1. Don't use colored facial
tissues, paper towels or toilet paper. The paper dissolves properly in water, but the
dye lingers on.
2. If you accumulate coat
hangers, don't junk them; return them to the cleaner. Boycott a cleaner who
won't accept them.
3. Use containers that
disintegrate readily. Glass bottles don't decompose. Bottles made of polyvinyl
chloride (PVC) give off lethal hydrochloric acid when incinerated. (That's the
soft plastic many liquid household cleaners, shampoos, and mouthwashes come in.
Don't confuse it with the stiffer polystyrene plastic, used mainly for
powders.) The Food and Drug Administration has now approved PVC for food
packaging, too. Don't buy it. Use decomposable or "biodegradable"
pasteboard, cardboard and paper containers instead. If you can't, at least
reuse non-decomposable bottles; don't junk them after one use.
4. Don't buy non-returnable
containers. Hold aluminum can purchases to a minimum.
5. At the gas station,
don't let the attendant "top off" your gas tank; this means waste and
polluting spillage. The pump should shut off automatically at the proper
amount. (True, too, for motorboats.)
6. If you smoke filter-tip
cigarettes, don't flush them down the john. They'll ruin your plumbing and clog
up pumps at the sewage treatment plant. They're practically indestructible. Put
them in the garbage.
7. Stop smoking.
8. Stop littering. Now. If
you see a litterer, object very politely (e.g. "Excuse me, sir, I think
you dropped something").
9. If you're a home
gardener, make sure fertilizer is worked deep into the soil — don't hose
it off into the water system. Phosphates (a key ingredient) cause lake and
river algae to proliferate wildly.
10. To reduce noise, buy a
heavy-duty plastic garbage can instead of a metal one. Or sturdy plastic bags,
if you can afford them. They're odor-proof, neater, lighter.
11. When you see a junked
car, report it to your local sanitation department. If they don't care, scream
till someone does.
12. If you don't really
need a car, don't buy a car. Motor vehicles contribute a good half of this
country's air pollution. Better, walk or bicycle. Better for you, too.
Note:Shared
from motherearthnews.com
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