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charles

@charles@hachyderm.io

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GottaLaff , to random
@GottaLaff@mastodon.social avatar

If you come into my feed supporting "assassination" you get blocked.

I don't care how long we've followed each other.

We are not them. Murder is not the answer.

My god.

charles ,
@charles@hachyderm.io avatar

@GottaLaff Murder? Our government actively supports Genocide. The right is clearly communicating that they have no qualms about crossing all of those lines, but we're too busy clutching our pearls to get our hands dirty. I don't know the answer either, but I'm not so naive to think we're getting out of this mess easily. Handmaids' Tale is an increasingly likely scenario.

rbreich , to random
@rbreich@masto.ai avatar

The Biden administration has taken anti-monopoly action against:

-Amazon
-Apple
-Google
-Facebook
-Live Nation
-JetBlue
-Spirit
-Kroger
-Albertsons

We’ve had years of government forces working on behalf of corporations.

This is what it looks like when they work for the people.

charles ,
@charles@hachyderm.io avatar

@rbreich what do they say Apple did? They're one of the few big companies I don't have a problem with.

breadandcircuses , to random
@breadandcircuses@climatejustice.social avatar

A few days ago, we focused on the fraudulent scheme of plastic recycling. It does not work, it never has worked, and it never will.

The oil industry, which produces millions of tons of plastics every year and makes HUGE profits from it, has known all along that recycling doesn't do any good — yet they continue promoting the idea.

So should we just quit? That's the question asked by a new article at Salon.

"Plastic experts say recycling is a scam. Should we even do it anymore?"


Erica Cirino, communications manager at the Plastic Pollution Coalition, says, "Plastic recycling rates vary widely from region to region around the world. In the U.S., plastic recycling rates are currently below 6 percent."

Yet even those numbers are deceptive, Cirino warned, as they incorrectly imply that at least the plastic which does get 'recycled' is handled in ways that help the environment.

"Unfortunately, it doesn’t matter where or how you set out your plastic for recycling collection, whether at the end of your driveway, at your local recycling center, or in a municipal recycling bin: Most plastic items collected as recycling are not actually recycled," Cirino explained. "Surprisingly, plastic is not designed to be recycled — despite industries and governments telling the public that we should recycle plastic."

Instead the plastics that people think get 'recycled' are often instead shipped from the Global North to the Global South, with waste haulers often dumping and openly burning plastic without regard to environmental laws, Cirino explained. People who live near the sites where these things happen face a lifetime of health risks, to say nothing of living in a degraded environment.

Indeed, a compelling question arises from the fact that the crusade to recycle plastic is more corporate propaganda than true Earth-saving measure: Should we recycle plastic at all?

"No," Cirino told Salon. "Even if plastic recycling rates were higher, recycling alone could never come close to solving the serious and wide-ranging health, justice, socio-economic, and environmental crises caused by industries’ continued plastic production and plastic pollution, which go hand in hand." Cirino argued that, given how plastic production has grown exponentially and its pollution problems have likewise worsened, emphasizing recycling over meaningful solutions is at best irresponsible.

"It’s clear recycling is not enough to solve the plastic pollution crisis," Cirino concluded. "The fossil fuel industry, governments, and corporations really need to turn off the plastic tap. Ultimately, our world must decide what it values: money or life."


FULL ARTICLE -- https://www.salon.com/2024/02/23/plastic-experts-say-recycling-is-a-scam-should-we-even-do-it-anymore/

charles ,
@charles@hachyderm.io avatar

@breadandcircuses I'm not at all an expert on this, just getting started exploring it myself, but I've recently been looking into diy at-home plastic recycling. Plastic seems to be one of materials most easily recycled at home into simple products.

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