I grew up in New York City. You don't really become an environmentalist living there. There isn't much natural beauty, if anything, NYC represents the far end of the achievements man has made around urbanized living, economic power, social and cultural influence and concrete & glass.
Now that I live in California I can't help but love and appreciate nature. The California Coast is simply stunning and all the amazing natural resources out here on the west coast are easy to take for granted, but every time I pay my property and state income taxes I think... what a small price to pay for such an amazing place.
This brings me to my point. Now that I live in a house (first time in my life, I spent the rest in apartments) I can't help but see and feel the amazing amount of waste our society produces and we consume. The amount of trash and recycling that comes out of our house is shocking. When you live in an apartment this stuff just disappears down the trash shoot and you never see (only hear) the garbage trucks at 6am.
So, Lora and I do what we can to recycle. But that was just the beginning. I feel that I've turning into a Hippie
. I remember the first time I went to Whole Fools and I was like, what is this place good for? They don't have good trash bags or Coke. And look at those weird bags people bring to the store for their groceries. Well now I'm one of those people.
I am HIGHLY IRRITATED when I go to Safeway and the bag people insist on placing one item in every bag. I come home and end up with like 20 crappy little plastic bags that you can't even recycle. These bags are made from oil and we consume an enormous amount of oil to make something that will sit in a land fill or end up somewhere on a freeway or beach cause it's cheap (about 1 cent a bag). However, San Francisco recently became the first city in the nation to BAN the use of plastic bags in Grocery Stores and Drug Stores.
Now, many can argue how bad this is and how it will drive up prices and blah blah blah. I say SHUT IT! Bio Plasic Bags (made from corn starch) cost a few cents more per bag. If this really bothers you buy a re-usable bag and keep it in your car. Whole Foods makes awesome reusable bags. They are large and have study handles and most all of your groceries will fit in 2-3 of them vs the 500 bags Safeway insists on giving you. In fact if you use such a bag at Whole Foods OR Safeway they will credit you a few cents per bag.
It's about time we start to pay for the very real cost of cleaning up the trash and mess and waste we spew into the world. Now that we have a child I'm even more sensitive about what we are not doing to ensure that she will enjoy this place as much as we do.
IMHO San Francisco is on a role. First they ban Baby products that contain harmful Bisphenol A (BPA) from things like baby bottles, and now plastic bags. It makes me feel warm and fuzzy that our irresponsible behavior to our natural resources and our over reliance on plastic and petroleum at the cost of our health and our planet is starting to trend back in the right direction.
I grew up as a cynic of recycling. Now I buy my tooth paste from Whole Foods and use my green bag. Go figure. I drove a Prius for the first time the other day, and while I still think it's ugly, I can't help but feel ashamed for driving a car that gets such terrible mileage.