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The photos with this blog show the rather disgusting sight that greeted me Sunday morning as I walked downtown on Kentucky Street in front of Infusions. The butt zone extended for three parking spaces.
Disgusting!
Here is a suggestion for a small thing someone can do to make the world around her or him a better place. This one is for smokers only. Please, when you finish your cigarette, put it out and put the butt in the trash. Please, don't throw butts into the street anymore.
If cigarette smokers started properly disposing of their butts, there would be a lot less litter. How much less litter? "It's estimated that trillions of filters, filled with toxic chemicals from tobacco smoke, make their way into our environment as discarded waste yearly." (Source: Cigarette Litter and How it Affects Us)
It costs nothing to dispose of a cigarette butt properly. Disposing of a cigarette butt properly is easy to do and it improves the world around you. Why wouldn't someone properly dispose of a cigarette butt?
This is an excellent example of a little thing we (all smokers) can do to improve the world around us.
This is also an excellent example of how we all have to pay for the price for what some Americans do. Cigarette butts damage the environment and second hand smoke kills thousands of us every month. Butt that's a topic for another day.
Here is another quote from Cigarette Litter and How it Affects Us:
"The core of most cigarette filters -- the part that looks like white cotton, is actually a form of plastic called cellulose acetate. By itself, cellulose acetate is very slow to degrade in our environment. Depending on the conditions of the area the cigarette butt is discarded in, it can take 18 months to 10 years for a cigarette filter to decompose. But that isn't the worst of it. Used cigarette filters are full of toxins known as tar, and those chemicals leach into the ground and waterways, damaging living organisms that contact them. And, most filters are discarded with bits of tobacco still attached to them as well, further polluting our environment with nicotine."
To learn more about the consequences of cigarette butts, visit http://quitsmoking.about.com/od/cigaretteingredients/a/ciglitter.htm (Cigarette Litter and How it Affects Us)
Please, if you smoke cigarettes, make a promise to never again throw a butt away.
Please, if you smoke cigarettes, try and convince as many of your fellow smokers as you can to never throw a butt away again.
And if you don't smoke, do whatever you can to keep butts from littering our beaches, streets, rivers, parks...
There are no lifeboats!
Thanks to Norton II for his comment about lifeboats. It helped focus my attention regarding the importance of Americans working together on the problems we face.
People get into a life boat to escape from a life-threatening situation. They stay in the boat until they make it to safety or until help arrives. In our present crisis, there are no lifeboats because there is no safe place to go to and no one is coming to our rescue.
Like it or not, we are all in this together. We can choose to act as a team and create a better world or we can continue down the path we've followed to get to where we are today. In either case, we will live in what we create and share a common fate. Even though most Americans don't buy drugs from
Norton II also commented on the need for a new paradigm. Thinking about lifeboats has brought one to mind: that of Spaceship Earth.
We have met the enemy, and they are us
I watched an interesting program on CNN today. Its focus was the growing crisis
The problems
Whether it's driving at gas-guzzling speeds or pouring water unused down the drain, many of the environmental, economic and international (did you know that China holds $1,000,000,000,000 in American Treasury bonds) problems we face as a nation are either caused by or exacerbated by our own actions.
Why are we doing this to ourselves and, more importantly, how do we stop engaging in self-destructive behavior?
Thanks to Walt Kelly and Pogo.
Tomorrow: There are no lifeboats!
Little things can make a big difference
That is certainly true when it comes to individual-sized bottled water. Below I've quoted two Web sites I found with a quick search on plastic water bottles + pollution. This is clearly a case where a lot of little things make a difference.
The articles I've read on the topic always mention plastic and oil. Rarely do they mention how much WATER is wasted when the bottles are discarded.
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"In 2007, the manufacture of plastic water bottles generated more than 2.5 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions and required the equivalent of more than 17 million barrels of oil.
Every year more than 4 billion pounds of plastic bottles end up in landfills or as roadside litter, and while some states have bottle-bill laws that extend to cover bottled water, the recycling rates for bottled water pale as compared to carbonated soft drinks."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ina-pinkney/tap-tap-tap-water_b_173338.html
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If you use bottled water, after reading these quotes, would you consider giving up bottled water?
If you don't use individual-sized water bottles, would you consider talking to others about the hidden costs of drinking bottled water?
"Approximately 1.5 million barrels of oil "enough to run 100,000 cars for a whole year "are used to make plastic water bottles, while transporting these bottles burns even more oil."
http://inspiredathome.com/musings/writings/09-008.htm
Of twigs and bundles
It's an old story; one that has been told many times. You know how the story goes: it's easy to break a single twig but much more difficult to break a twig when it's part of a bundle.
Simple wisdom, easily grasped.
The question facing us all today is not if we will survive the current economic downturn; of course we will. The question is how much pain will be suffered by how many people before this storm passes? If sufficient numbers of Americans work together, if we form "bundles" from coast to coast, we will get past this crisis more quickly and with less pain.
Like the bundle of twigs, each individual grows stronger by association with others. We give strength to each other and in the process the whole becomes much, much more than the sum of its parts.
We can't prevent suffering; it's too late for that. As more jobs are lost, the newly unemployed are likely to join the ranks of the suffering. But if Americans find ways to work together, we have it in our power to reduce the suffering. Where can we start? By rising to meet this challenge: to see ourselves not only as individuals but also as part of a larger whole, as part of a team.
The larger whole may be one's neighborhood, city or state; or it could be the whole world. All Americans are in this together. The sooner we start acting like a team and doing whatever it is we can do improve the world around us, the sooner this crisis will begin to turn around.
As a group, we have the power exert some level of control over how the recession plays out. If we don't act in bundles, if we act as individuals our situation turns into every man/woman/child for him/herself.
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About this blog
Petaluma Angels
Educator, computer consultant, avid photographer and owner of alwaysangels.com, you are likely to see Bob Caruso walking along the sidewalks of Petaluma. He loves walking around town and sitting by the river at the Apple Box on a sunny day. The name Petaluma Angels refers to the collection of Angels Bob has at Always Angels.
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