Plastic bag: Paper Or Plastic Or Both
May 23rd, 2011 by aplasticbagWe have come to make a variety of uses for the ever familiar plastic bag: carrying groceries from the car to the kitchen, lining waste baskets in the kitchen, throwing wet swimsuits in them after a day at the beach, kids’ science projects, padding for fragile items when moving, the list goes on. This conscientious reusing of plastic bags, as opposed to tossing them in the trash after a visit to the supermarket, is an important component of recycling. While the plastic bag’s actual material isn’t being physically broken down and reconstituted to another product (bottle, cell phone part, vehicle upholstery, or another plastic bag), using a bag again, and again means not using up a new bag which adds up in the long run.
Combining the practice of reusing with seeking out recyclable plastic bags for everyday applications can make a significant difference in the environmental footprint our industrial and commercial production leaves for future generations to come. As with finances, the saying that we are borrowing from our children is also true with regards to out environment. Lessons can be gleaned from the kind of culture and lifestyle of Native Americans in North America during the 18th and 19th centuries. These people adapted to the environment and practiced a form of reusing that reflected the spirit of conservation and frugality. These peoples in general wasted very little, if anything at all, in their daily livelihood with settling, traveling, cooking, and hunting practices that differed immensely from Western pioneers who arrived on the scene with all manner of sophisticated weaponry and transportation.
Though they didn’t use plastic bags, if they did, Native Americans would have probably figured out a way to melt old plastic bags (after years of use) and make new ones using techniques they would have developed over time using the materials available to them from the both their environment and the animals they captured. It could be argued that Native Americans lived a comparatively more conscientious lifestyle than our own to accommodate an existence on very sparse resources, and that it was completely out of necessity that they lived the way they did. Be that as it may, it would be difficult to hold something against parsimonious living, after all, being wasteful is generally discouraged by most. With the advent of newer technology and better production methods, standard and custom plastic bags continue to develop and improve over time with regards to usage, physical composition, disposal, and recycling. For additional information on plastic bags and their usage, visit www.aplasticbag.com to learn more.




