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In the â70s we stopped using plastic straws because we were killing too many trees. I donât use straws because I can drink stuff without them; like an adult.
Iâm glad they are moving toward paper strawsâŠ.itâs still nice to have a straw but there is no reason they have to be plastic. The two times we ate out this week, we left the straws wrapped, on the table and just picked up the glass. Trying to do our partâŠ.
Straws do have a useful purpose. One is that cold beverages usually have ice in them, and the ice hitting my teeth can sometimes be painful. Another is that, if youâre drinking from a cup with a lid on it, like at the movies or in your car, the straw comes in very handy.
Yeah, straws became a pet issue like a month ago so any heathen who uses them still could only be doing it because they are lazy eyeroll. Clearly Jef doesnât have a mustache.
Multiple daily straw users also include small children and adults in restaurants, hospital and home bound patients, medical labs, movies goers, people who eat in parks or offices, and many others. So while that daily waste figure might seem high, it is not impossible.
While I donât use a straw a day, sometimes only a couple a week(or less) but I DO use them when in restaurants. It is just a clean thing with me, it creeps me out to not use one. My own house, yes, I can drink from a glass like a big girl. When push comes to shove Iâll be one of those people carrying my own metal straw in my purse.
I remember using paper straws. They would collapse after a few minutes and forget about the X type cup lids. There are times when straws are a must! I remember not being steady enough after surgery to drink from a cup without one.
The kicker is very few fast food restaurants try to recycle their plastics. Those that do soon find their recycle bins filled with wrappers, soda cups and other restaurant trashâŠ
I believe this is referring to the issue Michigan is having with littered beaches. The food/drink litter left on the beach instead of in the available trash cans was ridiculous over the recent holiday. https://www.cleanwateraction.org/2017/05/24/just-say-no-straws
Plastic bendy straws were invented to help the disabled drink liquid. While I agree that people who donât need straws, or who can use an alternative, should do so, banning something that some people need to live is cruel. Just have non-disabled people cut down on usage.
The reality for me, is I happen to like drinking from a straw. I tend to find Caulfieldâs statement rather imbecilic and rude. Just because he does not like straws (or perhaps more likely he is the alter-ego for Jef, who does not like straws), does not mean he should denigrate others who happen to like to use them. Unfortunately, the rather harsh tone of Caulfield today happens quite (too) often for his character.
Now, the use of plastics in straws is a problem. But, there are solutions that allow folks who like straws to use them. Many were mentioned alreadyâŠ. the metal straw, the paper straw. But, the one that I think will win out and hopefully be widely adopted is the biodegradable, "plant-based "plastic"" straw. These types of straws, when designed well, will biodegrade after use in a matter of a week or two.
Plastic straws are a big problem in coastal areas. They get in the water and on the beach, animals eat them, and the plastic clogs up their guts. Thereâs a very simple solution, which is going back to paper straws (I was probably at least eight years old before I saw a plastic straw). The paper straws degrade very quickly in the water or on the beach, so they arenât much of a problem. There are also natural alternatives (hollow plant stems) for those who want them.
I didnât see any comments regarding health codesâŠas a worker at a restaurant, we must use a cup with a lid and a straw to drink with. Otherwise, saliva can run down the cup or glass, and contaminate your hands. How are the states that are outlawing straws contending with this? Just curiousâŠ
I use straws a lot, and it has nothing to do with laziness. If you like cold drinks with ice, straws are a must, because drinking the regular way means you get a face full of ice and your drink spilled on your lap. Additionally, if you get covered cups (e.g., for use while driving), a straw is the best way to access the drink without exposing it to spillage.
I bought some metal straws from Amazon a few years ago. They came with a pipe cleaner so you can thoroughly wash them out after every use. I drink my iced coffee with a straw to help prevent staining my teeth too badly. Also, itâs less messy using a straw especially since I usually drink my coffee or soda while working on my laptop. Open containers and laptops have never been a good combo for me.
The real solution, I believe, all around is that the biodegradable, plant-based âplasticsâ are needed for ALL sorts of food handling applications to decrease the heavy use on petroleum based plastics. The extreme persistence of petroleum based plastics in all their renditions is the BIG problem for a whole helluva lot of the pollution we face. Technology in the manufacture and production of plant-based âplasticsâ that are readily biodegradable is now sufficient to replace virtually all short-term, food based container uses now housed in petrochemical based plastic. Longer term storage (aka months) in this form of biodegradable plastics⊠that is still something we are not quite able to do yet.
