Re: State Preemption
Posted: Thu May 11, 2017 4:50 pm
FUCK ICE
What if you used a biodegradable bag of some sort? A paper grocery bag fits just fine in a bathroom trash bin.tragabigzanda wrote:but it's better than purchasing news mini trash bags, or even using no bags but then having to use water and detergent to clean out scummy garbage receptacles.cutuphalfdead wrote:A doesn't really matter because those plastic bags you reuse still eventually end up in the trash.tragabigzanda wrote:We have stopped using our cloth grocery bags because A) plastic bags get re-used in our bathroom trash bins, and B) paper bags get re-used for either recycling of other paper products, or for our cat to play with.
tragabigzanda wrote:He tells an anecdote about some food -- a piece of cake maybe? -- that was discovered deep in a landfill. By comparing it with adjacent refuse (receipts and magazines and whatnot), they could date the cake to being some years old, yet it looked like a brand new slice...

wtfcutuphalfdead wrote: A paper grocery bag fits just fine in a bathroom trash bin.
Shut up I was just digging in.bart wrote:wtfcutuphalfdead wrote: A paper grocery bag fits just fine in a bathroom trash bin.
No, I actually am an arrogant dickhead.tragabigzanda wrote:Bart, I had you all wrong. You are a good man after all.cutuphalfdead wrote:Shut up I was just digging in.bart wrote:wtfcutuphalfdead wrote: A paper grocery bag fits just fine in a bathroom trash bin.
We have a $0.05 fee for those here in the People's Republic, but instituting that had little effect. It wasn't until local businesses started giving away reusable bags with brand names on them and the bags became a type of social signalling that there was a shift.cutuphalfdead wrote:plastic grocery bags are still awful
cutuphalfdead wrote:A doesn't really matter because those plastic bags you reuse still eventually end up in the trash.tragabigzanda wrote:We have stopped using our cloth grocery bags because A) plastic bags get re-used in our bathroom trash bins, and B) paper bags get re-used for either recycling of other paper products, or for our cat to play with.
I was at my local market, and they were selling paper grocery bags by the 10 pack or whatever in the storage container/ bag aisle. Why not just go with paper?Bi_3 wrote:We have a $0.05 fee for those here in the People's Republic, but instituting that had little effect. It wasn't until local businesses started giving away reusable bags with brand names on them and the bags became a type of social signalling that there was a shift.cutuphalfdead wrote:plastic grocery bags are still awful
Tangent: we lived in Boise 1st thru 6th grade and we’d go to McCall for the ice sculpture festival /winter festival (?) and it was awesome.Green Habit wrote:Idaho also invalidated local minimum wage hikes after McCall, a resort town that's close to my heart, put such a measure on the ballot. They also forbade gun bans on university campuses, which resulted in this hilarious article.B wrote:OMFG! Do I need to list all the bullshit by my state General Assembly again?
- Invalidated town design committees.
- Handed Asheville's water purification to the county.
- Redistricted Wake County's (Raleigh) school district.
- Redistricted Guilford County (Greensboro) county commissioners.
- Invalidated town restrictions on guns in parks, churches, and/or bars.
- Eliminated town minimum wages.
- Invalidated Durham's pollution controls over their reservoir.
- Invalidated all town/county anti-discrimination ordinances.
- Limited town/county tax initiatives to every other year.
- Invalidated a previous sale of land from the state to the city of Raleigh.
Maybe there are others I'm forgetting.
They also forbade cities from enacting plastic bag bans, even though absolutely no one was even coming close to considering it.