Recommended: Impact of interstate garbage transfers
Chapter 4 describes the horrific consequences of pre-1991 landfills. Humes writes, “Trash, sometimes with hazardous chemical waste mixed in, had been buried carelessly all over the country for decades without installing plastic barriers and other protections now deemed essential to containing landfill pollution”( 2013 p.92). Humes describes a tragic incidence near Niagara Falls, New Jersey in the 1970s. “In the 1950s, there was a residential community near Niagara Falls in New York. The community was built on what had been at one time a toxic chemical disposal site” (Humes, 2013, p.92).
The GatesburgGoGreen Initiative is a good idea. Americans are currently recycling in many towns and cities across the United States. We all want to improve the environment and save our landfills, but at what cost? I don 't believe we need a new law stating that we have to recycle.
Recycling is a great idea for it 's a way to make the environment a better place, im a pro for the no recycling laws for Gatesburg. If the law passed it would criminalize violations of its complicated rules. Why would we want someone to tell us how to live our life or having to be worried about being fined for putting an item in the wrong bin. Yet they want to increase out taxes to pay for the services they think is right. This law proposal requires a radio-freguency identification computer chips to the recycling bins is an invasion of our privacy, it tracks the pounds we throw in there every day and if its over the normal amount summons the trash police to check to see if we threw a recycle item in the trash barrel?
The author of American Wasteland, Jonathan Bloom, uses many techniques to steer readers in his direction. Bloom talks about a big issue concerning American in 2010 and is still an issue today in 2016, six years after he wrote this book. As a result of broad research, the main issue today is expiration dates and how state regulations and laws promote food waste (Linnekin). As other books, articles, and documentaries explain this issue they use evidence, positive and negative connotations, and bias to connect with a general audience or supporters.
In Katie Kelley’s essay “Garbage,” from The Norton Sampler it argues New Yorkers frivolous attitude perpetuates their garbage problem. Jerome Kretchmer, the Environmental Protection officer, perpetuates Fresh Kills, New York’s largest landfill, with his ignorance. Kelley says that “Jerome Kretchmer (…) had-taken his seven-year-old daughter’s class out to Fresh Kills for a field trip.” (108).
Instead, Jerome supports the garbage problem. Environmental protector Jerome Kretchmer see New York as the “Fun City garbage” (107). In the essay he is supporting the garbage problem and he is trying to influence to the younger generation to continue this type of nonchalant behavior toward the City problems especially to life 's problems. “He had taken his seven-year-old daughter’s class out to Fresh Kills for a field trip.” (108).
In the novel Station Eleven, Emily St. John Mandel creates a parallel between a pre-apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic world affected by the nation-sweeping epidemic: The Georgia Flu. This dystopian world opens up the conversation about the following unresolved dilemmas: displacement, disorientation, dislocation, alienation, and memory. Each of the main characters faces a certain level of uncertainty while fighting for survival, evidently affecting them mentally, emotionally and physically. For this reason, some readers may question Mandel's choice to have her characters continue suffering from their inner turmoils.
I am writing to express my concern regarding the visible amount of trash in our neighborhood. The surroundings of Dentonia Park and all the way to the Golf Club are filled with pieces of paper, cans, broken toys, packages and all the sort of unwanted objects on the grass, ruining the pleasant experience of walking in the park with the children. It is a duty of each citizen to preserve the city and it is not excusable to throw away garbage on the streets, however, a few measures could serve as friendly reminders of a person’s obligation. There is a lack of garbage bins in the park and on the sidewalks and this could be one of the reasons of why people are disrespecting the environment. If there is plenty of places to dispose the garbage properly,
In the essay “Garbage,” author Katie Kelley indicates, via her supportive evidence, that the careless and non-chalant attitude New Yorkers have towards garbage not only does not solve the problem but just adds more to it. New Yorkers, blinded by their thoughtless outlook, take things that are garbage and present it to the public as something that is valuable, creating sort of a deadly cycle that worsens the garbage overflow. Katie Kelley implicates the image of garbage in the city by saying “Come Fall, offices all around New York City Hall are decorated with gourds and pumpkins harvested at Fresh Kills” (108). The pumpkins that were thrown away earlier by New Yorkers are coming back into the city as beautifications. At the end of the autumn season the
Obviously, those lawmakers are trying to help out those sources of disposal for the purpose of making profit out of it. But, they are looking down the impact that it may have on Texans. As the increased waste disposals degrades the environment, it will eventually pile the problems on the citizens. In this kind of issues the local control must be in the lead as the policymakers are in course to diminish the environmental essence in Texas. Local control is a means that is applicable to solve this kind of issues which affect the citizens and Texas, itself.
In my personal opinion, I firmly believe that Jeremy Seifert presents the strongest argument for dumpster diving. I would much rather learn from a person who was enjoyable and teachable were as Eighner is very rude and cocky in a way. Seifert not only defends himself, but he gives a way that society can better themselves. By showing others the art of dumpster diving, with a joyful heart, Seifert brings the people together to better the world.
Nowadays debris is an integral part of humanity life. Mankind thinks about how to make the product easier and cheaper to use, but nobody cares what happens with waste after it was used. We contaminate the environment with every decade increasingly: muddied air and water, global warming are an output of human life. The worst thing is that from such attitude other living beings are dying. Millions of animals and birds cannot withstand such environmental changes; their populations become smaller and, eventually, disappear altogether from the face of the earth.
Imagine living in a world where the air is polluted and most people are afraid to step outside their front door, in the near future, this may be reality for Americans. Americans throw out over 200 million tons of garbage a year, yet recycle not nearly as much. Most people do not realize it but recycling is a vital part of America’s society and if Americans do not perform this action, it will backfire on them. People in America are debating whether Americans are recycling enough and correctly. After analyzing the data, one will definitely agree that Americans need to be more educated on recycling due to the fact that most people do not know what happens after they recycle an item, nearly all Americans are recycling incorrectly, and Am To begin,
In “The Hidden Life of Garbage,” Heather Rogers writes about the waste disposal in the United States and how dangerous is getting. Land dumping has been the main disposal method for many years because of the low cost. She writes how landfill is a designed construction in which the trash is far away from the environment. Therefore, isolation is accomplished with a bottom liner and a daily covering of soil. She also says that a sanitary landfill uses a clay liner to isolate the trash from the environment.
Speech Title: The Importance of Recycling General Purpose: To Inform Specific Purpose: I want to educate my audience about the importance of recycling. Introduction I. Attention Getter: (History) Love Canal- Niagara Falls, NY hooker company dump site 1920’s ,1952 school board $1 contaminated cancer; birth defects II. Statement of Significance: Recycling is critical currently if we need to leave this planet for our who and what is to come.