I find a drink far more satisfying in moderate-sized âgulpsâ from a cup or glass than sipping through a straw or even directly from a bottle or can. I donât always carry a cup or glass with me, but I havenât used a straw in decades.
Richard S Russell Premium Member over 6 years ago
Which one will be the straw that breaks the camelâs back?
Bilan over 6 years ago
My two cents is that restaurants should not give people straws automatically; they should just make them available. Most people donât even use them.
BillSlach over 6 years ago
Our recycler doesnât take straws. I never use one even when the server brings one; typically I see them adding it to the trash.
asrialfeeple over 6 years ago
Itâs going to be a âwhileâ before they have the last straw. Fastfood joints seems to use them en masse. Have no use for them myself.
wrloftis over 6 years ago
In the â70s we stopped using plastic straws because we were killing too many trees. I donât use straws because I can drink stuff without them; like an adult.
dlkrueger33 over 6 years ago
Iâm glad they are moving toward paper strawsâŠ.itâs still nice to have a straw but there is no reason they have to be plastic. The two times we ate out this week, we left the straws wrapped, on the table and just picked up the glass. Trying to do our partâŠ.
dwane.scoty1 over 6 years ago
Sippy Cups are the answer!
Pedmar Premium Member over 6 years ago
Straws do have a useful purpose. One is that cold beverages usually have ice in them, and the ice hitting my teeth can sometimes be painful. Another is that, if youâre drinking from a cup with a lid on it, like at the movies or in your car, the straw comes in very handy.
Ignatz Premium Member over 6 years ago
Delis hand you a straw with a bottle of soda thatâs taller than the straw, so it isnât even practical to use.
Does it really average out to more than one a day for every human being? That doesnât seem to make sense.
jazzman831 Premium Member over 6 years ago
Yeah, straws became a pet issue like a month ago so any heathen who uses them still could only be doing it because they are lazy eyeroll. Clearly Jef doesnât have a mustache.
cervelo over 6 years ago
Donât know if Jef did the math in his head (doubt it with the Imperial system) but I get 15782 miles when I do the calculation.
cervelo over 6 years ago
15783 miles if you round off properlyâŠ
sandpiper over 6 years ago
Multiple daily straw users also include small children and adults in restaurants, hospital and home bound patients, medical labs, movies goers, people who eat in parks or offices, and many others. So while that daily waste figure might seem high, it is not impossible.
maxiesmom2 Premium Member over 6 years ago
While I donât use a straw a day, sometimes only a couple a week(or less) but I DO use them when in restaurants. It is just a clean thing with me, it creeps me out to not use one. My own house, yes, I can drink from a glass like a big girl. When push comes to shove Iâll be one of those people carrying my own metal straw in my purse.
3cranes Premium Member over 6 years ago
I remember using paper straws. They would collapse after a few minutes and forget about the X type cup lids. There are times when straws are a must! I remember not being steady enough after surgery to drink from a cup without one.
e.groves over 6 years ago
How did they get a half a billion straws?
Uncle Bob over 6 years ago
The kicker is very few fast food restaurants try to recycle their plastics. Those that do soon find their recycle bins filled with wrappers, soda cups and other restaurant trashâŠ
SkyFisher over 6 years ago
Starbuckâs solution to replace the straws with drink-through lids backfired! The new lids contain more plastic than the old lid-straw combination.
https://www.dailywire.com/news/32992/starbucks-solution-replace-plastic-straws-hank-berrien
tammyspeakslife Premium Member over 6 years ago
Tell that to the quadriplegic
mourdac Premium Member over 6 years ago
Seattle recently banned plastic straws and I believe other cities are looking at doing the same. The solution is easy, just donât use one.
Saddenedby Premium Member over 6 years ago
for what itâs worth???
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/jul/12/plastic-straw-bans-wont-save-oceans-alarm-disabled/
lars_doyle over 6 years ago
Actually it would be 15,782.828 miles.
