Originally posted by: JS80
Recycling uses more energy than creating new.
Originally posted by: Xyclone
Originally posted by: JS80
Recycling uses more energy than creating new.
:roll:
Recycling is not for creating energy, it's for reusing materials. Whether it's to save paper/trees, or to keep plastic out of the landfills, you should recycle. Ignorant people who throw out ridiculous justifications for their actions make me sick. :thumbsdown:
Originally posted by: Xyclone
Originally posted by: JS80
Recycling uses more energy than creating new.
:roll:
Recycling is not for creating energy, it's for reusing materials. Whether it's to save paper/trees, or to keep plastic out of the landfills, you should recycle. Ignorant people who throw out ridiculous justifications for their actions make me sick. :thumbsdown:
Originally posted by: JS80
Originally posted by: Xyclone
Originally posted by: JS80
Recycling uses more energy than creating new.
:roll:
Recycling is not for creating energy, it's for reusing materials. Whether it's to save paper/trees, or to keep plastic out of the landfills, you should recycle. Ignorant people who throw out ridiculous justifications for their actions make me sick. :thumbsdown:
But but but GLOBAL WARMING!! You have to cut manmade greenhouse gases! And trees don't grow back! Tree farms are corporate propaganda! We can't cut trees omg!!!
Originally posted by: Descartes
Originally posted by: Xyclone
Originally posted by: JS80
Recycling uses more energy than creating new.
:roll:
Recycling is not for creating energy, it's for reusing materials. Whether it's to save paper/trees, or to keep plastic out of the landfills, you should recycle. Ignorant people who throw out ridiculous justifications for their actions make me sick. :thumbsdown:
You're entirely missing the point, but I'm not sure I want to delve into that argument. You can start here if you want. It's not such a clean-cut argument as you like to think. Ideas get perpetuated so long that people tend to assume they're fact without actually ever thinking about it.
Trees are renewable, but what about nonrenewable resources
such as fossil fuel? Here, too, there is no reason to fear that we will
run out. At least three times in the twentieth century, the U.S. Department
of the Interior (or its predecessor, the Bureau of Mines)
predicted that America would run out of petroleum within 15 years
or less (Simon 1996, 165). It didn?t happen. Indeed, as we continue
to use more oil, the standard measures of proven oil reserves get
larger, not smaller.
Originally posted by: DaWhim
hell no. it cost more to recycle than producing a new one. recycling does not make economics sense.