Anonymous wrote:plastic forks spoons knives
use metal and wash[/quote
+1, use chopsticks instead
Anonymous wrote:Plastic tampon applicators! It's become so damn hard to find cardboard applicators, and they're becoming more expensive. Just WHY?????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All disposable plastic in lunches. Figure out how to pack a lunch without it. Choose foods that don’t need plastic. Read how Laura Ingalls packed her lunch.
You are making a command?
Anonymous wrote:Things in "goody" bags.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bey blades
Eh, kids get hours of enjoyment from them. A lot different than a bottle or bag to carry your already packaged groceries.
Ours are metal. You need to switch to the better version to avoid plastic.
Anonymous wrote:All disposable plastic in lunches. Figure out how to pack a lunch without it. Choose foods that don’t need plastic. Read how Laura Ingalls packed her lunch.
Anonymous wrote:Better question: Name something made with plastic that we need that can't be made with a material that has less of a negative impact on the planet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plastic tampon applicators! It's become so damn hard to find cardboard applicators, and they're becoming more expensive. Just WHY?????
OB or a cup is the real solution here.
Anonymous wrote:I have serious doubts about whether reusable water bottles are a net benefit. The number I have bought for my kids, and the weight of them and the manufacturing and shipping. I have one stainless steel one where the silicone straw part ripped in half and I can’t buy a replacement and now the bottle is useless. Manufacturing something like that has to be worse than X thin plastic bottles, idk how many. A ton of 5 year old stanley cups in the landfill might only be marginally better than however many plastic bottles would have been used, if at all.
Anonymous wrote:Plastic tampon applicators! It's become so damn hard to find cardboard applicators, and they're becoming more expensive. Just WHY?????