
CONNECTING THE DOTS
Frosty Wooldridge
More About: EnvironmentRivers of trash running throughout the United States
The Chesapeake Bay suffers horrific pollution from the
Potomac River running right through the middle of Washington DC. Once rich with fisheries, oyster beds and
ample avian life—the bay struggles under poisonous pesticides, endless
container trash, plastics, fertilizers, petroleum and industrial run-off from
upstream abusers.
While our U.S. Congress watches the polluted Potomac River
right beneath its windows, it fails to pass meaningful 10 cent deposit-return
container laws to thwart those who toss their bottles, cans and plastic
containers anywhere and everywhere upon the landscape.
Unfortunately, wildlife, not knowing what to do with
plastics and unable to avoid poisons—suffer horrible deaths from plastics
stuffing up their gullets.

(Nothing can be more sickening than to watch beautiful birds
walking amongst human trash in all its forms.
Even worse, humans make no effort to clean up their trash all around the
planet.)
In a deeply disturbing story by AP reporter Verena Dobnic,
she exposes the incredible trashing of Newtown Creek in New York. She said, “Just across the East River from Manhattan’s shimmering
skyscrapers sits one of the nation’s most polluted neighborhoods, fouled by
generations of industrial waste, overflow from the city’s sewage system and an
underground oil leak bigger than the Exxon Valdez spill.”

(Plastic washing up on shorelines all around the world. When I
visited the Galapagos Islands in the Pacific, plastic covered the shorelines on
the eight islands that I visited. When I scuba dived under the waters, plastic
bags hung from coral reefs and containers rolled around with the currents. Nothing is sacred to humans as they lay waste
with their waste all over the planet.)
“It’s easy to see and smell the filth in and around Newtown
Creek, which runs through an area of working-class homes, warehouses and
industrial lots straddling Brooklyn and Queens,” said Dobnik. “The odor of
petroleum mixes with the smell of sewage…when the city’s treatment plants can’t
handle the volume, the municipal pipes send trash and human waste into the
creek that ends up in the Atlantic Ocean.”

(Wildlife cannot discern food from plastic and when they eat
it, they die.)
Soda cans, plastic bottles, raw sewage and decaying food
fill the oily, rainbow-slick water sliding down Newtown Creek like a poisonous
snake. Indeed, it kills most living
things within its depths.
“It’s a byproduct of our society,” said environmentalist
John Lipscomb of the Riverkeeper clean-water advocacy group. “What was originally a watershed is now a
sewage shed.”
Dobnik reported that a 15 foot-thick layer of
petroleum-based pollutants, nicknamed “black mayonnaise” covers the bottom of
the river. Endless upstream oil
refineries over the decades spilled their effluent into the river without
considering downstream impacts.
Reality check: every river in America runs to the Atlantic,
Pacific and Gulf of Mexico laden with trash, poisons, containers and plastics.
The Mississippi River alone features a 10,000 square mile dead zone at its
mouth. That means vertebrate marine life
cannot exist within that poisonous zone.
Yet, Congress and nobody in any of the states do anything to
stop it, change it or make it better. I
remember after I canoed the Mississippi River at its source at Lake Itasca, Minnesota,
I collected thousands of cans, trash and plastic bottles along the 2,552 miles
of the river. Afterwards, I wrote 800
word commentaries imploring the people of Minnesota to pass a 10 cent container
deposit-return law.
The Minneapolis-Star Tribune and the Pioneer Express, the
two main papers in the state, refused to publish the commentary. I rewrote a 200 word “letter to the editor”
imploring them to encourage Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, high schools, Rotary,
Lions and other clubs to clean up the banks of Old Man River. The papers refused to publish my
letters.
Today, the Mississippi River
runs like a giant conveyor belt loaded with cars, trash, millions of tossed
containers, couches, sunken boats, bed sheets, plastic bags and more crap than
you can imagine. Why? Because no one
cares enough to take action even as they watch the trash float past them.

(Billions of people don’t think humans suffer an
overpopulation predicament. All of us throw some kind of trash into the natural
world, i.e. carbon exhaust, poisons, trash, bottles, cans, plastic and much
more.)
It’s amazing to me that people in cities walk through piles
of trash, but won’t stop to pick anything up.
In the wilderness, farmers and small town throw trash and create dumps
anywhere in the woods—with no regard for long term consequences. Trash litters every highway in America, but
only six states feature 5 cent deposit-return container laws. Michigan remains the best with a 10 cent
deposit-return law.
To dampen my spirits even further and having traveled
throughout the third world where trash overwhelms cities in India, Mexico, and
Bangladesh, I cannot help but wonder what will happen to our rivers in America
in the next 37 years with another 138 million people added to our population. Think of another 3.1 billion added humans
throwing their trash by 2050. I cannot
for the life of me understand how we can continue “trashing of our rivers” and
land without moving to create solutions at the source.
None of it’s pretty and all of it deadly for the natural
world and all wildlife.


