this post was submitted on 25 Aug 2023
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Researchers found low concentrations of so-called forever chemicals in various "eco-friendly" straws, raising doubts about whether they're an appropriate alternative.

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[–] I_Fart_Glitter@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yeah, it sucks that straws somehow became the poster child for saving the world. It's nowhere near our main problem, even with sea plastic (that would be discarded fishing nets) but if we can masochistically try to suck a milkshake through a collapsing, leaking, sticking to my lips, paper straw then I must be doing something good, right...?

[–] Excrubulent@slrpnk.net 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This and plastic shopping bags are the perfect poster children - they inconvenience consumers and not shareholders. Look at your average shopping cart and tell me how much plastic is in it. Did we ever address that, or was it totally ignored for the tiny fraction of that plastic that constitutes disposable bags? Disposble bags that have now been replaced by other bags that are dubiously better that we have to buy, and whose normal reuse-case is now other thin plastic bags that we have to also buy.

Meanwhile the enormous amount of packing plastic that is already in the shopping cart before you bag anything is left alone, because presumably doing anything about that would change supply lines, and that would cost money for shareholders. Can't have that.

Also if you've got a straw you almost certainly have a plastic lid that has more plastic in it than the straw did but there isn't an easy way to fix that. It's an incredibly thin and meaningless cover for the real problems.