Gantlemagne
Active Member
I worked at a University, until I was poisoned and fled as a refugee from PA because the police didn't charge or investigate (to My knowledge) the poisoning incident despite My going to the police station, telling them "I think I've been poisoned." And that it was stool hardener and anti-freeze and asked them to check My blood with a forensic test, which they refused to do; didn't call an ambulance for Me, or transportation to the hospital... until I had a heart attack from the anti-freeze clogging My arteries; and despite the emergency call telling the dispatcher I was poisoned... lack of investigation; but anyway...
I worked at Kutztown University in Pennsylvania and I spoke with staff and students and coworkers about the importance of recycling. And, see, what's most perplexing is that despite the fact that most materials, paper, plastic, aluminum, etc; being recyclable and the recycling containers being right next to the trash bins; I observed people absent mindedly just throwing into the trash a lot of recyclable material. When I spoke about this observance to a cowoker, she just shrugged her shoulders as I talked about the trash islands in the oceans, and how sea life was suffocating and dying because of it. Then I observed her numerous times just throwing her plastic recyclable material into the trash, seemingly on purpose.
So, I'm at the point where, I think there should only be recycling, and the Recycling Centers should replace all trash dumps, food, used coffee grounds and tea bags, and compostable waste is sorted out, put into compost piles and farmers and gardeners can purchase the compost as fertilizer. Yellow and Brown Grease, the same, excellent fertilizers (calories in the ground, calories out of the ground). And the effort to transform Our Civilization into a completely environmentally sustainable Civilization in harmony with Our Planet and any planet or moon or celestial body We colonize, should be subsidized by the government; especially since the potential for soil enrichment is so great with brown and yellow grease! I was able to grow an onion in sand, barely needing to water the onion when I saturated the sand with cooking oil as an experiment. The control onion in the non-cooking oil sand required much more water and began to wither, I suspect as a result of lack of nutrients and energy in the sand.
I worked at Kutztown University in Pennsylvania and I spoke with staff and students and coworkers about the importance of recycling. And, see, what's most perplexing is that despite the fact that most materials, paper, plastic, aluminum, etc; being recyclable and the recycling containers being right next to the trash bins; I observed people absent mindedly just throwing into the trash a lot of recyclable material. When I spoke about this observance to a cowoker, she just shrugged her shoulders as I talked about the trash islands in the oceans, and how sea life was suffocating and dying because of it. Then I observed her numerous times just throwing her plastic recyclable material into the trash, seemingly on purpose.
So, I'm at the point where, I think there should only be recycling, and the Recycling Centers should replace all trash dumps, food, used coffee grounds and tea bags, and compostable waste is sorted out, put into compost piles and farmers and gardeners can purchase the compost as fertilizer. Yellow and Brown Grease, the same, excellent fertilizers (calories in the ground, calories out of the ground). And the effort to transform Our Civilization into a completely environmentally sustainable Civilization in harmony with Our Planet and any planet or moon or celestial body We colonize, should be subsidized by the government; especially since the potential for soil enrichment is so great with brown and yellow grease! I was able to grow an onion in sand, barely needing to water the onion when I saturated the sand with cooking oil as an experiment. The control onion in the non-cooking oil sand required much more water and began to wither, I suspect as a result of lack of nutrients and energy in the sand.