by MrBill » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 03:25:30
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('untothislast', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GoIllini', '
')Look; try buying an undriven 1955 Cadillac and a new 2005 Kia. Which car is going to have a longer warranty? Which car will stay on the road longer? Two months ago, I bought a $15 jigsaw, and I've been using it for a lot of engineering projects. It came with a two year warranty. Something I had bought twenty years ago probably wouldn't have survived for the two months I've used this.
Despite the claims of survivalists, things made today, while they might be more complicated and seemingly more fragile, generally last longer and are cheaper than things made fifty years ago. And if we need our manufactured stuff to be more durable, we can have that, too.
If our material possessions did get more durable- and more heavy- would you be complaining that it would be tough to carry around, and go back to the light stuff from the '90s?
Any idea how much coke we use producing steel?
The examples you cite are much too specific. The point here, is that we've developed a dangerous consumer mentality, and that to encourage ever greater levels of consumption, stuff is increasingly made more cheaply (in every sense) and therefore more readily considered as disposable - encouraging profligate waste. Great for the manufacturer (as increased sales) but bad for the planet's dwindling resources - which we need to eke out applying some sort of long-term sensibility, rather than as part of a short-term consumer binge.
Where once you might've been expected to look after something and get years of use out of it (maybe even trying to get it repaired if it ever went wrong), the more likely option in today's world is to simply trash it and buy another. Go and take a look at your local landfill site for an ongoing demonstration of the principle at work. And isn't this obsession with getting things relatively cheaply, without regard for real value, price, or sustainability, partially the reason we've been brought to the threshold of Peak Oil in the first place?
Finally, no, I have absolutely no idea how much coke we use to produce steel. But I'm not proposing we manufacture everything out of steel. Plastic is fine. Personally, I've always been a big fan of anything made out of Bakelite. What I'm saying is, whatever you choose to make your product out of - make it well, and with some expectation that it's going to last. If durability results in premium pricing, then it's no bad thing if people get back into the habit of actually looking after their possessions.
I have one Krups coffee maker that I bought in 1992 which just gave up the ghost last week. In the meantime, I have had countless number of coffee makers for our weekend home/apartment in Cyprus. Two in the last year in any case. They are just cheap. I even bought a Krups again, but it was broken before I even used it. I agree. Give me goods that are durable. I feel guilty buying cheap crap and then throwing it away after a year.
I think there is a big future in landfills. Why mine mountains? There's plastic, metals and sorts of reusables in dem der garbage dumps. Hmmm, where can I find cheap labor though?