34 comments on Social Norms, Climate Change, and the Energy Crisis We Face
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34 comments on Social Norms, Climate Change, and the Energy Crisis We Face
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The trouble is that if you act alone, you will be seen as the odd one out, the crazy guy. Try to go shopping at Wal-Mart with a leather tote bag and refuse any plastic bag. The associates will probably not understand what you want, pack your items into plastic bags and then those plastic bags into the leather bag, and will thing that you are quite an odd guy.
You are quite right about that! For years I have taken my canvas bag to the grocery and my reusable carry out meal container('turkey') to restaurants to avoid getting either plastic bags or styrofoam containers. These days I shop mostly at the local 'fresh' market where canvas bags are the norm but if I wander into a conventional grocery with my canvas bag usually the clerk frowns and asks 'Do we sell these?'. When I explain that I carried it in to hold my purchases, I usually have to prevent the bagger from just putting the plastic bags into it. My friends that I eat with are used to me bringing along my 'turkey' but they regard this as 'ecentric' behavior and none of them have elected to do the same despite considering themselves as 'environmentally aware'. They all do get the styrofoam 'doggie bags' at nearly every meal for leftovers.
HI TnGran,
Probably no one will see this, but when I tried to reply back when, there were computer problems - somewhere!
Anyway, just wanted to mention that a friend suggested to a local, commerical (not co-op or anything) grocery store that they make up canvas bags w. a logo (which I believe he designed) - on it. They have and they do sell.
So...And the great marketer "Trader Joe" has a kind of raffle, if people bring their own bags, they get a ticket for a drawing. Of course, this depends on "green" being in. Even if it's not - this can change.
Just some ideas you might try, if anyone might listen.
I have a couple of reusable shopping bags, one canvas (from Land's End), one synthetic. I don't use them all the time (right now the canvas one is full of computer) but they've saved quite a bit of plastic over the years and won me a few dollars of bag credits (Meijer gives you 5¢ per re-used paper bag, and they give it to me for canvas).
Well, shopping at WalMart is another matter entirely, and I would argue that WalMart would probably be the last place to start something like this. If you go to a farmer's market, the people there would probably understand exactly what you want.
I guess my point is that if you act in visible ways, other people can see it, and it becomes incrementally less odd. The next person to start can see that they aren't the first to try something.