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OT bags
Gosh Bill,
This is almost as bad as me posting an OT about "DAB for Cars" - Ouch! UK Traveller "harryagain" wrote in message ... "NY" wrote in message o.uk... "Peter Duncanson" wrote in message ... In Northern Ireland we have had the 5p levy on single-usecarrier bags (paper as well as plastic) since April this year. Why is there a levy on paper bags which are biodegradable? If the levy is attempt to reduce the use of plastic bags because they are not biodegradable, then why are supermarkets not encouraged to supply alternative paper single-use bags which do not suffer from the problem? I resent having to carry a bulky bag-for-life with me on the off-chance that I might want to buy something. Too much of modern life requires you to plan ahead (bag for life, buying railway tickets in advance to get best fare, etc) instead of allowing you to be impulsive and spur-of-the-moment. We always re-use supermarket carriers for lining rubbish bins (eg in the kitchen, one for general landfill rubbish like packaging, and another for food waste and vegetable peelings that can be composted) as a free alternative to buying a roll of bin bags. Once the levy is introduced, quite apart from having to buy a large number of bags for life, to accommodate everything that we buy at one go, we'll have to spend even more money buying rolls of binliner bags that we used to get for free as single-use carrier bags. And all because some plebs can't be arsed to throw away their carrier bags in the bin after using them. Impulsive/random is always bad. You should consider all purchases before buying. Unless of course it is something you use being sold off cheap. |
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On 19/12/2013 13:34, NY wrote:
I resent having to carry a bulky bag-for-life with me on the off-chance that I might want to buy something. Too much of modern life requires you to plan ahead (bag for life, buying railway tickets in advance to get best fare, etc) instead of allowing you to be impulsive and spur-of-the-moment. You'll still be able to buy a bag for 5p for those impulse buys. If that's too expensive, may I suggest you're not really in the financial position to afford impulse buys? |
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Bill Wright wrote: It's time start saving your supermarket bags. From next October they will be 5p each. This is because of the stupid greenies. I have a large box in the basement and I put my bags in there. I use them for dog ****, clinical waste, badly soiled laundry, bowls of food for freezing, disposable nappies, collecting apples and tomatoes, all sorts of things. When they are banned I will have to buy bags. These will be made from much thicker plastic so will cause more waste. I've made enquiries and I will be able to get bags for clinical waste from the NHS. This will cost me nothing but will cost the taxpayers a lot, because everyone will get onto it. The greenies are stupid ****s. I think it is the duty of all right-thinking people to do all they can to subvert and sabotage all greeny-influenced legislation. I go out of my way to do this. Bill How is it that the US can manage to supply shoppers with free strong paper bags which are recyclable in their waste system and we can't? |
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"Bill Wright" wrote in message ... It's time start saving your supermarket bags. always have From next October they will be 5p each. This is because of the stupid greenies. As long as they bring back the ones that are thick enough to use as bin bags I have no problem with that It's if they start to charge 5p for the ones that are no damned use for anything once you get them home that will annoy me |
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harryagain wrote:
I think you are a stupid ****. That's my arguments skilfully demolished then. Why don'tyou take a proper bag to the supermarket when shopping or don't you have the foresight? I prefer to have cooked meats and fish in individual bags. I buy fresh bread which needs to be bagged. I buy fresh veg which I like to bring home in separate bags. In the past I have put tinned stuff, etc, straight into my own bags, but from now on I will get as many supermarket bags as I can. The fact that you have to store vast quantities, indicates you get far more than you need. I don't have to store vast quantities. Why would anyone? Anyone with too many bags would presumably throw them in the bin. I am endeavouring to accumulate a vast quantity so that when they are 5p each I will have plenty to last me. Supermarket bags are quite unsuitable for most of the uses you put them to anyway. In that case why would I use them? Bill |
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Woody wrote:
By the way Bill, you forgot the newspapers that you put out in them for recycling. Now there's a paradox if ever there was one. The ******* mardy binmen carefully removed a cardboard drink container from my recycling and threw it on the ground. Presumably it is because it is waxed. They could just have easily have put it in the adjacent grey bin. But no, they like to be officious ****s. That's their Christmas tip cancelled. Bill |
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"Huge" wrote in message ... On 2013-12-19, Peter Duncanson wrote: On Thu, 19 Dec 2013 06:00:57 +0000, Bill Wright wrote: It's time start saving your supermarket bags. From next October they will be 5p each. This is because of the stupid greenies. I have a large box in the basement and I put my bags in there. I use them for dog ****, clinical waste, badly soiled laundry, bowls of food for freezing, disposable nappies, collecting apples and tomatoes, all sorts of things. When they are banned I will have to buy bags. These will be made from much thicker plastic so will cause more waste. I've made enquiries and I will be able to get bags for clinical waste from the NHS. This will cost me nothing but will cost the taxpayers a lot, because everyone will get onto it. The greenies are stupid ****s. I think it is the duty of all right-thinking people to do all they can to subvert and sabotage all greeny-influenced legislation. I go out of my way to do this. Bill In Northern Ireland we have had the 5p levy on single-usecarrier bags (paper as well as plastic) since April this year. It seems to be working well. Define "working well". In Eire, which has had the levy for several years, consumption of bags has risen, not fallen. what, risen since it fell back hugely (about 95% apparently) after they first introduced the charge or risen back above that quantity used before? Whilst I don't know the figures I do know that the people with the vested interest will claim the first as proof of failure of the idea. (Like that nutter who used to post here about the Newbury by-pass did) tim |
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"Max Demian" wrote in message ... "Tim+" wrote in message ... Only half agree. Without doubt, many (?most) people recycle their plastic bags but I walk my dogs on a beach every morning and from Easter until the autumn, the beach is littered with supermarket bags. Also, when I'm running along country lanes the hedgerows and ditches are clogged with bags. Anything that can be done to lessen this blight gets my vote. It's perverse the way dog owners hang their bags of dog **** from branches. Do they really can't say that I've ever seen it do your parks not have those doggie-crap bins? tim |
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Martin Brown wrote:
Just because the greens are in favour of something does not automatically make it wrong. It almost does. If you subtract the beliefs that are generally held from the greens' beliefs what's left is almost entirely ********. You sound like the typical paranoid right whinger. That isn't an argument. Bill |
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tim...... wrote: doggie-crap bins? FLED bins. The Fleds aren't very good at putting crap in them. |
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