WhiteTiger225 said:
fluffybacon said:
WhiteTiger225 said:
fluffybacon said:
FallenJellyDoughnut said:
fluffybacon said:
Thanks. I feel enlightened now. You have shown me the light. Changed my life. For the better. You made a difference. Saved the planet. Awesome show. Great job.
You really are psychotic aren't you? Anyway, you do realise if we do KEEP making landfills then eventually we will end a with every city being like detroit. Smelly and filled with guys on crack.
I'm not psychotic![small]:twitches:[/small]
To add to the discussion, we can't just keep dumping our shit wherever we damn well please, It doesn't exactly do wonders for the environment. Since we can't eject our trash into space, because it will create a giant asteroid that will one day come back and kill us all, the best solution is to recycle.
<3 Futurama
Also you do realize the enviroment itself has created numerous "Landfills". How do you think oil is made? Even plastic decomposes (Very slowly, but it does eventually) and glass decomposes aswell (Glass is actually gelatinous when classfied in science. Go look at a 100 year old house with it's original windows, the glass will have oozed downward over 100 or so years to a noticeable extent)
A lie people say... "Man made" items are not "Natural". YES THEY FUCKIN ARE! We are natural beings! We cannot make anything Non-nature because what we make is made from components of nature, we just have thousands of years to refine those methods. A bird house is a bird made structure, does that mean it's not natural? A beavers damm effects water flow, does that mean it's not natural AND disruptive to nature (Those enviroment hating bastards!) Bees create honey themselves... Does that mean honey is not natural? NOTHING we have on this world is made from materials not found on earth. Plastic is made in many ways, but all the materials to make plastic are organic or earthen based, or refined organic or earthen based products.
Actually, you are incorrect.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_element
[small]:does a funky dance:[/small]
You miss the metaphorical sense. Also, if you trace back the elements of those radioactive experiments.. The radiation emitters, the metal and parts that make them up, the raw materials that are given to make those parts, are from earth, meaning such things can exist on earth because otherwise the components of earth would not be able to be aligned ever in such a way to make such a molecule. Again, this comes down to the beaver making a dam. The beaver made the dam himself, does that mean it is not natural? That "Man Made" atom is man made, but it is still natural when you look at it, as it was made after a series of tool refinings, melding the earthen and organic products we have scavenged from the earth into creations, and using those creations to further refine such things... In the end, it is simply the product of advance tool refinement that you find in nature everywhere.
Not a metaphor.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metaphor
[sub]thanks wikipedia, I would give you a high five but you aren't a tangible entity.[/sub]
Synthetic elements do not exist in nature, therefore they are not natural. Bevar dams however, do exist in nature, so therefore they are natural.
MiodekPL said:
Sorry man, but you failed at this time.
Honey for example isn't natural. Ok I can agree. But when discarded - honey will be decomposed bu bacteria. Plastic can't be decomposed, because it was made using very unnatural techniques, like high temperature, and high refinement, and therefore - can't be decomposed by natural means.
"Synthetic elements" are far too scarce, and are not used in mass scale, so they can be omitted while we talk about recycling.
Who failed? Also, no one pre-qualified that this argument was sans synthetic elements, and they must be disposed just as normal elements, and thus be included under the umbrella of things that must be disposed of and therefore are to be considered in an argument about the disposal of things, so I'm going to invalidate your statement and say synthetic elements are to be included in the realm of recycing.