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DrBoring | 3 years ago
I think the answer to that question lays somewhere between maybe and probably.
I'm curious, what made you bring up the point ? Is micro-particle poisoning a common concern for you. Or perhaps it was it the context of micro-particles being used in the aforementioned products which have short ownership-periods ?
I'm not trying to dismiss your concern, I'm just curious why bring it up now.
On the topic of shortly-owned-products, I for one have a dislike for cheap plastic beach toys. For example, the retailer Dollar Tree sells plastic sand buckets that break at an amount of force easily exerted by a child. At the beach where I vacation, you can peer into any trashcan and find broken sand toys and foam boogie boards which only break after one day of use.
samstave|3 years ago
https://i.imgur.com/2LuS7ix.png
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But literally, I think that this should be intrinsic to product design at this point, and anything short is criminal....
One should be responsible to think about product lifecycle as it pertains to the environment.
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I have always been anti-pollution in every sense... and its getting our of fn control - and politicians should be melted at the stake (pour molten plastic over them) - as they have failed to hold ZERO petroleum (plastics) producing company TRULY accountable for anything.
If you disagree, show me positive ACTUAL meaningful progress in curtailing human waste?
DrBoring|3 years ago
I don't think it is feasible to engineer products in a way which optimizes their disposal. Certainly that is not something most consumers are concerned with. Surely if it were, there would be fewer manufacturers selling junk fall-apart products.
> Politicians should be melted at the stake (pour molten plastic over them) - as they have failed to hold ZERO petroleum (plastics) producing company TRULY accountable for anything.
I find it unlikely that many politicians are interested in holding to account any plastics manufacturer for the pollution caused by their products. But, for exactly what should they be held accountable ?
And, on whose onus the proper disposal of plastics products? I say it's the consumer, not the manufacturer.