Gaming World Forums

General Category => General Talk => Topic started by: Silhouette on April 13, 2008, 01:00:09 am

Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Silhouette on April 13, 2008, 01:00:09 am
I hate how it's "the right thing to do" to recycle everything you can, but that most small towns (including mine) simply have woefully inadequate recycling programs. We have newspaper and sodapop can recycling, but not much else.
Does anyone know of a good (FREE or INEXPENSIVE preferred) way to recycle other stuff like tin cans, plastic, etc, or have any interesting recycling stories to share?

P.S. I really need to know how to recycle an aerosol spraypaint can. But if I need to buy some fancy equipment to do it, heck with it, it's going to the landfill with my other garbage.
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Mama Luigi on April 13, 2008, 01:09:59 am
If I were you (or just me) I would only recycle the cans as they're the only things that are worth recycling. The rest is worthless, from what I've heard (from Bullshit!).
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Death Gulp on April 13, 2008, 01:14:27 am
I live in a town of about 10,000 or so, and we pretty much have a shitty recycling system too. Bottles, cans, and newspapers only basically. Once or twice a year people from hazardous waste materials come and pick that kind of stuff up. I can't really think of any other ways to recycle though, It would be a help to me also.
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Artis Leon Ivey Jr on April 13, 2008, 02:09:20 am
If I were you (or just me) I would only recycle the cans as they're the only things that are worth recycling. The rest is worthless, from what I've heard (from Bullshit!).

welp you're wrong because they said glass, and you're wrong because Bullshit was wrong that entire episode.
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Doktormartini on April 13, 2008, 02:16:45 am
Bullshit! is dumb.

If you can wash and reuse stuff, do that...it helps :)
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: xanque on April 13, 2008, 02:34:32 am
The apartment complex I live in has no recycling program whatsoever, which really pisses me off.  I recycle EVERYTHING that is recyclable, and you'd be amazed at how little trash you throw away if you do this (about one grocery shopping bag of stuff every two weeks for me). 

Anyway, I recycle by stopping at the landfill on the way to my girlfriend's college.  I usually have a huge box full of stuff, and it only takes a few minutes.  The landfill is right along the way, and the recycling center is easy to get to. 

And I also reuse as much as possible, especially glass stuff.  I don't buy things that are bottled because it's such a waste.  Even if you recycle all the water bottles you drink from, you're still wasting. 

I really wish I could get the rest of my family to recycle too.  My dad is really good about it, but my step father is absolutely awful.  I find metal cans and other easily recycled things in the trash all the time.  Argh, it's not that fucking hard.

EDIT: Anyone who believes everything on Bullshit! is a tool.
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Silhouette on April 13, 2008, 02:44:53 am
Bullshit! is dumb.

If you can wash and reuse stuff, do that...it helps :)

I do reuse a lot of stuff (I keep all my plastic bags and most of the plastic containers (for stuff like rice and popcorn kernels and flour and sugar....)) but there are some things which you really just can't reuse (tin cans, spraypaint canisters, etc).
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Mince Wobley on April 13, 2008, 03:06:08 am
For the metallic things just throw them into an open field an Nature will reabsorb them
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Terin on April 13, 2008, 04:39:17 pm
My apartment was making a big deal out of doing something for Earth Day (and that one day only).  They're recycling SOMETHING, but it wasn't even worth anything.  It wasn't cans or plastic cartons or anything common.  I think they were asking for something obscure like glass.  And while glass is nice to recycle, it didn't seem like it was really worth recycling compared to other important things, like copper/plastic/aluminum.  I mean, forgive me if my understanding is wrong, but glass is made from sand, right?  So why are we so worried about that compared to something like plastic, since oil is so damn expensive right now?  Just my two cents.

--Terin
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Kaworu on April 13, 2008, 04:53:21 pm
Here we have to (by law) recycle. It's only stuff like putting plastics/metals/glass seperate from foodstuffs, so it's no deal. Plus here we generally recycle foodstuffs as compost because we grow our own dandelions fruit and veg. Paper gets recycled/reused for the bottom of birdcage etc and I am using random rubbishs for my art. Also bottles and bags always get reused. Even cardboard boxes are contstantly reused, they're so useful.
At the moment though recycling is kinda useless here because we don't have a recycling plant nearby so it has to go quite a distance to get there, causing more pollution and shit and then the whole ineffective process of sorting out and making reusable makes recycling somewhat moot here at the moment.

