Holy crap literally poop bags

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Remobz

Platinum Member
Jun 9, 2005
2,563
37
91
Dog just sniffed the box. He looks undecided about them. I wonder if its the China stench? We do our best to avoid made in China and no dog toys, treats or dog foods are allowed from China in my home.


I agree. Buy nothing made in China when it comes to putting things inside your body like food especially.

I don't trust those Chinese for nothing.
 
Feb 4, 2009
34,703
15,951
136
China appears to be incapable of inspecting food. Especially pet food there have been two examples of Chinese jerky containing arsenic. I think some of the ingredients were transported in containers that recently held arsenic.
 

Kelvrick

Lifer
Feb 14, 2001
18,438
5
81
Yep, there are a lot of things that are biodegradable that sit in a landfill for a long ass time for that reason.

I'd be careful of anything that claims to be flushable unless you plan on an expensive visit from a plumber.

I tested a few bags in water and they broke apart, so I'm happy enough.

Also, my toilets can handle my shit, they can handle some bags.
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,599
19
81
You know, I've been saying this forever. Make it happen!

...technically, can't we do that with nuclear waste, as well? That shouldn't really do anything to the sun, right?
The Sun? No, it won't care. You could plunge Earth into the Sun and it wouldn't have much effect.


The cost would be enormous though. I think it's something like $10k/lb to get something into LEO. Getting it to the Sun would be quite a bit more expensive. 1) Escape from Earth's gravity, 2) Reduce orbital velocity around the Sun in order to fall towards it. Getting there isn't as easy as you might expect.
Edit: Number was off, but it's still thousands of dollars per pound. SpaceX might push it to sub-$1k/lb levels for LEO.


Nuclear waste: If GenIV reactors ever see the light of day, they could use up some of that waste as fuel. (Or if we'd pull our heads out of our asses and reprocess the damn stuff like most other users of nuclear power, that would help.)
 
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zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
110,806
29,557
146
The Sun? No, it won't care. You could plunge Earth into the Sun and it wouldn't have much effect.


The cost would be enormous though. I think it's something like $10k/lb to get something into LEO. Getting it to the Sun would be quite a bit more expensive. 1) Escape velocity from Earth, 2) Reduce orbital velocity around the Sun in order to fall towards it. Getting there isn't as easy as you might expect.



Nuclear waste: If GenIV reactors ever see the light of day, they could use up some of that waste as fuel. (Or if we'd pull our heads out of our asses and reprocess the damn stuff like most other users of nuclear power, that would help.)


You know what I don't like about you engineers? Always shitting on my dreams.


On second thought, you did give me a great idea about what to do with this pesky earth problem. :hmm:
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,599
19
81
You know what I don't like about you engineers? Always shitting on my dreams.


On second thought, you did give me a great idea about what to do with this pesky earth problem. :hmm:
See that? Totally useful.
Or else send the planet to Jupiter and become a new moon. Get a nice, close orbit and use tidal forces to keep kneading the mantle to maintain it as a pleasantly warm goo. Mobile devices will charge wirelessly as Earth moves through Jupiter's powerful magnetic field. The immense radiation belts will deliver healing radiation treatment to cancer patients, whether they want it or not.


But yeah...getting into space kind of sucks. Hopping up into LEO sometimes seems like a flying fish: <Leap> "Look at me, I'm up in the air, flying! I'm so awesome" <splash>
Tepid applause ensues.

Just our luck, we get the densest planet in the Solar System, and all the gravity that goes with it. (Though Mercury is pretty close behind, as it is also loaded with iron.)
 

John Connor

Lifer
Nov 30, 2012
22,840
617
121
I was on a job a few years ago, and it was on the site of an old landfill. They were pulling up newspaper from WWII that was still readable. That landfill wasn't nearly as good as a modern site. I'd expect anything that goes in the ground today will last virtually forever.


I can believe it. Was at an old abandoned house and I seen a paper with the freaking Mercury Astronauts!
 

John Connor

Lifer
Nov 30, 2012
22,840
617
121
Space X should launch trash / shit into the sun.

landfills on earth are too damn full !!


Earth + plastic my friend. LOL



I was a firefighter explorer and was at a nuclear transportation exercise. This was back when the feds were going to ship spent rods to Yucca. Well, this large, white cask that holds the nuclear waist is built Ford Tough x10,000^10. They described the large boob-like cask as being able to be hit by a train, drooped from god knows how far up, etc. They should use casks like that in rockets to send spent nuclear waist towards the sun.

Of course newer generation plants could reprocess this stuff.
 
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Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
67,898
12,365
126
www.anyf.ca
That's a neat idea. My city recently introduced a bylaw where you are not allowed more than 3 pounds of pet poop per bag, which means dog owners now have to weigh their dog poop and bag it separately. Completely ridiculous, and will lead to way more pollution going in the landfill. Biodegradable bags for garbage and groceries and stuff should really be a standard by now and not an exception. A good portion of garbage that we throw out is biodegradable by nature while a lot of plastics are recyclable anyway, but by putting trash in bags it changes that.
 

pcgeek11

Lifer
Jun 12, 2005
21,512
4,607
136
You know, I've been saying this forever. Make it happen!

...technically, can't we do that with nuclear waste, as well? That shouldn't really do anything to the sun, right?


I think the largest reason is the weight limits of space launches and how much it would cost. I have often wondered why the nuclear waste wasn't disposed in this manner, regardless of the cost, it would seem to be worth it IMO.
 

pcgeek11

Lifer
Jun 12, 2005
21,512
4,607
136
That's a neat idea. My city recently introduced a bylaw where you are not allowed more than 3 pounds of pet poop per bag, which means dog owners now have to weigh their dog poop and bag it separately. Completely ridiculous, and will lead to way more pollution going in the landfill. Biodegradable bags for garbage and groceries and stuff should really be a standard by now and not an exception. A good portion of garbage that we throw out is biodegradable by nature while a lot of plastics are recyclable anyway, but by putting trash in bags it changes that.

Yeah, but who is going to check your trash for > 3 lb bags of poop? Really. Do you think they are checking this?
 

Murloc

Diamond Member
Jun 24, 2008
5,382
65
91
meh you're not supposed to leave around bags of dog shit anyway.
90 days or 4 years, it's still a visible bag of dog shit.

That's a neat idea. My city recently introduced a bylaw where you are not allowed more than 3 pounds of pet poop per bag, which means dog owners now have to weigh their dog poop and bag it separately. Completely ridiculous, and will lead to way more pollution going in the landfill. Biodegradable bags for garbage and groceries and stuff should really be a standard by now and not an exception. A good portion of garbage that we throw out is biodegradable by nature while a lot of plastics are recyclable anyway, but by putting trash in bags it changes that.
and why would they introduce such a bylaw? What's the difference? It's going into the trash anyway no?

Biodegradable or infinite-use (woven nylon) bags are compulsory in most of western Europe, they banned plastic bags, except for bagging the fresh vegetables of course.
 
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