(no title)
berjin | 2 years ago
I put my plastic packaging in a recycling bin that is picked up by the municipality. Everything seems to come in plastic packaging but I try to avoid it where possible. I grow my own vegetables. They like to tell me I'm doing the right thing but I know it all ends up in some poorer country. The consumer doesn't really have any sway at the bottom of the cliff. Ban at the source.
catiopatio|2 years ago
I think we need a stricter regulatory mechanism for proving the safety of products that can pose a substantial risk to health or the environment, akin to that of the FDA.
Right now, it seems like you can put something relatively unproven on the market, and by the time we realize it’s unsafe, everyone has become dependent on it.
In response, companies cook up an analog that does the same thing, and the market switches to that.
Eventually, we discover that the analog suffers from very similar issues, and the entire process starts over again.
zizee|2 years ago
berjin|2 years ago
I recommend watching The Poison Squad documentary which digs into the reasons the FDA was formed in the first place. The meat packing industry used to sell a lot of spoiled food containing chemicals unsafe for human health.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuukM9OY-is
cushpush|2 years ago
zizee|2 years ago
Subsidies are what stifles innovation.
I _think_ you are not being sarcastic, but apologies if I am misunderstanding. Allowing industry to externalize costs does not promote innovation. It does the opposite, as offloading those costs to others is effectively subsidizing the behaviour.
berjin|2 years ago
mdp2021|2 years ago
If there exists a use of "«break down»" intended to mean "biodegrade", the term remains too close to "crumble".
You would not eat a bottle, but having tiny chunks of plastic around makes "you eat 5 grams of plastic - one credit card - per <period>" fully credible (i.e. you want it to stay big to stay out of the body - you want materials not to shed themselves around). Crumbling plastic just creates microplastic. Which is relevant, because some actors seem to have confused the goals - transforming vs pulverizing.
(See e.g. https://theconversation.com/were-all-ingesting-microplastics... ; https://theconversation.com/youre-eating-microplastics-in-wa... )
psychomugs|2 years ago
newaccount74|2 years ago
(That being said, I don't worry too much about the material of something that gets years of use)
DrBazza|2 years ago
Having just looked at boxes in my kitchen I counted 5 different logos that look the same at first glance, except they're not. 3 arrows with a number in the middle, one circular arrow, 3 arrows with no number, and they're the ones I remember.
ImaCake|2 years ago