this post was submitted on 03 Feb 2024
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Asklemmy
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You're completely correct, until enough of us buy other products to impact their bottom line. Scaled up production makes things cheaper per unit, but if demand drops out because we're buying it less, then their cost per unit goes up. Then they raise prices to make up for it. Eventually alternatives become relatively competitive and then there's a domino effect of more people jumping off of plastic. At least for some things. We will never get away from plastics entirely, but we're way more wasteful than we need to be. There aren't enough systemic incentives for companies to change their production, and there aren't enough legislators willing to change that, but we can influence it a little bit by voting with our wallets. It's very low impact, but talking about it in places like this can make the low impact a little bigger and lead to a bigger conversation about the global responsibility of industrialized nations to bear more of the burden because we can afford to. Idk I just don't want to grow old and tell younger generations that we knew what we were doing was wrong and would hurt them but we just didn't feel like doing anything about it.