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EXCREMENT OF DEATH: PART 32--NEXT ADDED 100 MILLION AMERICANS
Frosty Wooldridge Date: 5-10-2007 Subject: Environment
THE NEXT ADDED 100 MILLION AMERICANS
Part 32: Excrement of death, disease & consequences
Each
Sunday, in order to publish the New York Times, 62,860 trees must
dieâ€"sacrificed to make pulp into newsprint-paper.
In
52 weeks, that equals 3,268,720 treesâ€" killed just so New Yorkers can read
their newsâ€" and discard it after less than 15 minutes reading, on average per
reader.
To
make one ton of newsprint, 17 trees must die. In 2005,
Do
the math!
Wasteful production of print-newspapers
Not
only do the trees dieâ€" the chemicals, transport and processing of paper creates
horrific pollution. As reported in the May issue of Vanity Fair,
"The paper industry is the
world's third-greatest industrial polluter, behind manufacturers of chemicals
and steel."
Paper
production proves a messy, irresponsible toxic process.
Paper
mills exhaust uncountable tons of lethal chemicals including mercury, lead and
dioxins. Dioxins are carcinogens that can combine with other toxins to
make them mutagenicâ€" meaning they alter your DNA.
"Not
only dioxins but 100,000 other synthetic compounds have made their way into
eco-systems far and near, infecting food chains and accumulating in their top
carnivoresâ€" eagles, polar bears and humans."
From
2005 to 2006, global consumption of paper increased from 300 million tons to
366 million tonsâ€" a 22 percent increase. However, out of 62 million
newspapers printed daily, 44 million are thrown away within one dayâ€" and
precious few reach recycling bins.
This
week, as you read this report, 500,000 trees will be dumped into
landfills, or burned.
Yeah but, recycling makes a big difference, right?
Recycling
in
As
you tear off three feet of toilet paper once or twice a day, please appreciate
the 500,000 acres of boreal forest in
As
Allen Hershkowitz, an expert on paper consumption said, "We're wiping our
asses with endangered habitat."
Excrement of oil
Do
you eat food? Of course you do! Do
you know what it costs to grow human-food crops, and the impact upon our
environment?
Today,
because of depleted agricultural landâ€" corn, cotton and other plants
demand 110 pounds of nitrogen fertilizer per acre. Farmers apply
pesticides, herbicidesâ€" all based on oil.
Those
chemicals impregnate the soilâ€" causing death for nitrogen-fixing
bacteria. Those chemicals drain into ground water, rivers and finally the
oceans. Dead zones create horrific consequences for all living
creatures.
No
wonder honey bees die by the billions.
What about your personal transport motor-vehicle
Each
day you jump into your car, you're a part of 241,193,974 registered
motor-vehicle owners-users in
How about commercial aircraft; passenger &
freight
Airplanes
inject 600 million tons of carbon dioxide a year into the atmosphere. The list
of wasteful processes and products grows long.
Americans
use and waste 380 billion plastic bags annually. Yes, that number stands out in the Vanity Fair
article! Used an average of 25 minutes,
they're not biodegradable. They sink into lakes, streams and oceans
to strangle marine life that eat themâ€" or "wear" them, snagged on
their bodies. The remainder hit landfills where they never break down.
If
these figures don't sicken you, they sicken me because I’ve seen unbelievable
waste around the world in my bicycle travels.
Incredible amounts of waste
A
whopping 70 percent of our consumer recyclables never see a recycle bin.
Vanity
Fair tells us, "In 2003, Americans went through 73 billion plastic or
polystyrene cups and plates and 64 billion paper ones, generating 1.7 billion
tons of waste. Styrene molecules migrate into your food from containers,
and, once in your system, become estrogen mimics- enabling molecular bonds in
your body. These have bizarre effects on reproductive anatomy, fertility
and increase your chances of breast or testicular cancer."
You
don't suppose the young couples who want to raise their own baby connect
the chemical process to their infertility, do you?
Food consumption
Americans
consume 6.7 billion hamburgers a year. A whopping 80 percent of U.S
raised grains feed livestock. One beef cow eats 2,700 pounds of grain for
a result of 1,000 pounds of beef. That doesn't include the thousands of
gallons of water consumed per pound of beef.
Marine-life consumed or destroyed by humans
On
our ocean fishing beds, factory trawlers 'vacuum' up marine life with 20 mile
long drift nets. This process is anything but cautious and
discerning. Millions of
"inadvertent" innocents die. If you recall, 100 million sharks suffer death at the hands of humans
annually.
Once
snagged, captains cut the nets awayâ€" which commence killing dolphins, turtles,
sharks and other sea lifeâ€" with impacts lasting for decades. Scientists
predict a complete failure of marine fisheries by mid century.
Potable drinking water; quantities insufficient
One
person out of every three on the planet today lacks reliable access to
freshwater. Please, take a deep breath and think about that
statement! That's two billion people who can't find a clean drink of
water today as you read this report.
Rampant, unchecked, unplanned, irresponsible
population growth
Can
you imagine adding 100 million people to the
Every
negative aspect of this environmental and social nightmare increases by the
needs of 100 million more people.
What are we
thinking?
What are we
doing?
Where are
we headed?
Do we
behave as lemmings?
Our
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