Thank you Inannamute, for brining this, maybe the most important topic at all.
I read the link... ... and I cried. Not that I didn't know about phatalates, the everlasting durability of plastics and what it does to the
enviroment.
It's just so easy to forget about with all the other maladities going on in the world.
Let me tell you about an experience I had in 1996 flying cross Pacific to Australia.
In the early morning as the sun came up the plane hoovered down approaching the continent getting ready for landing, the coastlline was a dim brim in
the horizon.
I guess we were 30-40 miles from land and the ocean was glittering in the morning sun. Suddenly I spotted an area of flecks down there, I couldn't
make out what it was. At first I thought it was an armada of small boats, but some of the flecks were hard to shape into a boat. Finally I spotted a
small boat and could see they wasn't boats. Maybe whales playing in the morning light, I then thought. But there wasn't any visible movement in the
flecks. At last the horrible truth dawn on me ...it was garbage.
When I came to Sydney I told my friend what I had seen. He took me to the newly build garbage plant, where all the rubbish from the greater
metropolian area was collected ...and pumped into the ocean.
He saw it as a great progress that a pipeline now lead it 10-20 miles off shore bfore it was realeased. In that way their beautiful beaches wouldn't
be polluted like they'd been with the earlier practise, to just haul it a few miles out and dumb it. Now it was relaesed in the ocean current and
would end up in a vortex like described in the link. Out of sight, out of mind.
I was appaled. I do hope they've changed the practise today.
Yes, it is horrible what we do to our oceans. I've always known it to be bad, but 40 percent littered... I didn't know it was THAT bad.
Let me just add another horrendous thing we do to marine life. Every day floating nets are set in the big ocean, each one scores of miles long, and in
a number that put together would reach halfway around the globe. Some of them are lost and will float around literally forever trapping sea mammals on
its path getting entangled. Kills millions of turtles. seals, small whales constantly.
Yes its sad, a mad world.
For the plastics, be sure to blame Dupont, who in the 1930s --together with Hearst's yellow press-- lobbied the US congress to outlaw and ban the use
of hemp, since the dawn of man used in a vast variety of household products from clothes to rope and fabrics suitable for bags, containers, not to
mention its medical use. Actually it can be turned into an organic degradable plastic by today's technology.
But it is deemed "an illegal substance" and you bet big oil want it to stay that way.
To know more than the psychedelic properties of hemp, please check this link.
www.illuminati-news.com...
And... FLAG THIS THREAD! It's the most important topic up right now.