by Mircea » Sun 13 May 2007, 15:33:01
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'B')aldwin, you need to do your own research.
The brief version is: Glass can be recycled indefinitely. Sand can be found along any riverbank and obviously at ocean beaches. The temperatures needed to melt sand into molten glass, or to melt cullet (recycled glass) can be achieved with at least 1700s-era technologies. Ditto for the technologies to fom the glass into containers. Plate glass for windows dates to the mid 1800s if I'm not mistaken. All of this can be done in a post-PO world. Easily. More easily than most things.
I think the problem is that many on this forum are very young and were raised in a "throw-away society." They never lived in a non-disposable society and don't understand life in the US and other countries in 1950s to 1980s.
I was in Alabama for training in 1984 and saw a little pink truck. It had been maybe 2 or 3 years since I'd last seen one, and that was the last one I ever saw.
I know some of you know what I'm talking about with little pink trucks. It was a diaper service. The diaper man would come round and drop off fresh diapers and pick up the soiled diapers, take them back to the plant to be cleaned and sanitized, then repackaged for delivery.
That's how it was done for decades, and that's how it will be done again, because no one will be able to afford disposable diapers.
Everyone had little metal aluminum boxes outside the front door for the dairy man. He'd come round and deliver milk, buttermilk, sour cream, cream, cheeses and juices. You just left a note to tell them what you wanted and they mail you a bill at the end of the month.
The produce truck would come round every other night about 7:00 pm or so and you'd by your corn and tomatoes, onions, potatoes or fruits or whatever you needed for the week.
You only went to the grocery store once or twice a month, and that was to buy flour, sugar, coffee and bleach and laundry soap powder in a cardboard box. Yeah, some of you might want to reaquaint yourself with soap powder, since liquid soap in plastic container will be too expensive to buy.
People went shopping to buy clothes and shoes, or maybe tools and lawn and garden stuff, but that was a few times a year, not every freaking day.
Some of you might want to sit down until the shock wears off, but yes, nearly everything came in glass containers (or cardboard or metal), like mayonaise, catsup, mustard, vegetable oil, salad dressings, milk, soft drinks, liquors, and such.
So if you want to sell catsup or mustard, you're going to have to package it in a glass container. The cost savings might only be $0.15, but that $0.15 might be the difference between staying in business or going out of business.
A post-PO society will not be as horrid as it sounds. People will just have to make some adjustments and for those of you who can't hack it, then I guess that says that your great-grandparents and grand-parents are better men and women than you'll ever be.