@sephiroth | ||
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@crimson | 22 June 19 | |
I don't think so, companies only care about money.
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@crimson | 22 June 19 | |
Oh don't be a fool. We, humans, are killing our gorgeous animals. But I have hope, younger people are a lot more informed and environmentally conscious.
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@3mel | 22 June 19 | |
is it possible, technically of course it is. there's nothing particularly difficult about delivering food to stores and buying them differently. travelling to the shops with your own containers isn't mountain climbing. is it likely given our inertia as a species ? probably not. businesses don't like upsetting customers leaving no-one to take the lead and develop a consensus. |
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@dodgey | 22 June 19 | |
Everyone needs to play their part in protecting the environment.
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@sephiroth | 22 June 19 | |
I can't stand polystyrene. It just doesn't feel/look right when it escapes into my immediate surroundings. Starch-based packaging peanuts should also be universally implemented in the boxing of all electrical appliances. Now why do I tend to find polystyrene-looking beads in compost? It's not biodegradable from what I've observed. |
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@eyesore | 22 June 19 | |
This whole notion of man destroying the planet is all very arrogant. We're at best changing it, the planet will adapt and change to a point it may be inhospitable to man, but the planet will march on, just in a different form
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@mok214 | 22 June 19 | |
There is no such thing as a carbon free convenience store or supermarket. Farming machinery produces carbon, packing plant machinery produces carbon, trains and lories produce carbon and your fat ars* produces carbon even if you're just walking to the market.
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@mok214 | 22 June 19 | |
In fact, the fat stored in your body is a hydrocarbon.
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@eyesore | 22 June 19 | |
Not to mention farting cows
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@crimson | 22 June 19 | |
@ sephiroth - 22.06.19 - 01:37pm I can't stand polystyrene. It just doesn't feel/look right when it escapes into my immediate surroundings. Starch-based packaging peanuts should also be universally implemented in the boxing of all electrical appliances. Now why do I tend to find polystyrene-looking beads in compost? It's not biodegradable from what I've observed. It's perlite in your compost, most probably. |
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