Larry Miller Premium Member over 6 years ago
Iâve never been served a straw with a beer. Drink more beer.
imbeachlover45 over 6 years ago
I believe this is referring to the issue Michigan is having with littered beaches. The food/drink litter left on the beach instead of in the available trash cans was ridiculous over the recent holiday. https://www.cleanwateraction.org/2017/05/24/just-say-no-straws
ellis1138 over 6 years ago
Plastic bendy straws were invented to help the disabled drink liquid. While I agree that people who donât need straws, or who can use an alternative, should do so, banning something that some people need to live is cruel. Just have non-disabled people cut down on usage.
Pipe Tobacco Premium Member over 6 years ago
The reality for me, is I happen to like drinking from a straw. I tend to find Caulfieldâs statement rather imbecilic and rude. Just because he does not like straws (or perhaps more likely he is the alter-ego for Jef, who does not like straws), does not mean he should denigrate others who happen to like to use them. Unfortunately, the rather harsh tone of Caulfield today happens quite (too) often for his character.
Now, the use of plastics in straws is a problem. But, there are solutions that allow folks who like straws to use them. Many were mentioned alreadyâŠ. the metal straw, the paper straw. But, the one that I think will win out and hopefully be widely adopted is the biodegradable, "plant-based "plastic"" straw. These types of straws, when designed well, will biodegrade after use in a matter of a week or two.
GaryCooper over 6 years ago
Plastic straws are a big problem in coastal areas. They get in the water and on the beach, animals eat them, and the plastic clogs up their guts. Thereâs a very simple solution, which is going back to paper straws (I was probably at least eight years old before I saw a plastic straw). The paper straws degrade very quickly in the water or on the beach, so they arenât much of a problem. There are also natural alternatives (hollow plant stems) for those who want them.
Russell Madden Premium Member over 6 years ago
Fake statistic, based on âresearchâ a guy did when he was NINE years old. Never confirmed. Just accepted because it fits the eco ânarrative.â
Russell Madden Premium Member over 6 years ago
No. Sorry. https://reason.com/blog/2018/07/12/starbucks-straw-ban-will-see-the-company?utm_medium=email
snuster1 over 6 years ago
l have no hands so straws are a must
Russell Madden Premium Member over 6 years ago
More facts, not emotion: https://cei.org/blog/five-reasons-banning-plastics-may-harm-environment-and-consumers
Robert Miller Premium Member over 6 years ago
I didnât see any comments regarding health codesâŠas a worker at a restaurant, we must use a cup with a lid and a straw to drink with. Otherwise, saliva can run down the cup or glass, and contaminate your hands. How are the states that are outlawing straws contending with this? Just curiousâŠ
ckeller over 6 years ago
I use straws a lot, and it has nothing to do with laziness. If you like cold drinks with ice, straws are a must, because drinking the regular way means you get a face full of ice and your drink spilled on your lap. Additionally, if you get covered cups (e.g., for use while driving), a straw is the best way to access the drink without exposing it to spillage.
Nicole â« â±âż ââżââżâ°â« Premium Member over 6 years ago
I bought some metal straws from Amazon a few years ago. They came with a pipe cleaner so you can thoroughly wash them out after every use. I drink my iced coffee with a straw to help prevent staining my teeth too badly. Also, itâs less messy using a straw especially since I usually drink my coffee or soda while working on my laptop. Open containers and laptops have never been a good combo for me.
Pipe Tobacco Premium Member over 6 years ago
The real solution, I believe, all around is that the biodegradable, plant-based âplasticsâ are needed for ALL sorts of food handling applications to decrease the heavy use on petroleum based plastics. The extreme persistence of petroleum based plastics in all their renditions is the BIG problem for a whole helluva lot of the pollution we face. Technology in the manufacture and production of plant-based âplasticsâ that are readily biodegradable is now sufficient to replace virtually all short-term, food based container uses now housed in petrochemical based plastic. Longer term storage (aka months) in this form of biodegradable plastics⊠that is still something we are not quite able to do yet.
mklange Premium Member over 6 years ago
Oh good grief! This is what people have to worry about?
gammaguy over 6 years ago
I find a drink far more satisfying in moderate-sized âgulpsâ from a cup or glass than sipping through a straw or even directly from a bottle or can. I donât always carry a cup or glass with me, but I havenât used a straw in decades.