Thought this was a little interesting post on a blog.
So much of this happening these days
The blog author reads a little demanding to me. While purposefully using eco language or imagery to fool customers is certainly wrong the idea of inconsequential actions seems tough:
*Inconsequential Actions: Promoting a small ‘green’ feature whilst ignoring bigger environmental issues, e.g. a fast food company promoting a switch to recyclable paper straws, while still using polystyrene food containers.*
If every action helps, then every action helps. If only the most consequential actions should now be counted can I have my plastic straws back please?
3 comments
Thought this was a little interesting post on a blog.
So much of this happening these days
The blog author reads a little demanding to me. While purposefully using eco language or imagery to fool customers is certainly wrong the idea of inconsequential actions seems tough:
*Inconsequential Actions: Promoting a small ‘green’ feature whilst ignoring bigger environmental issues, e.g. a fast food company promoting a switch to recyclable paper straws, while still using polystyrene food containers.*
If every action helps, then every action helps. If only the most consequential actions should now be counted can I have my plastic straws back please?