crikkett wrote:No Asshole, it's the kind of attitude that a self-cleaning organism would have: learn from mistakes, adjust to new knowledge, cooperate for the betterment of all. People like me clean up after snotty shits like you because otherwise we'll choke on your crap.
Unless you're sneaking into my home while I'm away, you're not cleaning up jack shit from me, crikkett. I walk to my job as a drinking water engineer everyday, and have as small a "carbon footprint" as you might expect an individual to possibly have. Not only do I go through the futile motions involved in phoney "recycling" (once again, basically for the profit of industrial corporations who cannot be bothered to package even everyday staples in a bio-degradeable fashion - too costly, cuts in on their profits) but virtually everything I own is bought in thrift stores or found in other people's trash. And guess what? I've lived this way my entire life! The happy combination of near poverty, small needs and responsibility is one which should be foisted upon the transnationals as a matter of course. Don't be such a douche bag. I almost never eat red meat. I come from generations of farmers, like most people. I've been growing my own vegetables for thirty years. The four varieties of tomatoes in my garden are just ripening now, along with the zuccini, cucumbers, string beans, pears, and peaches. The persimmons and oranges are next. I pay some of the highest property and state taxes in the country to offset the "pollution" I cause by taking showers and flushing my toilet. Thanks for your "help" but you know what? It's covered, pal, and it's too, little too late. I hate to lecture you about "taking personal responsibility", 'cause in general I think all that is just corporate propaganda. I don't live this way to save the world; on the contrary, I do it because it is smarter, cheaper, easier, and more convenient FOR ME. I am selfish that way.
By the way, what do you do again to clean up after me?
crikkett wrote:It's called maturity which requires taking responsibility for your part in the state of things, and a willingness to take part in the/any solution. If for you that means wailing on the Internet about how nobody's doing anything to punish polluters I hope you snap out of your shiftless despondency long enough to bother to actually do something to change things for the better, and remember to recycle your plastic as you go.
If you call this wailling, you don't wanna be around me when I really get pissed about the corporations and their bullshit. Recycling plastic is meaningless in the large scheme of things. Recycling the same problem over and over is more like it, as each cycle sends a predetermined amount of the mess into the environment. You can get every individual in the country to recycle every bag and bottle around, but that won't do shit until the transnationals are forced to clean up their messes. I know you've spent your busy day cleaning up after me, but what about them, crkkett? There is a way of life here that requires changing from the top down. The gasoline required to perform the processes of recycling my personal plastic offsets any environmental benefit accrued. The whole notion of "recycling" and small individual "carbon footprint" is revolting. The corporations and grafted politicos laughed at that shit all the way to the bank, while they watched New Orleans drown, and Bhopal turn into a relentless unlivable wasteland sinkhole, Three Mile Island become a radiant fuckhole, Alamosa River stank into lifelessness, the bees died a neurotoxic death, etc. etc. etc. "They" made money the whole ride, from spill to cleanup. And this doesn't begin to discuss the systematic release of poisons into the environment on the level of SOP for industrial process each moment of every globalized day, an environmental disaster which frankly dwarfs by several orders of magnitude any personal mess you or you'r neighbors are "responsible" for. Dow, Monsanto, Exxon, you know - THOSE GUYS. Guess whose "superfund" money cleans this shit up? Mine. Guess whose taxes subsidise entire shitty wasteful industries? Yours. Guess why 70% of the senators in Washington are millionaires? I guess according to you that's all at least partly my fault, though. You can keep your ire and your responsibility, or focus it where it belongs. And it ain't me. Welcome to the Calumet River:

Oh yeah, recycle, sure, that'll work.
It's cool, though. I just keep praying for the price of oil to skyrocket, and it will some day. In the meantime, come on by, we'll go dumpster diving, and you can help me wash up al the quality shit that other people just discard. Its actually rather amazing.