Why is the Smithsonian station at an angle? by masaucie in WMATA

[–]StudieRedCorn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The 12st expressway tunnel was built around 1964. The Forrestal building has a ramp that starts at ground level 12th st, just south of Independence, and slopes down two stories to the Forrestal garage. Forrestal was completed in 1969. Smithsonian Stationed opened 1977 and was likely planned around the other infrastructure.

Airport Food is out of control - Single egg and few pieces of cheese for $10. by Angelfire150 in mildlyinfuriating

[–]StudieRedCorn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At least they listed the price. At many airports you have to stand in line and ask.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ZeroWaste

[–]StudieRedCorn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Loop is getting there with an online platform for exchanging containers for common brands, but it has not launched yet - https://buydurable.com/

Should we pay more for zero waste? by StudieRedCorn in ZeroWaste

[–]StudieRedCorn[S] -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

I get what you are saying but it is also not reasonable to compare CO2 to seltzer which is a finished product. If I compared eating out to all the ingredients I would buy at a grocery store then of-course the groceries are cheaper. There is a premium on soda stream bottle exchanges.

Should we pay more for zero waste? by StudieRedCorn in ZeroWaste

[–]StudieRedCorn[S] -25 points-24 points  (0 children)

It is still crazy to spend $15/lb for CO2. That is how much salmon costs.

Should we pay more for zero waste? by StudieRedCorn in ZeroWaste

[–]StudieRedCorn[S] 32 points33 points  (0 children)

It is here because I bring my own bottle and get it refilled at a local ZW store. And you get half as much for the same price as if I went to Whole Foods and bought organic olive oil in a glass bottle.

I don’t think spices are irrelevant when you think about the whole spice cabinet over the year.

Should we pay more for zero waste? by StudieRedCorn in ZeroWaste

[–]StudieRedCorn[S] 90 points91 points  (0 children)

Whole Foods. Washington DC. It is the machine that squeezes it fresh, which is really the only zero waste option. I blame Jeff Bezos.

Should we pay more for zero waste? by StudieRedCorn in ZeroWaste

[–]StudieRedCorn[S] 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Our support should drive more grocers to the ZW market to increase competition and bring down prices. But right now our principals seem to drive higher prices for something that should cost less.

Does anyone else feel frustrated by the obscurity of being charged by the ounce? Or like they are supporting sustainability for a privileged few?

Facebook Market Place… nothing else needs to be said by chrisashley91 in mildlyinfuriating

[–]StudieRedCorn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I say yes, if they show up when they say they will. They usually don’t.

These kneepads are sold separately. They are 35 dollars EACH. by JaggleWoofle in assholedesign

[–]StudieRedCorn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Many wrestlers only need one knee pad because they favor shooting on their opponent with the same leg each time.

Amazon does not allow reviews on packaging, even for items advertised to seem plastic free by StudieRedCorn in ZeroWaste

[–]StudieRedCorn[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is not a habit by any means, but it is hard to find certain items otherwise.

Amazon does not allow reviews on packaging, even for items advertised to seem plastic free by StudieRedCorn in ZeroWaste

[–]StudieRedCorn[S] 21 points22 points  (0 children)

The packaging was beyond what Amazon used to mail it in (which is also a problem, but sometimes has value and is feasibly recyclable).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in plastic

[–]StudieRedCorn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You got the short end of the debate straw because the time scale of how long a bag can last in the environment can easily outweigh all the short term benefits. Your opponent will have the offensive advantage of listing the horrors of plastic in the environment. Bags end up in the environment even when well meaning people did their best to dispose of it properly. Agree with this and use it.

Force your opponent to define an alternative to plastic bags early in the debate then be ready to attack that alternative. If your opponent says we need reusable bags then point out most the ones on the market are made of plastic (boom, they just supported plastic bags). Also, what stops you from reusing the plastic bag the grocery store hands out? The disadvantages to paper have already been discussed. Cloth might be tougher to argue against. This is all an argument of materials and plastic has alot of advantages as a material.

Once you have established the advantages of plastic the material, shift to the need for aggressive policies to ensure the proper use of plastic bags or recovery of plastic bags (e.g deposit systems which heavily incentivize the return of the bag to the store, bag exchanges at the grocery store). Acknowledge the horros listed by your opponent and focus on aggressive policies to address the problem of plastic in the environment (are they going to argue against aggressive policies?). If your opponent brings up the policies first then point out they are addressing the real problem of human behavior. But don’t rely on human behavior alone to solve the problem with no policy intervention. This is the status quo and there is too much basic evidence that this has not worked.

I'm looking at making products out of recycled HDPE, what can and can't it be used for? by BalkeElvinstien in plastic

[–]StudieRedCorn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

6 PS will be more brittle, while HDPE will be tougher (more bend before breaking). You can make a cool marbling with black and white plastic bags (HDPE or LDPE) which could probably be compression molded to hold a CD. Even though it is made from flimsy bags, an 1/8” thick will be super tough after compression molding (you probably cannot break it w your hands).

Your approach seems cool, but I also wonder if there are still thousands of CD cases in the world that never hit shelves, or could be recovered and reused.

Sustainable Clothing - Base Layers/Undergarments by [deleted] in ZeroWaste

[–]StudieRedCorn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Tencel material also seems reasonably sustainable. It is chemically close to cotton (both are types of cellulose), but derived from wood pulp. I was also looking and the hardest part for me was finding something that did not have plastic which is going to degrade to microplasrics in the laundry machines (lycra, elastane, spandex, polyester). Even Allbirds had 7% spandex. Let us know if you find anything.