Anonymous wrote:FYI -- Paper bags are notorious for harboring cockroaches.
"Entomologists, including Coby Schal of North Carolina State University, have observed that cockroaches prefer paper to plastic. “They really like to live in the creases found in paper bags,” said Schal, the nation’s top expert on cockroaches. Many cockroach species chew into paper bags to lay their eggs — something they don’t do with plastic."
Anonymous wrote:do you all ever wash your purses?
Anonymous wrote:OP,
I've used re-usable canvas bags since the 1990s. I've never gotten food poisoning from my groceries. (I have gotten it from a restaurant b/f--not pretty.)
Anonymous wrote:http://reason.com/blog/2013/01/24/are-plastic-bag-bans-making-us-sick
DD got food positioning this fall twice and I never connected the dots. It's back to plastic for my family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd think this would be relatively easy to track, quantitatively. We know when re-usable bags became widely used. Data exists on the number and type of food poisoning cases. Line those two up, see if they correlate.
Until someone shows actual data, all we will hear is "I got sick, probably from my bags" and "I've used re-usables for ever and never gotten sick." Which is of course useless.
Correlation is not causation.
Anonymous wrote:do you all ever wash your purses?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can understand the reaction, but there are other things you can do.
1. Buy washable bags
2. Buy the cold bags that are thicker and can be cleaned With Lysol wipes (trader joes sells one)
3. Ask that the raw meat be put in a plastic bag.
So instead of the possibility of food poisoning, you're now getting Lyson wipe residue on your food? Fantastic solution.
On the rare occasions I buy meat at the grocery store, I have it put in a plastic bag.