With those employment centers gone, Marylanders can make biodegradable straws to sell on Etsy.
Amazing how people love to make things up in their head and think that saying it makes it true.
Dunno. Walter Reed moved a lot of its departments to the hospital at Fort Belvoir. Hopkins just bought a building in DC and is affiliating with Sibley.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there recycling bins in Wheaton Plaza?
Or White Flint Mall. Maybe that’s why Amazon laughed at Maryland after being dragged through that ghost town.
Maryland already lost most of the military hospitals to Virginia, Johns Hopkins is incrementally leaving Baltimore, and NIH is moving to Virginia. With those employment centers gone, Marylanders can make biodegradable straws to sell on Etsy.
Amazing how people love to make things up in their head and think that saying it makes it true.
Dunno. Walter Reed moved a lot of its departments to the hospital at Fort Belvoir. Hopkins just bought a building in DC and is affiliating with Sibley.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there recycling bins in Wheaton Plaza?
Or White Flint Mall. Maybe that’s why Amazon laughed at Maryland after being dragged through that ghost town.
Maryland already lost most of the military hospitals to Virginia, Johns Hopkins is incrementally leaving Baltimore, and NIH is moving to Virginia. With those employment centers gone, Marylanders can make biodegradable straws to sell on Etsy.
Amazing how people love to make things up in their head and think that saying it makes it true.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there recycling bins in Wheaton Plaza?
Or White Flint Mall. Maybe that’s why Amazon laughed at Maryland after being dragged through that ghost town.
Maryland already lost most of the military hospitals to Virginia, Johns Hopkins is incrementally leaving Baltimore, and NIH is moving to Virginia. With those employment centers gone, Marylanders can make biodegradable straws to sell on Etsy.
NIH is moving??? That’s an enormous campus!

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there recycling bins in Wheaton Plaza?
Or White Flint Mall. Maybe that’s why Amazon laughed at Maryland after being dragged through that ghost town.
Maryland already lost most of the military hospitals to Virginia, Johns Hopkins is incrementally leaving Baltimore, and NIH is moving to Virginia. With those employment centers gone, Marylanders can make biodegradable straws to sell on Etsy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Maryland and I'm constantly hearing people whine about how Montgomery County is so anti-business with its regulations and so on. But Virginia's environmental standards, or lack thereof, are deplorable. I notice this when I visit friends in Virginia or spend any extended amount of time there.
Maryland, especially Montgomery County, is miles ahead of Virginia. We're banning plastic straws and styrofoam and tax plastic bags. Most stores and cafes discourage single use plastic utensils and encourage bringing your own bag.
What do I see in "business friendly" Virginia? Plastic bags galore. People just give me plastic bags automatically even when I visibly have my own bag. Go to a fast casual or takeout place and they have styrofoam, non recyclable plastics, and automatically give you a plastic bag with single use utensils and a young tree's worth of paper napkins. Not to mention nobody has the new compostable straws and they think I'm weird for having my own reusable straw. I can't even buy bulk products with my own mason jars.
Why is "business friendly" Virginia so wasteful?
Just heard an NPR podcast saying that plastic bags are in fact better than the alternatives, so banning them is actually stupid.
Go Virginia!
Link please? Usually when people talk about that they’re talking about energy consumption. Plastic bags get into rivers and oceans and harm sea life.