WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT PLASTIC POLLUTION
Plastic bags and bottles, like all forms of plastic, create significant environmental and 
economic burdens. They consume growing amounts of energy and other natural resources, 
degrading the environment in numerous ways.  In addition to using up fossil fuels and other 
resources, plastic products create litter, hurt marine life, and threaten the basis of life on 
earth.  We are producing over 25 million tons of plastics per year in the United States, a 
trivial fraction of which is getting recycled.  Here are some steps that you can take to reverse 
the tide of toxic, non-biodegradable pollution so that it will not overtake our planet. 
| 
PERSONAL
  STEPS | 
COMMENTS | 
| 
Put produce in
  paper, canvas, and other healthy-fibre | 
Take no
  plastic bags from the grocer’s shelf.  | 
| 
Refuse plastic
  bags at the check-out counter.  | 
If a clerk
  throws your box of soap into a plastic bag, ask him or her to replace it in
  one of your bags.  Give the clerk a
  copy of “Why I Don’t Use Plastic Bags.” 
  Our experience has 
 been that they appreciate this information. | 
| 
Don’t buy
  plastic sandwich bags.  | 
Use wax paper
  bags, cloth napkins, or re-useable  
sandwich boxes
  (e.g., tiffins, described below). | 
| 
Buy beverages
  in sustainable containers.   | 
Use only glass
  bottles or cans. | 
| 
Don’t open
  another plastic water bottle.  Take
  drinking water from the tap | 
Bottled water
  costs over 1000 times more per liter than water from your tap.  Buying our most essential nutrient, water,
  from corporations represents an abdication of community control of the commons.  If you have concerns about water safety,
  investigate a filter system such as  
Multi-Pure.  Better yet, work with your water district
  to develop stricter standards for water purity. | 
| 
Buy fresh
  produce in Mother Nature’s wrappers (shell, rind, husk, etc.). | 
Pre-bagged
  produce not only uses wasteful packaging, but also tends to come from farther
  away, consuming more of our dwindling oil supplies in transport. | 
| 
Give up Tupper
  Ware and related products | 
Tiffins
  (stainless steel food containers) are a long tradition in India.  They store food well, have longer lives
  than Tupper Ware and its look-alikes (you’ve probably seen the fading,
  corroding, and chipping that occurs to these plastic containers), are more
  hygienic, and have certain panache. | 
| 
Make a habit
  of thinking about what comes with each thing that you buy | 
Look for and
  reward earth-friendly packaging choices. e.g.:    
•  Buy greeting cards in paper boxes instead
  of clear plastic shells  
•  Ask your florist for flowers wrapped in
  paper, not clear film  
•  Use pens that re-fill instead of land-fill | 
| 
Make a habit
  of thinking more in general. | 
Conscious
  consumption is not only good for the earth, it’s good for you.  “Mindfulness,” says Thich Nhat Hanh, “is the
  miracle by which we master and restore ourselves. | 
 
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