Tuesday, October 31, 2006

These guys sell organic stuff and green stuff, let's write about them

<li><a href="http://www.brenmarco.com/supermarket/Superindex/organic.html?gclid=CPCRtrLdo4gCFQloYAodLy4TXA/">AmAzInG EnViro PlAstics!</a></li>

NatureWorks PLA -The Revolution in Packaging!

Biodegradable Plastic!
Edible Styrofoam!
party cups made from corn!
Burn these forks in the campfire, it's completely non-toxic and safe to do!

Wooo-Hooo!!!! Let's go crazy!

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

SOme Environmentalists these guys are

I'm temping at an Environmental conversation group.
They obviously think big picture and forget the little things.
They had me buy 30 different sodas -sick, sugary sodas- for a lunch meeting, but no juice. They go through paper towels and plates by the tree. What happened to reduce? Reuse? Recycle?
What happened to environmentall conscious?
Yeah, it's good you're buying land and sorta saving it, but as for YOURSELVES, the personal lifestyle shift that's required in successful conservation?
To be continued...

Monday, October 02, 2006

My vision...

Why did I start these blogs? As tools of social change, consumption practices and raising awareness of everyday environmental choices.  So far, I'm the only one who visits this blog, but I hope that changes. 
 
Here's my vision: to start an internet petition ro some other process to get corporations large and small to be a little more aware of their environmental impact and make the choices clear to them.
 
And here's a way to start it:
 
Currently, Trader Joe's uses exclusively paper bags when bagging up people's purchases. Conversely, they sell a reuseable fabric bag, but for $4.  Why don't they sell a cheap environmentally friendly option?  They could ask, "For an extra dollar, would you like this reuseable fabric bag?  What sort of choice do you think consumers -and at Trader Joe's, overly environmentally conscious consumers- will make?
 
As an added incentive, Trader Joe's could charge ten cents for every paper bag (usually doubled) -a fraction of the impact of that bag's single-use consumption.
 
So, I'd like to start a campaign:  Trader Joe's, I'm asking you to promote environmentally friendly, cheap, reuseable fabric bags to your consumers.  Not the passive, "we offer them in our stores" (at an outrageous, disincentive price of $4 a pop) sort of promotion, but offer them at ring up, make it cheap, and make it clear: $1 for a reuseable fabric bag that you can use again and again, or $.10 for a paper bag that within ten visit amount to that fabric bag?
 
Let the challenge begin....