As easy (and understandable) as it is to complain about paper straws and the like, the truth is that it’s overall a new positive to not create trash that will outlive multiple generations of humans. However, the bad news is that we all have a long way to go.
The “Anticonsumption” online group shows the environmental effects of producing, moving, and buying too much stuff through memes and insightful posts. Hopefully, these images might be some good food for thought, so get comfortable, be sure to upvote the posts that caught your eye and comment your thoughts below.
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My Haven
Came Across This On Facebook
Exactly
Looking at all the examples here might lead someone to despair, so it’s worth also highlighting that it’s not all doom and gloom. For example, just this week (November of 2024) Australian scientists have developed a method to recycle old textiles into concrete. The fashion industry and fast fashion in particular create mountains of waste, so this is a great step forward.
Remember, many of us purchase cheap clothing that tends to not even last a year, creating monumental water waste for products that end up in landfills at the end of the day. This is a good and sustainable way to turn that junk into a considerably more valuable commodity, construction materials.
"The Heroes We Deserve"
True True True
Blue Shell The 1%
Speaking of emissions, researchers from the University of Massachusetts are working on “agrivoltaics,” a method to help farmers utilize even more of their farmland. The crop? Energy, gathered from solar panels placed across the land. Farming does come with its own emissions, but let's face it, we need food, so might as well make it more efficient.
Because Of The Anticonsumption Mindset, I Have So Much More Respect For Someone Driving A Normal-Sized Old Truck Than A Brand New Gigantic One
Local Funeral Home Offers This $85 Cardboard Casket. What A Great Way To Not Waste Money And Resources
It’s All Of Our Responsibility, As Inhabitants Of Earth, To Reduce The Impact We Make Upon It! If You Love This Earth, And Want To Make It A Better Place, The First Place To Start Is Living And Shopping More Sustainably! Creating Less Waste Is The First Step In Making Our Earth Healthy Again
You may have noticed that behind most of these developments are researchers and scientists. It’s easy to get lost in the promises of green entrepreneurs, but at the end of the day, it’s research, both privately funded and publicly funded that is going to end up helping our environment.
My Mother's Blender, Still Choochin Just Fine After 4 Decades Of Use, With All The Original Parts
Your Life Has Already Been Designed
Made A New Cat Scratch Pad From Trash
A Book From The 70s Based On A Computer Model Based On Just A Few Inputs Roughly Predicted The Next 50 Years, We're At The Brink Of Ecological Breakdown, Billions Live In Dire Poverty And The Rich Own More Than Half Of The World's Wealth. If That's Not An Alarming Bell, I Don't Know What Is
Yikes
Should This Be Implemented Throughout The World?
This Mother’s Day Ad I Received In The Mail Made Me Sad
As Seen Elsewhere
The Recycling Shop Near Me Has Free Used Paints And Chemicals!😊
Sushi Place Put My California Rolls In A Tupperware Container I Brought Them!
Pretty Much Sums It Up
Which Would You Rather: Cheap Clothes, Or A Habitable Planet?
♻️a Drain In Karachi, Pakistan. Hard Work Can Go A Long Way In Cleaning This Earth! Use Less Waste And Work On Picking Up Litter During Your Day! Live And Shop Sustainably ♻️
We Can Do It Again!
This Is A Great Incentive To Get More People Recycling And Cleaning Our Earth! However, We Must Keep Working To Limit Our Plastic Production And Live Sustainably!
Pulled From A Local Pet Stores Dumpster
My Wife With A $4 Toy Basket
This Sculpture Represents The Amount Of Plastic Found On Only 2 Miles Of Coastline In The UK. We Can Do Better! Live And Shop Sustainably
Courtesy Of A Canadian Grocery Chain
Shows How Outrageous Pricing Has Gotten, But At Least This Is A Small Step Towards Sustainable Consumerism
The Irony Of These Items Is Too Much
Surely They Would
From My Days Working In A College Dining Hall
Now There Are "Disposable" Vapes You Can Play Games On
Prime Day Be Like
"Work, Consume, Die!"
The Weight Of Different Breeds Of Chicken Over Their Lifespan
This Smoothie Place I Went To Gives You Mason Jars To-Go, And Fills It Each Time You Bring It Back
I Wouldn’t Care If People Vaped If They Weren’t Generating So Much Plastic Waste
But I’m A Creep 🎶
I don't want to share a city *street* with 23 cars.
Load More Replies...Same. Though to be fair, I am considered a weirdo.
