Then you throw the overly-iced drink in the server's face and yell, "I am not a polar bear!"
I'll give you that one.
Just thought of this...
Even with beer?
Alcohol kills the germs!
Then you throw the overly-iced drink in the server's face and yell, "I am not a polar bear!"
I'll give you that one.
Just thought of this...
Even with beer?
Wait..
Is this real? Are sippy-cups the actual proposed solution?
They probably junk more plastic cups while making drinks than the customers consume in straws.
Not even going to watch. The text alone is enough to make you oh I don't know, react in an irresponsible way.
I'm no tree hugger but there is plenty of data out there to support greatly curtailing the use of disposables, particularly plastics in today's society. The LA Times sponsored a great piece called "Altered Oceans", it's a 4 or 5 episode series on the damages being caused by plastics and other disposables. I'd gladly pay more for various items or deal with the inconvenience of providing my own bags for shopping. It's pretty disgusting what we are doing to our oceans and environment in general.
O.k., Pile On.
So what I don't understand is how a straw my wife uses in Fort Wayne makes it to the ocean.
Republican owned trash company trucks the trash to the pacific ocean. It's free instead of paying for a landfill. It's insidious.
Yet putting a fork (that's been in a stranger's mouth) in your mouth is OK?
I'm no tree hugger but there is plenty of data out there to support greatly curtailing the use of disposables, particularly plastics in today's society. The LA Times sponsored a great piece called "Altered Oceans", it's a 4 or 5 episode series on the damages being caused by plastics and other disposables. I'd gladly pay more for various items or deal with the inconvenience of providing my own bags for shopping. It's pretty disgusting what we are doing to our oceans and environment in general.
O.k., Pile On.
I'm no tree hugger but there is plenty of data out there to support greatly curtailing the use of disposables, particularly plastics in today's society. The LA Times sponsored a great piece called "Altered Oceans", it's a 4 or 5 episode series on the damages being caused by plastics and other disposables. I'd gladly pay more for various items or deal with the inconvenience of providing my own bags for shopping. It's pretty disgusting what we are doing to our oceans and environment in general.
O.k., Pile On.
This stuff bugs me, one of these days it's going to be the last straw.