RE: Dependent
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Trash does not all go to landfills here, no. It is all around us. On the streets, in the bushes, hanging from the fence.
Look! A river gorge! Let's dump our waste there! (And then complain that authorities did not clean it on time before we got flooded or something.)
I'm just trying to reduce my own impact. Educate where I can. Plant trees but... hey, they were already growing somewhere. What I need to do is just find room for them to each grow free and safe. In my latest post I have a picture of nine or ten walnut saplings tightly packed. I think, come fall, I should disperse them. Like... near the river gorge ;)
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Yes, I have noticed that in images left on Hive, not just in your region but all over the place. Sad really.
It's a complex matter and one that we're all going to have to pull in the same direction on, at the same time, if we're going to move it away from disaster.
Like you with the trees, if we all thought that way (and acted on it) we'd be going a lot better, but humanity don't have the ability to all have the same idea, even if it's a really good one, at the same time. So sad.
Pollution thanks to super consumer's behavior is the greatest problem, I think. The churning of car fresheners that you talked about, for instance.
I am doing nothing, really. Just abandon a yard for a decade and watch trees appear on their own.
There are studies and date, though, that people begin caring for the environment, when their society is wealthy. Poor people have other problems on their mind and give no **** about their waste, bad habits, or anything else than finding the next meal. Gulls and cats do that, too. They attack a trash bin with vengeance and they leave all the trash spread around after they've managed to pull their treat out. It's a good thing they don't produce anything plastic.
There's a constant drive towards more, more everything, and no one ever seems satisfied which leads to the over-production of products that we could actually do without.
You make a very good point about the disparity between affluent and poor and how that correlates to how each approaches the environment due to circumstances. It's a very complex issue when looked at from all angles.
Here they recycle trash by using it to produce power. I'm not sure if it's cost effective, but it does reduce the waste stream! Plastic is a growing problem, that needs to be addressed. Either by regrinding and reusing it, or by converting it back to fuel (which looks promising); but I Hate to see it in the wild! We all need to pick it up when we see it for useful disposal.
I do understand about the third world problems. It damn hard to worry about trash, when your kids are hungry! That's a very serious problem, that needs serious attention...they need real help! One solution would be to purchase this trash, for a living wage; to be recycled once collected.
I don't know what the answer is, all I know is that not enough people seem to want to do something about it and so the problem gets worse, despite all the initiatives that have been around for many years to arrest the decline. Smells like a money making initiative to me.
Plastic is a massive issue, the oceans are in bad shape because of it, but it'll recover when humans are gone, won't be in our life time but it'll happen, and then the planet can begin to heal.
It must be profitable to recycle, then clean up will occur. Fifty years ago, we had conservationist who would go out, and clean up a problem area. Today we have greenies who try to force others to do clean up by lawsuits. If the greenies put half the energy and money cleaning up themselves, the trash problem would be solved!
I will Always take out any trash I find, leaving the wild in better shape than I found it! Just not that hard to do....
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