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Wasteful products...

The majority of canned goods that I buy are definitely NOT ring pull. And my can opener sucks. :(
 
I find that "fancier" things like some new fancy Campbell's soup will be more likely to have a ring pull than random cans of veggies and such.
 
Yeah. However, if I'm buying something in a can, chances are I'm not really worried about how fancy it is.
 
I wouldn't say the bulk of cans are ring-pull. I also thing there's a difference between "wasteful" and "approaching obsolete" seeing as how a can opener isn't really wasting much if it's starting to get less use.

I work in Food retail, and about 75% of cans are ring pull. Not saying that the case in other parts of the world, but in the UK unless it's tinned fish or a value line tin. Most are ring pull.

I work in food retail as well. I'd say 75% is being generous on how many cans out there are pull-tab style.
 
The stuff I use to clean protein deposits off my contact lenses, which used to come in a dropper bottle, now comes in a box that contains 24 individual disposable plastic dispensers. By mass and volume, I figure that’s about a 30-to-one ratio of packaging to product. I mean, WTF? Who needs all that extra plastic?

How is an electric can opener wasteful? A few pennies for electricity over the year for something that's much easier to use than a handheld can opener...

I second this. An electric can opener is a blessing for someone with arthritis in their fingers.
Or for someone who opens a lot of cans.

Do you feed your cats canned cat food? My cats used to come running into the kitchen every time they heard the sound of the electric can opener. We jokingly called them “Pavlov’s cats.”

Manual can-openers have the distinct advantage of being something washable. Most people easily forget to wash their electric can-openers. Next time you're over at someone's home take a look at their electric can opener and give that a thought.
;)
People don’t always wash their manual can openers either. I’ve seen plenty of them where the mechanism is encrusted with hundreds of cans’ worth of crud.
 
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What bothers me are people that are "grossed out" by tap water, like it's pumped straight out of a swamp or something.

Yeah, I stayed with friends in another city recently, and they showed the same reaction and looked at me as if I was crazy when I drank their tap water. I assume the water quality wasn't very good in the past there. It's fine now.
There are many places in Europe (e.g. various cities in France and Greece) where tap water is chlorated and smells and tastes accordingly so bottled water has its uses.
 
Our tap water is reclaimed sewage, so yeah... there's a pretty strong yuck reaction, especially since there are significant amounts of anti-depressants and the contraceptive pill in.
WTF? I’ve heard of fluoridation to reduce tooth decay, but putting something in the water to reduce the birth rate??

What bothers me are people that are "grossed out" by tap water, like it's pumped straight out of a swamp or something.

Yeah, I stayed with friends in another city recently, and they showed the same reaction and looked at me as if I was crazy when I drank their tap water. I assume the water quality wasn't very good in the past there. It's fine now.
There are many places in Europe (e.g. various cities in France and Greece) where tap water is chlorated and smells and tastes accordingly so bottled water has its uses.
I don’t know about Europe, but in America, AFAIK, all municipal water supplies are chlorinated. If it smells and tastes of chlorine, they’re using too much. Unless the water is really dirty and full of germs to start with.
 
Our tap water is reclaimed sewage, so yeah... there's a pretty strong yuck reaction, especially since there are significant amounts of anti-depressants and the contraceptive pill in.
WTF? I’ve heard of fluoridation to reduce tooth decay, but putting something in the water to reduce the birth rate??

I find that claim suspect and would love to see some official documentation to back it up.
 
^^ Yes, I was being a bit facetious there. Putting drugs in the water supply to keep the populace happy and to control reproduction does sound like a good idea for a dystopian/totalitarian sci-fi novel, though.

Seriously, are there traces of antidepressant drugs and female hormones in the water where An Officer lives?
 
I went Scotch shopping today. Why did my purchase come in a large cardboard box? Why were some other packaged in tubes? Does Scotch really need that much protection from flourescent lighting? Is it that commonly given as a gift that it needs packaging to ease the wrapping process?

Good gods, just give me the booze!
 
One item I thought was wasteful was that Clapper, thing. As if someone went, "What can I invent so that I don't have to get up off my big butt and go flip that light switch?" :rolleyes:

Plus my grandpa had his own clapper, me. He'd be like

Grandpa: ~claps hands twice~ boy, get up and turn on that light. ~claps hands again~ go change that tv channel. :rommie:
 
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