Load More Replies...A Whopping 58% Of Food Is Wasted Or Lost In Canada Every Year. The Pandemic Has Put Extra Strain On An Already Inefficient Food System As We Saw Farmers Forced To Dump Milk And Abandon Crops Due To Plummeting Demand
No Words
Five Below Propoganda
Neighbors Threw Out Their $5400 Play Set Because It Was “Rotten”. Just Needed Some Paint, Good As New
We're Doomed
What Was The Point Of The Plastic Bag Ban If They're Simply Going To Rebrand Them?
On To The Next Fad
Making It Look Like A Bigger Amount Is More Important Than Using Less Plastic
Found At The Park And Grabbed Before My Daughter Could. Turns Out It's Disposable. What A Waste Of Material For One Use And Screw People Who Leave These At Parks 🙄
This Just Completes It
2 Billion Dollar Home In Mumbai Built On Orphanage Land Worth 10 M, Sold For 2.5m, Overlooking Slums
Note: this post originally had 94 images. It’s been shortened to the top 50 images based on user votes.
How is not being materialistic somehow equate to communism or socialism? I think it’s called being an adult. Deferred gratification. Living within your means. And all the other, boring, hated, moderation ideas of generations past.
Capitalism requires constant growth to perpetuate itself, minus the baked-in economic collapse every decade or so. It needs people to buy random things, otherwise line not go up ):
Load More Replies...Back in my day, growing up Catholic meant growing up anti-consumption. Comedians make fun of Catholic parents for teaching guilt, but yeah, don't put it on your plate if you aren't going to eat it; question if you really need it before you buy it; and the fashion of jeans hasn't changed that much since your older sibling got them.
And fashion comes back around. Really wish I still had some of my outfits from the 90s.
Load More Replies...When I was growing up, jelly came in glass jars with lips sized and threaded to accept canning lids to make them reusable. Soda came in reusable bottles with a nickel deposit. Us kids would get spending money by picking them up along the road to turn in, helping keep the roadside clean. Flour came in printed cloth sacks to be sewn into clothing items or used as kitchen towels. Cereal came in a cardboard box with a heavy wax paper bag inside. There was a distinct lack of plastic packaging. We reused, repaired, and recycled directly. I was actually talking about this with the wife earlier this evening. Our family of 5 back in the day sent less garbage out in a month than a couple today sends out in a week, or even a few days now. And so much of it is plastic packaging.
I remember when the local government brought in the recycling bins. First they said it was to reduce the cost of the 'Council tax'. A few years later it was then 'Better for the environment'..so people put the rubbish in the appropriate bin. The council then comes around, collects the bins for recycling and they all go in to the same vehicle. Companies, governments and organisations will say anything to make them seem better than they REALLY are.
Your local government? Well that socks. As a resident though you have so much power in creating awareness and change. Working locally is rewarding, the results are right there to experience.
Load More Replies...How is not being materialistic somehow equate to communism or socialism? I think it’s called being an adult. Deferred gratification. Living within your means. And all the other, boring, hated, moderation ideas of generations past.
Capitalism requires constant growth to perpetuate itself, minus the baked-in economic collapse every decade or so. It needs people to buy random things, otherwise line not go up ):
Load More Replies...Back in my day, growing up Catholic meant growing up anti-consumption. Comedians make fun of Catholic parents for teaching guilt, but yeah, don't put it on your plate if you aren't going to eat it; question if you really need it before you buy it; and the fashion of jeans hasn't changed that much since your older sibling got them.
And fashion comes back around. Really wish I still had some of my outfits from the 90s.
Load More Replies...When I was growing up, jelly came in glass jars with lips sized and threaded to accept canning lids to make them reusable. Soda came in reusable bottles with a nickel deposit. Us kids would get spending money by picking them up along the road to turn in, helping keep the roadside clean. Flour came in printed cloth sacks to be sewn into clothing items or used as kitchen towels. Cereal came in a cardboard box with a heavy wax paper bag inside. There was a distinct lack of plastic packaging. We reused, repaired, and recycled directly. I was actually talking about this with the wife earlier this evening. Our family of 5 back in the day sent less garbage out in a month than a couple today sends out in a week, or even a few days now. And so much of it is plastic packaging.
I remember when the local government brought in the recycling bins. First they said it was to reduce the cost of the 'Council tax'. A few years later it was then 'Better for the environment'..so people put the rubbish in the appropriate bin. The council then comes around, collects the bins for recycling and they all go in to the same vehicle. Companies, governments and organisations will say anything to make them seem better than they REALLY are.
Your local government? Well that socks. As a resident though you have so much power in creating awareness and change. Working locally is rewarding, the results are right there to experience.
Load More Replies...