A material that everything can be made out of. It has largely replaced all other materials. It is made from a non-renewable resource. We are taking a valuable, limited resource –oil - and turning it into temporarily useful (and often not all that useful) objects that quickly become trash. We are wasting something precious. Also, we are damaging the environment by turning something that is within nature's many finely tuned and highly evolved cycles - oil - into something that is outside of most of these cycles, and therefore highly destructive of them - plastic.
Who's responsible for this? Well, no one. There is no one making the decisions on the scale of the world, which is the scale of oil. When there is no one else in charge, the fall back is the free market, the invisible hand. The free market is supposed to be a logical way of distributing resources. But what's logical about this? Plastic, in and of itself, is not bad, but for god sake, save the plastic for what it's really good for. Things that it's really the only good material for. Like...the space program. Greenhouses. Maybe galoshes. And make it recyclable. Make recycling it mandatory. What we need is some form of world government that is able to make logical choices about our resources in the long-term interests of humanity in general. In the mean time…
Here's how I deal with plastic: I try to act like it doesn't exist. First of all, I avoid buying anything plastic or packaged in plastic at all costs. And if I am at the store and want to buy something unpackaged but didn’t bring a container with me, I don’t buy it. If I’m out and about and I want a coffee to go, but I don’t have a container, I don’t have coffee. Or I make the time to sit down and drink it there in a reusable container. I find that if I take advantage of the convenience of plastic and tell myself I’ll remember my container next time, I never do. But if I go without once or twice, I sure do remember then. Also, I try to imagine that there is no dump. On a large scale, that’s true. We’re all living with our trash. But I try to imagine it on a personal scale. What if I couldn’t rid myself of all the things I want to throw away? I would buy a lot less, and be more careful about what I bought – will it last? Will it decompose once I’m done with it? I would be more careful about what I threw away. Can I use this longer? Can I find another use for it? I try to act like that’s the case. I may put it into actual practice once I have my own land. Rather than throwing things away, I’ll have a long-term compost pile.
Here's how I deal with plastic: I try to act like it doesn't exist. First of all, I avoid buying anything plastic or packaged in plastic at all costs. And if I am at the store and want to buy something unpackaged but didn’t bring a container with me, I don’t buy it. If I’m out and about and I want a coffee to go, but I don’t have a container, I don’t have coffee. Or I make the time to sit down and drink it there in a reusable container. I find that if I take advantage of the convenience of plastic and tell myself I’ll remember my container next time, I never do. But if I go without once or twice, I sure do remember then. Also, I try to imagine that there is no dump. On a large scale, that’s true. We’re all living with our trash. But I try to imagine it on a personal scale. What if I couldn’t rid myself of all the things I want to throw away? I would buy a lot less, and be more careful about what I bought – will it last? Will it decompose once I’m done with it? I would be more careful about what I threw away. Can I use this longer? Can I find another use for it? I try to act like that’s the case. I may put it into actual practice once I have my own land. Rather than throwing things away, I’ll have a long-term compost pile.