so you'd prefer mountains of plastic bottles that can't biodegrade and would wash out to sea?
Pascal (post: 1455901) wrote:I really don't like litter... worst of all, I hate broken beer bottles.
Seriously, they should make Budweiser come out and clean all of the glass out of every river, street and park across this country. Don't tell me they didn't break the bottles, what type of idiot puts an intoxicating liquid that impairs people's judgment inside of a glass container... they've been breaking these things for years, so the statistics alone should prove it. At the very least, switch over to plastic bottles >_>.
I don't think alcohol works very well in plastic. There are some things you just don't do...
mechana2015 wrote:so you'd prefer mountains of plastic bottles that can't biodegrade and would wash out to sea?
Nate (post: 1455981) wrote:Psst, plastic actually biodegrades faster than glass. It's estimated that plastic bottles will take 1,000 years to biodegrade, and glass bottles would take one million years to biodegrade. So technically, plastic bottles are preferable to glass...although both of them are going to be around for a long time.
I remember being paranoid about those rings you have around six packs of soda choking fish and stuff when I was a kid (because of Captain Planet) so I would always cut them up and freak out if my brothers threw one in the trash without cutting them up. Then I realized I live miles from the ocean and none of our trash will ever end up there, and it was pointless. XD
It certainly seems to work just fine in a can . Don't like, then pour it in a glass - that way if you break it, you're most likely to do so in your OWN back yard - and you'll have to pay a pretty penny to replace the glass you broke.
(or they could use pure polycarbonate and 40% or less alcohol (source)
Pascal (post: 1455979) wrote:It certainly seems to work just fine in a can . Don't like, then pour it in a glass - that way if you break it, you're most likely to do so in your OWN back yard - and you'll have to pay a pretty penny to replace the glass you broke.
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1456001) wrote:There's a world of a taste difference between beer in a can and beer in a glass bottle. I don't like beer from a can.
Though lately young white kids have been drinking more PBR as of late... hipsters *eyeroll*.
Cardiche007 (post: 1456004) wrote:I can only add the presence of trash reflects a sort of moral or ethical decay in the fabric of society as a whole. The more garbage you see the greater the breakdown. Also some kinds of filth are more suggestive than others apparently are. That's my opinion anyways.
Nate (post: 1455981) wrote:Psst, plastic actually biodegrades faster than glass. It's estimated that plastic bottles will take 1,000 years to biodegrade, and glass bottles would take one million years to biodegrade. So technically, plastic bottles are preferable to glass...although both of them are going to be around for a long time.
Shao Feng-Li (post: 1456003) wrote:I don't get the PBR thing. Since when is cheap beer "cool"?
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1456015) wrote:Of all the cheap beers out there, it's considerably the best. Think of it as "high quality horse pee"
Speaking of which, didn't know you were a beer person. Interesting. =p
Shao Feng-Li wrote:I don't get the PBR thing. Since when is cheap beer "cool"?
mechana2015 (post: 1456031) wrote:LOL at not corporate... we had billboards by the school I work at pitching it to the frats.
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1456001) wrote:There's a world of a taste difference between beer in a can and beer in a glass bottle. I don't like beer from a can.
Cardiche007 (post: 1456004) wrote:There's a dumpster in the alley not far from where my front door is. Every week, like clockwork, a group of needy folk go into the dumpster searching for aluminum cans. The recycling center pays them. I don't know how much a can goes for in recycling trade but I'm glad someone cares enough to pay. Those cans are not biodegradable. Society also profits from folk who are a little less desperate in their circumstances. I suppose that's a double-win.
ShiroiHikari (post: 1456007) wrote:I dunno about that.
Nate (post: 1456024) wrote:Hipsters like PBR because "It's pretty obscure, you probably haven't heard of it." In other words, it's not a major brand like Budweiser, Miller, or Coors. Also PBR doesn't put out many ads, so it's not "totally corporate, man."
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