The dangers of plastic bags

PoconoRecord.com put together a slideshow on the dangers of plastic bags.

Intellectually, I knew a lot of this and already use cloth shopping bags when I go to the grocery store, but seeing the pictures… well, I’m a visual person. I just rolled up a lightweight canvas bag and stuck it in my purse for the other times when I’m out and buy something. I mean, do I really need a plastic bag to carry the greeting cards I bought? I don’t think so.

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5 thoughts on “The dangers of plastic bags”

  1. The other evening we were at a grocery store up in Riverdale, a little hole in the wall where we were probably the first non-Latinos who had been in there all day, and when we pulled out a cloth bag for our groceries, the teenage boy doing the bagging perked up and said, “A green bag! Those are great!”

    The meme is spreading. Keep it going.

    1. I am having mixed luck. My last visit to a store consisted of me saying, “I don’t need a bag” and holding up my canvas one.

      The clerk put the single item in a plastic bag anyway and handed it to me with a smile, “In case it rains.”

  2. It’s even worse than some of us know. The North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, known informally as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, is a sargasso sea of garbage the size of Texas between California and Hawaii that is 90 percent plastic. Oceangoing vessels dump an estimated 8 million pounds of plastic annually. All that stuff gets slowly ground up into tiny globules that birds and fish “eat”: one study of dead North Sea birds found 95 percent of them had plastic in their stomachs — an average of 44 pieces per bird — and krill, jellyfish, and plankton are ingesting tiny pieces of indigestible material not visible to our eyes. (All this is courtesy of Alan Weisman’s fascinating book, The World Without Us; see my lengthy review on the California Literary Review web site.)

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