It’s hard for me to explain in words how disturbing I find this. Here’s a manifestation of how we as a culture see “stuff” and how we relate to the material world.
Wow. That looks really inefficient.
Submitted 6 months ago by MHSJenkins@infosec.pub to aboringdystopia@lemmy.world
It’s hard for me to explain in words how disturbing I find this. Here’s a manifestation of how we as a culture see “stuff” and how we relate to the material world.
Wow. That looks really inefficient.
paysrenttobirds@sh.itjust.works 6 months ago
Watching this can change the world. It does make me ill.
The secondhand market should be huge and top of mind. Furniture stores should have 80 percent of the store used goods. Craigslist, etc, is fun but frustrating. I’m not particularly picky or fearful, but person to person is just inefficient.
Also, people have been sold on needing everything to reflect themselves and their tastes and knowledge, sort of catalog/review envy, I feel it myself. But you know, it’s just a chair or a shelf or a food processor or a jacket or whatever: try to embrace serendipity :) They have pens at goodwill, a bag for $2, and it’s all kinds and brands and it will cover your household needs for years rather than leak and rot into a hole in the ground-- that kind of thing, just consider it as often as you can. Once you have that down you will find you need less stuff because you are not using it to represent yourself, just for it’s actual purpose, and you will find it easier to pass things on as well.
Just my drunk advice
MHSJenkins@infosec.pub 6 months ago
You’re absolutely correct in everything you’re saying.
However, we’ve been giving out that exact advice since at least the 1980s and thus far it’s gotten us nowhere significant. There are too many subsidies for plastics manufacturers/petrochemical companies, too many industry lobbies for various forms of manufacturing, and too many lobbyists for it to make a difference.
I absolutely think that folks should buy used, grow their own, reduce/reuse/recycle, and repair. However we’re swimming against a cultural and political tide that turned long ago and while we can take our names off the problem I’m not sure that we can reverse it.