Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You keep saying "clogged toilet" when everyone above (myself included) are telling you the clog isn't limited to your toilet. Tampons can clog the main sewer line. You get sewage coming up every drain in your house.
All because you're too dainty to wrap a tampon in tissue and throw it away.
Have you seen the main sewer lines? It's the mountains of fat and hair that get nicely stuck there. I suggest stop taking showers, washing dishes and generally using it, because it all can clog it.
If you think of what a teeny piece of hair becomes, imagine what a tampon does. Your logic is flawed.
And, also, I don't put oil/fat down the drain either.
My logic is fine. I don't think any of it should matter for the first world sewage system. If it does, I hope we work on a better solution than "stop flushing stuff down".
And what do you propose that solution is? Redo all the sewer lines in DC so you don't have to be troubled putting stuff in the garbage? You will change your tune fast when you have sewage coming up your basement.
It will not be able to sustain the population growth if it's in such dire straits. I don't support permanent bandaid solutions. A temporary campaign is okay, but it's not good as a long-term. At this rates we will be disposing of tp in the waste baskets like it's done in the less developed countries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You keep saying "clogged toilet" when everyone above (myself included) are telling you the clog isn't limited to your toilet. Tampons can clog the main sewer line. You get sewage coming up every drain in your house.
All because you're too dainty to wrap a tampon in tissue and throw it away.
Have you seen the main sewer lines? It's the mountains of fat and hair that get nicely stuck there. I suggest stop taking showers, washing dishes and generally using it, because it all can clog it.
If you think of what a teeny piece of hair becomes, imagine what a tampon does. Your logic is flawed.
And, also, I don't put oil/fat down the drain either.
My logic is fine. I don't think any of it should matter for the first world sewage system. If it does, I hope we work on a better solution than "stop flushing stuff down".
And what do you propose that solution is? Redo all the sewer lines in DC so you don't have to be troubled putting stuff in the garbage? You will change your tune fast when you have sewage coming up your basement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You keep saying "clogged toilet" when everyone above (myself included) are telling you the clog isn't limited to your toilet. Tampons can clog the main sewer line. You get sewage coming up every drain in your house.
All because you're too dainty to wrap a tampon in tissue and throw it away.
Have you seen the main sewer lines? It's the mountains of fat and hair that get nicely stuck there. I suggest stop taking showers, washing dishes and generally using it, because it all can clog it.
If you think of what a teeny piece of hair becomes, imagine what a tampon does. Your logic is flawed.
And, also, I don't put oil/fat down the drain either.
My logic is fine. I don't think any of it should matter for the first world sewage system. If it does, I hope we work on a better solution than "stop flushing stuff down".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You keep saying "clogged toilet" when everyone above (myself included) are telling you the clog isn't limited to your toilet. Tampons can clog the main sewer line. You get sewage coming up every drain in your house.
All because you're too dainty to wrap a tampon in tissue and throw it away.
Have you seen the main sewer lines? It's the mountains of fat and hair that get nicely stuck there. I suggest stop taking showers, washing dishes and generally using it, because it all can clog it.
If you think of what a teeny piece of hair becomes, imagine what a tampon does. Your logic is flawed.
And, also, I don't put oil/fat down the drain either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tried putting them in the trash. My dog likes to get them out of the trash and chew/spread them around the house. That’s far more gross than a clog in the toilet (which in 25 years of having a period hasn’t happened). I risk the clogged toilet.
Well yes, it is gross indeed to have an animal in the house who goes into the trash can to retrieve things.
My dog has thumbs I think. He can open doors and he gets into all trash cans with lids. I don’t like him but he’s my responsibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You keep saying "clogged toilet" when everyone above (myself included) are telling you the clog isn't limited to your toilet. Tampons can clog the main sewer line. You get sewage coming up every drain in your house.
All because you're too dainty to wrap a tampon in tissue and throw it away.
Have you seen the main sewer lines? It's the mountains of fat and hair that get nicely stuck there. I suggest stop taking showers, washing dishes and generally using it, because it all can clog it.
Anonymous wrote:You keep saying "clogged toilet" when everyone above (myself included) are telling you the clog isn't limited to your toilet. Tampons can clog the main sewer line. You get sewage coming up every drain in your house.
All because you're too dainty to wrap a tampon in tissue and throw it away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:no, you are not supposed to flush tampons. not sure why you'd need a "ton" of toilet paper, just wrap it in a normal amount and then... put it in the bathroom trash....not sure why this is weird?? obviously you would have a trash bag/liner in the trash can and should empty it regularly.
Why would you not flush it if you have modern plumbing?
Ummm because assuming that it makes it to the sewage treatment plant (big assumption), someone somewhere would have to filter that out, and then put it in the trash for you? Why would you not just be civilized and put it directly in the trash yourself? Or do you think all the tampons just float out into the oceans like that?
Let me guess, you just don't think at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:no, you are not supposed to flush tampons. not sure why you'd need a "ton" of toilet paper, just wrap it in a normal amount and then... put it in the bathroom trash....not sure why this is weird?? obviously you would have a trash bag/liner in the trash can and should empty it regularly.
Why would you not flush it if you have modern plumbing?
Ummm because assuming that it makes it to the sewage treatment plant (big assumption), someone somewhere would have to filter that out, and then put it in the trash for you? Why would you not just be civilized and put it directly in the trash yourself? Or do you think all the tampons just float out into the oceans like that?
Let me guess, you just don't think at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tried putting them in the trash. My dog likes to get them out of the trash and chew/spread them around the house. That’s far more gross than a clog in the toilet (which in 25 years of having a period hasn’t happened). I risk the clogged toilet.
Well yes, it is gross indeed to have an animal in the house who goes into the trash can to retrieve things.