(Plastics destroy marine, avian and ultimately all
wildlife. Just look at the picture on
the right with all the plastic bags washed up from the ocean. Imagine what that
plastic does while it’s in the oceans.)
What can you do? Get involved:
Top 100 recycling websites: www.world.org/weo/recycling
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If you would like to make a difference, please join these organizations
for the most effective collective action you can take: www.CapsWeb.org ; www.NumbersUSA.org ; www.TheSocialContract.com ; www.Fairus.org
Join me, Frosty
Wooldridge, with Dave Chaffin, host of the Morning Zone at 650 AM, www.KGAB.com, Cheyenne, Wyoming every Monday 7:00
a.m. to 8:00 a.m., as we discuss my latest commentaries on www.NewsWithViews.com about issues facing America. You may stream the show on
your computer. You may call in at: 1-888-503-6500.
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In a five minute astoundingly simple yet brilliant video, “Immigration, Poverty, and Gum Balls”,
Roy Beck, director of www.numbersusa.ORG,
graphically illustrates the impact of overpopulation. Take five minutes
to see for yourself:
“Immigration by the numbers—off the chart” by Roy Beck
This 10 minute demonstration shows Americans the results of
unending mass immigration on the quality of life and sustainability for future
generations: in a few words, “Mind boggling!” www.NumbersUSA.org
This is the best website to start: www.numbersusa.org ; watch Roy Beck’s
“Immigration by the Numbers” at 14 minutes. Bi-partisan and very effective.
Become a faxer of pre-written letters to your reps to make positive
change.
Visit www.TheSocialContract.com
for the best information on what we face as a civilization as to overpopulation,
energy, immigration and much more.
Canada www.immigrationwatchcanada.org
; in Australia www.population.org.au
andPublicPopForum@yahoogroups.com;
in Great Britain www.populationmatters.org
; and dozens of other sites accessed at www.frostywooldridge.com. In Florida, www.flimen.org
.
Must see DVD: "Blind Spot" www.snagfilms.com/films/title/blind_spot/
, This movie illustrates America's future without oil, water and other
resources to keep this civilization functioning. It's a brilliant educational
movie! www.blindspotdoc.com
Must see: Rapid Population Decline, seven minute video by
Dr. Jack Alpert-
Dave Gardner, President, Citizen-Powered Media ; Producing
the Documentary, GROWTH BUSTERS; presents Hooked on Growth: Our
Misguided Quest for Prosperity. Trailer to his latest movie on overpopulation: www.growthbusters.org ; http://youtu.be/KLWxWOcUrVc; How do we become a
sustainable civilization? Order your copy
today! http://bit.ly/pPgxNA
Follow the Film / Join
the movement at www.growthbusters.org
www.facebook.com/growthbusters; www.twitter.com/growthbusters
www.facebook.com/growthbusters; www.twitter.com/growthbusters
Check out this link with Wooldridge on bicycle and Lester
Brown and panel discussion:
Tomorrow's Americaproject on www.youtube.com/contemporarylearning.
Producer: GEORGE A. COLBURNwww.tomorrowsamerica.com
DC: 202-258-4887
Email: gac@starbrightmc.com
Link to www.tomorrowsamerica.com
for more discussions on America's predicament.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Alexandra Paul talks about human overpopulation and saving
our world by all women having 1 child only:
One planet, one child:
This film will rock you: MOTHER: CARING FOR 7 BILLION
Dr. Jack Alpert , www.skil.org
Too Many People Video
series
How Much Degrowth is Enough? "NEW" Sept. 2012
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Frosty Wooldridge has bicycled across six
continents - from the Arctic to the South Pole - as well as eight times across
the USA, coast to coast and border to border. In 2005, he bicycled from the
Arctic Circle, Norway to Athens, Greece. In 2012, he bicycled coast to coast
across America. He presents “The Coming
Population Crisis facing America: what to do about it.” www.frostywooldridge.com . His latest
book is: How to Live a Life of Adventure: The Art of Exploring the World by
Frosty Wooldridge, copies at 1 888 280 7715/ Motivational program: How to Live a Life of Adventure: The Art of Exploring the World
by Frosty Wooldridge, click: www.HowToLiveALifeOfAdventure.com
Live well, laugh often, celebrate daily and enjoy the ride,
Frosty Wooldridge
Golden, Colorado
6 Continent world bicycle traveler


