The influence is not dealing with the said company, not atoll.
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Originally posted by wiseguyI see the hutts switched beers also the cans they throw out on the road are now Coors banquet !
In my travels today I saw multiple vehicles or side by sides traveling the highway ditches picking up bottles and cans.
I noticed most of the cat's in the ditch tend to be beer cans. Apparently people still drink and drive, but to destroy the evidence, the chuck the bottles out the window. The law of unintended consequences at work, outlaw drinking and driving, and it increases littering.
And what is the carbon footprint, or net energy gain or loss involved in the entire beverage container recycling process. In this case, someone is burning fossil fuel in there vehicle picking bottles, then more fossil fuel driving those bottles to the depot where they will consume energy sorting and repackaging them, burn more fossil fuel trucking them to the recycling facility, burn more fossil fuel recycling them. How does this actually compare to mining and producing raw aluminum in the first place? Or glass or plastic?
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View PostI realize my comment is not marketing related and has nothing to do with this topic, but your post reminded me.
In my travels today I saw multiple vehicles or side by sides traveling the highway ditches picking up bottles and cans.
I noticed most of the cat's in the ditch tend to be beer cans. Apparently people still drink and drive, but to destroy the evidence, the chuck the bottles out the window. The law of unintended consequences at work, outlaw drinking and driving, and it increases littering.
And what is the carbon footprint, or net energy gain or loss involved in the entire beverage container recycling process. In this case, someone is burning fossil fuel in there vehicle picking bottles, then more fossil fuel driving those bottles to the depot where they will consume energy sorting and repackaging them, burn more fossil fuel trucking them to the recycling facility, burn more fossil fuel recycling them. How does this actually compare to mining and producing raw aluminum in the first place? Or glass or plastic?
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Originally posted by WiltonRanch View PostGlass is more environmentally friendly and more fun to play “signsâ€. Who still buys bottles though?
Nothing like hitting at sign at 100 clicks with a Lab Light bottle on the side roads on the way to the bush party with a car full of party goers.
Yes, it was totally wrong but, like Archie Bunker would sing "Those were the Days".Last edited by foragefarmer; Apr 14, 2023, 19:28.
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