WILLIAMS5232 wrote:Yeah, packaging is a huge problem I think, but the root is overconsumption. I ordered To-go last night and got a loaded baked potato. They put the butter, bacon bits, cheese, onion, and sour cream in their own little solo cup with lid. I guess I understand why, but shit. I'm not a person that would care if my bacon bits got mixed with my onion and cheese. It's going to mix anyway.
You amplify my point: TOO much packaging for FOOD to be EATEN at that location. They package ALMOST as if all food is to be delivered or eaten AWAY and not in their dining room. TOO much packaging and wasted plastic, imo.
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:
Landfills are going to be such an issue one day, maybe 50 years, maybe 500. Possibly in 10, I don't know. As a kid, I always envisioned sending trash to space, and nudging it to the sun. I guess idiocracy movie is more truth than fantasy.
This is simply too expensive; I have had students suggest that often when I discuss the problem of too much trash.
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:
I personally can't imagine recycling having an impact to be honest. I think of it like actually adding to the problem. Think of all the facilities and products created to process recyclables. And then does having 10,000 recycled forks really stop them from producing 10,000 new plastic forks? I don't know, just seems like a scam to me. It's so much easier to have one metal fork and clean it, but our culture is at a point where that's not an option.
Exactly, William; use a metal fork and other flatware and WASH IT. We are too much in a disposable mindset for a SIMPLE meal in this country. When I went to a wing place (BW2) some 15 years ago, I felt insulted being given all disposable dinner ware. Now it is the norm in so many eating places in the USA.
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:
I know what you're talking about with the chic fil a salad. You get a big bulky plastic carton, 2 plastic pouches with dressing, a plastic pouch with granola. A plastic pouch with mixed nuts, a plastic knife wrapped in a plastic protective bag, a plastic fork in a protective plastic bag, 20 napkins, a big ass plastic bag to hold all the plastic. And let's say one chic fil a sells 100 salads per day. And there are 5000 chic filas..... amazing. Of course I'm just throwing numbers out there. That alone is the daily chic fil a salad only contribution to the landfill. I wouldn't expect much percent of that actually closes the full recycle loop. I remember Panerai bread used to use a paper box, I think if a landfill was filled with only paper products, it would eventually return to earth. But even Panerai bread caved to using plastic salad cartons.
I totally agree.
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:
I don't know, it's fun to talk about, but I think we're in a like a death spiral. Maybe we can reduce the throttle a bit. But the course is set. I'm not saying that humans are done for, I just mean that whatever is going to happen is destined to at this point. Too many people. And we're too comfortable, or too greedy, or too lazy to do anything about it.
I am not that pessimistic. We have turned around attitudes about litter and pollution over the years with PSA on TV and in the media. I am NOT sure this is NOW done today online, too, however.
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:
When I was in high school I didn't think twice about flinging my coke bottle out the window. I look back and I can't believe I ever had the mindset that it was OK to do that. And now I see grown ass adults doing it. Or the ole "leave the mcdonald bag outside the car door at the Walmart parking lot while no one is looking and drive off" trick.
Shows that ALL of us CAN Change for the better, William. GOOD for you...!
I was driving home from the shopping mall some 2 years ago and was rather flabbergasted watching as those in the car in front of me fling trash every minute or so out their car window from an eating place. I wanted to call the police on these litter bugs, but I figured that they had REAL problems (Crime, such as robbery and speeders) to deal with instead.