Big Tech’s Waste “Solutions” Are a Scam | Rather than face hard truths about reorganizing our system to stop waste, the world is falling victim to empty and inefficient cleanup promises from the te…::Rather than face hard truths about reorganizing our system to stop waste, the world is falling victim to empty and inefficient cleanup promises from the tech industry.
Why don’t we take a look at how the plastics industry handled the public? Here’s Climate Town (YouTube link).
Here is an alternative Piped link(s): https://piped.video/PJnJ8mK3Q3g
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.
oh hey, piped works again!
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle isn’t a joke, and is in order of what should take precedence. And as for plastic recycling, https://text.npr.org/2020/09/11/897692090/how-big-oil-misled-the-public-into-believing-plastic-would-be-recycled (tl;dr it’s total bullshit. it’s expensive to do, and recycled plastic is worse and more expensive than virgin plastic. It probably cannot even handle two recycles before becoming totally worthless, that’s how crappy recycled plastic is)
The dumbest part is how we are disallowed from reusing many things. One small example out of a limitless number: Every time I buy milk I have to buy a brand new plastic container, because that is the only way I can purchase it. And it is the exact same as the old kind of plastic container. I can’t just go to the store and pour a refill and pay for that.
I don’t buy milk regularly, but where I live there are dairies that use glass bottles. You get charged a deposit for a new bottle, and get the money back when you return it to the store. The glass bottles are washed and reused; although the plastic cap & seal are disposable. Also, the milk sold this way is a little more expensive than the milk sold in plastic jugs or paper cartons.
Obviously this produces less trash than plastic disposable jugs. Whether it is more “environmentally friendly” depends also on energy consumption, though. Plastic jugs are really cheap to make, and they are lighter to ship than glass bottles and thus use less fuel in the delivery trucks. So there’s a tradeoff, and I expect the dairies have a better idea of this tradeoff than I do.
But, hey, that’s not going to stop NPR from blaming the public for not re-using that yogurt cup. Soo sooo quick to blame the public and not the useless corporations who can’t be bothered to spend the research to figure out how to improve recycling programs.
That was what a week ago? Still can’t believe npr actually wasted their time investigating fucking yogurt/ice cream cups.
Yet another technological antisolution. I’ve posted it before but it’s just a perennial concept.
That picture looks like it was drawn by the guy who does Dance Gavin Dance’s album covers
People who think companies like the Ocean Cleanup will solve the problem annoy me.
Then don’t use them