We was gunna have a major state of the art recycling centre built a couple of miles out of town to service the county, but no, recycling plants damage the beautiful landscape, so that got scrapped. It's all fine to care for and protect the environment, we'll all do our part... but not within twenty miles of my house OR ELSE GRR. Those filthy recycling plants.
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: datamanc3r on April 13, 2008, 05:55:58 pm
Hah. That really sucks, Kaworu.

I'm sort of in the same position with recycling. The nearest plant is so far away that the cost of gas to get there exceeds the money I would get from recycling. And it's counter-intuitive anyways. HEY LETS SAVE TEH PLANET BY FUCKING UP THE OZONE LAYER. AT LEAST WE CAN GORGE OURSELVES WITH SODA PRODUCTS AFTERWARD. Great fun in that.

What also pisses me off is that THERE IS ABSOLUTELY NO LOCAL PLACE TO DISPOSE OF COMPUTER CRAP. If its so damn bad to leave our busted CRTs in the dumpster because of mercury/lead poisoning, where the hell do you want us to put them? My mom was fined by my apartment complex recently for throwing away our CRTs in the dumpster, but they don't even know where we ought to put them.
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Maximo on April 13, 2008, 06:48:50 pm
For the metallic things just throw them into an open field an Nature will reabsorb them

Please tell me you're kidding. PLEASE. Nature doesn't break down an aluminum can of soda for at least 200 years. Worse than that though is glass. It doesn't break down for over a million years. I feel kinda bad because my favorite drink (Fuze) is only sold in glass bottles.

My family does recycle paper, but we just had our glass/metal recycling bin stolen from us (yeah.. wtf) so we stopped recycling glass and metal. And why did "Bullshit!" say it's not worth recycling anything else?
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Mince Wobley on April 13, 2008, 07:03:12 pm
Please tell me you're kidding. PLEASE. Nature doesn't break down an aluminum can of soda for at least 200 years. Worse than that though is glass. It doesn't break down for over a million years. I feel kinda bad because my favorite drink (Fuze) is only sold in glass bottles.

My family does recycle paper, but we just had our glass/metal recycling bin stolen from us (yeah.. wtf) so we stopped recycling glass and metal. And why did "Bullshit!" say it's not worth recycling anything else?

I am not kidding. 200 years may be a lot of time to you but not to Nature. Just don't do it too often and you won't live in a mountain of trash.
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: Maximo on April 13, 2008, 08:16:35 pm
I am not kidding. 200 years may be a lot of time to you but not to Nature. Just don't do it too often and you won't live in a mountain of trash.

200 years of damage to the environment from aluminum cans we just "throw into an open field" are terrivle. It damages the environment and plant and animal life around there. Imagine if people 200 years ago had aluminum cans they just threw wherever they wanted. There would be cans of soda George Washington drank from, damaging the environment all this time. There's a reason you recycle resources like this. Not to mention the fact that littering in the city I live in is punishable by a $1000 fine if caught. It's harmful to everything.
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: YourHero on April 21, 2008, 02:16:15 pm
hahah my old housemates had no idea how to recycle. we'd always have 'oops' notes indicating what we did wrong... for example we had:

"bicycles are not recycleable"

"leather bads cannot be put in the green box" (compost)

"please put the garbage in the garbage bin and the recycling in the blue box, not the other way around"


etc...
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: goat on April 21, 2008, 06:22:04 pm
You won't need any equipment to dispose of trash or recycleables, you just need to drop it off at the right facility. Contact your city health department if you are unsure of where/if you have these facilities.
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: ase on April 21, 2008, 07:11:08 pm
A few communities in my area are implementing an interesting incentive-based recycling program where you get coupons that can be redeemed at local supermarkets and businesses. It's a good idea, but it's too bad that the human race is so lazy that it refuses to do anything unless it sees PERSONAL BENEFIT

http://recyclebank.com/
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: YourHero on April 22, 2008, 11:04:53 am
i thought a clean planet WAS personal benefit...
Title: Recycling woes
Post by: goat on April 23, 2008, 10:55:51 am
A few communities in my area are implementing an interesting incentive-based recycling program where you get coupons that can be redeemed at local supermarkets and businesses. It's a good idea, but it's too bad that the human race is so lazy that it refuses to do anything unless it sees PERSONAL BENEFIT

http://recyclebank.com/

Yes, here in most parts of the USA you can gather up your cans and return them for hard cash. If you don't have a place close by, find the nearest one, and just make it a once in a while thing to bring a carload full of cans you've been storing in trashbags.