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Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Why newspapers need to become extinct!
As I sat on the Bart train from SF yesterday, my feet were swimming in the cheap wood pulp prints... so I read it and took it home to clean my glass windows with it. I mean really... have you ever tried to read one of these things on a busy public train before? Well it was a nightmare, trying to fold the papers easily without taking up more personal space than given just to me. Plus, my hands went black and I did not want to touch my baby afterwards, may he never know my pains with these ancient media wastes.
I would much more prefer to click any story I like on my smartphone or read it from a iPad type digital device. With this relatively new option I can share any pertinent, interesting or relevant article to old friends or maybe fellow dads, anyone really depending on the content in one touch of my CLEAN finger... now that works! My 67 year old father still reads a newspaper daily and often cuts parts out, highlights it, puts it into another paper envelope, buys postage, and ships it to me 3000 miles away for me to read and recycle across the country... WTF!!!
I can't even conceive the number of trees lost and acreage gone to print these now useless daily information paper blobs and then fold them into a plastic bag (that never truly disappears) and mail it (via fossil fuels) to your doorstep to be read for about 10 minutes on average... what a crap old system we have!
Luckily, evolution is working it's magic and readership is declining with niche magazines filled with in-depth topics, like mini-books are taking their place. Digital media will close them out of their home territory and hopefully as social security ends so will the generation of the newspaper readers.
I say BAN them now, along with the plastic bag they come in... so lets all get smart with our media before we run out of trees, paper, air, clean water and all the other things the large media newspapers, don't want you to know about anyhow!
Check out more online resources and data (see how easy this is):
An average yearly newspaper subscription (for example, the San Francisco Chronicle) received every day produces 550 pounds (250 kilograms) of waste paper per subscription per year. The average New York Times Sunday edition produces eight million pounds (3.6 million kilograms) of waste paper.
~ http://www.answers.com/topic/how-much-waste-paper-does-a-newspaper-generate
One 35 to 40 foot (10.6 to 12 meter) tree produces a stack of newspapers four feet (1.2 meters) thick; this much newspaper must be recycled to save ONE tree.
~ http://www.answers.com/topic/how-much-newspaper-must-be-recycled-to-save-one-tree-science
http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/newspapers-suck-less-than-you-think/
Newspaper waste photo by TalkingTree
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
NO MORE PLASTICS?
Is is even possible be be plastic free?
What are some of the best resources for living a plastic free existance?
Plastic bird deaths.. a photo series called Midway by Chris Jordan
http://www.chrisjordan.com/
A great quote about reducing plastics in our lives from the Fake Plastic Fish blog "... I didn't try to eliminate all plastics at once, and I would never recommend anyone else do it that way either. It's the road to burnout."
http://fakeplasticfish.com/
More online resources to check out:
http://lifewithoutplastic.com/
http://www.newdream.org/water/
http://freecycle.org/search
http://zenhabits.net/2009/05/55-ways-to-get-more-energy/
Top 10 plastic reducing actions:
1. Avoid the worst plastics: Polyvinyl Chloride (#3 PVC), Polystyrene (#6 PS), Polycarbonate (#7 Other). Good luck!
2. Carry reusable grocery bags. ChicoBag.com
3. Give up bottled water. Klean Kanteens
4. Say no to plastic shopping bags. Chicobag.com
5. Return the green plastic tomato baskets to the farmer’s market. They will love you.
6. Carry a stainless steel travel mug at all times for most drinks while out in the world. Rei.com
7. Buy from bulk bins as much as possible. Bring your old plastic bags even!
8. Cut out sodas, juices, and all other plastic-bottled beverages. Buy Glass or Aluminum!
9. Buy fresh artisanal bread which comes in either paper bags or no bags. Yeah no bag!
10. Carry reusable personal utensils, stainless containers and glass drinking straws. Bamboo even at Togoware.com
More than the top ten are listed here: http://fakeplasticfish.com/list/
Great body products in compostable, not recyclable plastics: http://www.organic-essence.com/
So enjoy the new found advice and good luck in reducing your plastic footprint on the world. Know is half the battle as G.I. Joe would always say.
Sunday, September 27, 2009
This Aussie Baby town don't want the Bottle!

The small town of Bundanoon, New South Wales, Australia has taken the revolutionary forward thiking step of simply banning all bottled waters in their town. They have instead sold reusable bottles and created town public drinking fountains all over the small area. I feel that bans allow for choice still, as long as the choice is a more sustainable one.
AP Wire- " An Australian town pulled all bottled water from its shelves Saturday and replaced it with refillable bottles in what is believed to be a world-first ban.
Hundreds of people marched through the picturesque rural town of Bundanoon to mark the first day of its bottled water ban by unveiling a series of new public drinking fountains, said campaign spokesman John Dee.
Shopkeepers ceremoniously removed the last bottles of water from their shelves and replaced them with reusable bottles that can be filled from fountains inside the town's shops or at water stations in the street.
"Every bottle today was taken off the shelf and out of the fridges so you can only now buy refillable bottles in shops in Bundanoon," Dee told AFP!!
San Francisco banned the plastic bag and now we have paper bags being used and sold. I wonder which will have a longer lasting effect on the town and the environment?
Way to go BUNDANOON!!!
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090926/wl_asia_afp/australiaenvironmentwater