From Wiki:
As electronic waste, CRTs are considered one of the hardest types to recycle.[56] CRTs have relatively high concentration of lead and phosphors (not phosphorus), both of which are necessary for the display. There are several companies in the United States that charge a small fee to collect CRTs, then subsidize their labor by selling the harvested copper, wire, and printed circuit boards. The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) includes discarded CRT monitors in its category of "hazardous household waste"[57] but considers CRTs that have been set aside for testing to be commodities if they are not discarded, speculatively accumulated, or left unprotected from weather and other damage.
Leaded CRT glass is sold to be remelted into other CRTs, or even broken down and used in road construction.
What
is there to say that hasn't already been said? What is there to do
in the face of this suspended decimation lumbering over the planet
like a planet sized boulder? The last thread holding the entire
shootin' match together is fit to bust any second now...and then
what? We're in the waiting room with our number to be called any moment. What happens when our number is called? I'm certain
that when that number is called it's going to include a large helping
of pain and suffering for each of us. Think of a trip to the dentist
before pain meds, anesthetics, or numbing agents. Think of the pain
that can be generated in your body via the most scathing torture
imaginable. Think of the emotional pain that is possible due to
love's loss, or the torture of loved ones that you are forced to
witness. Why would I be advocating for such a horrible exercise?
Perspective.
I
had a saying I used to share with the patients of mine who were in
dire straights back when I was on the meat wagon. I only used this
particular saying for special occasions and only with people who were
actually gettin' pounded hard by life's prison gay guerrilla. I'd
say to them, "as long as you are breathing it can get worse.
When you stop breathing it can't get any worse then that." It
sounds like a cruel thing to say now, in retrospect, but then it made
perfect sense and was always received well. Picture you were just in
a car wreck in which the car flipped a couple of times and your leg
managed to make it out of the window during some of the flips. At
some point during this process you might start flipping out about the
state your leg is in, now enter the cynical, burned out, clinical, no
business being a medic any longer medic telling you that it's really
not that bad cause at least you are still breathing. Again this is
really all a matter of perspective, or perhaps perception.
All
humans excel in forgetting where they came from. We adapt
notoriously well to better circumstances than before and then
promptly forget before. It must be the same mechanism that allows us
to make active use of JMG's magical "away" where all of the
garbage we generate goes. Yesterday I went to my counties main waste
management facility...next stop is the magical "away" that
is hidden somewhere in our state...I guess. I had a truck load of
"waste." Two garbage bags full of things that can't be
recycled like poopy diapers (we used cloth for the first year but had
to stop due to the moister conditions that assist in skin problems
for my son...I'm all for being green until it affects my son's
health) and all manner of consumer grade trash. I had a 50 gal trash
bag full of "commingled" recycles (glass, and 1 and 2
plastics) and another 50 gal trash bag full of crushed cans. The
reason I was at the main waste management facility and not the local
satellite branch was because I had a television to deposit into
"away." This was originally not my television.
I
acquired this television because it was laying on the yard next to a
large pile of trash waiting to be picked up by somebody to take it
all to the magical away. My buddies neighbor had stopped paying his
mortgage several years ago and the bank had finally gotten around to
making his ass leave, hence this pile of garbage. Since I'm in touch
with my scavenging place in our consumer society, I jumped into the
"garbage" pile head first. I acquired a good bit of free
trash to make use of including a nice wooden project table for my
garage. Unfortunately for me I did not notice that the television's
power chord had been cut until I had arrived at home 20 miles from
said yard. Now I had a large bit of trash that was not allowed to be
deposited into my magical local satellite away branch.
I decided I
would take the television completely apart to see what I could
scavenge from it. This particular television was of the heavy
cathode ray tube type. It was a flat screen CRT probably from the
early 2000's. I ended up with a few useful clamps and an art piece I
made out of the plastic frame and speakers that I'm using as a dvd
storage container in my garage at present (I plan on hooking the speakers up to a microphone at some point). I was able to remove all
of the guts to cart off to away in my house hold garbage. I was left
with the CRT which was fastened to the glass via a metal wrap that
had the whole thing welded together at 8 little points. There was no
removing this band and therefore no more left for me to take apart.
I thought about busting the thing up with a sledge hammer, but
decided that it wasn't worth the mess and plus there was a little
voice telling me not to seeing as how there was an X-ray emission
warning on the CRT.
This is what I was left with minus the bit on the end |
It's
a good thing I didn't break that CRT because according to the waste
management manager, had I done one more thing it would have not only
been illegal, it would have been a 25,000 dollar fine. He said
that the CRT would have been mine for the rest of my life had I
broken it. He told me there was a toxic gas inside of it but
couldn't say what the gas was. I latter found out that CRT's are
considered toxic because there are several toxic metals in the
phosphors as well as lots of lead in the glass screen. Nice, I
thought to myself. You can go to a any thrift store in the nation and pick one of these
things up for cheap and set it in your house. It will represent the centerpiece
of our American anti-culture and be featured in the focal point of your home. You can spend holidays starring at it with your loved ones and bond over reality television. Just remove a few screws, clamps, and
glued brackets and the thing becomes toxic waste. How perfect is
that?
For a few minutes I thought my ass was in legal trouble for
scavenging this television that was left in an abandoned yard at the
behest of BOA...I'm sure. For a couple of seconds I thought an agent was gonna show up and cart my ass back into a cell for exposing the very real and dangerous toxicity of the matrix. The manager told me to pull ahead and park
to get me out of the way of the only way into this facility. There
were people with their own truck loads of toxic waste to try to
deposit into the magical land of away. Luckily I stopped when I did
because I was aloud to deposit my acquired consumer toxicity with a
stern warning to never again remove the screws, clamps, and glued
brackets from a television. Next stop...the metal scrap yard to make
my first benjamins in the scavenge economy (just as an aside, cause I
don't know if it's true or not, but one of the dudes at the dump told
me that the tube has gold and some diamond in it...apparently you can
make a living on old televisions if you get the governments
permission...I may look into this).
45
cents a pound was what I got for my cans and 11 cents a pound for the
steel. That looked like this, 26 pounds of cans for $11.70 and 14
pounds of steel for $1.54. The steel was mostly the springs from a
box spring mattress I took apart. I ended up with a lot of useable
wood, a tarp, a metal lattice that I will eventually use for
something (probably a cucumber trellis) and a bunch of metal springs
which I turned into $1.54. This was a very interesting experience.
I pulled up under this yards awning to get my money and a burly con
looking 20 something year old, clearly full of exuberance for life,
barely noticed my presence. "Whadaya got?" He asked me in-between thoughts of how bad his life sucked. Without saying
anything he grabbed the bag of cans from my truck and weighed it,
then grabbed the 30 gallon trash can full of the springs and weighed
it. He then wrote on a piece of paper and handed it to me. "Do
I need to take this somewhere to get my money?" He just pointed
down a grimey hall. Once I arrived at the other side of the hall
there was a portal of sorts. It was a metal tube that rotated so
that I could place my slip in it for the clerk to read on the other
side. There was a bullet proof glass pane no more than a foot high
and wide for me to see into the office.
In
order for me to receive my $13.24, I had to show my drivers license,
get my picture taken, and sign my signature into the computer. I was
entered into a database along with all of the drug addicts and cons.
I mean what other type of self respecting citizen of our great empire
would be out to gain $13.24 for some scavenged cans and leftover box
spring metal? Clearly I was either a con, drug addict, homeless, or
some combination or all three. When the toothless 50 something year
old clerk asked me for my drivers license, and to sign, I said "why,
am I being entered into some government data base?" I was
informed that my "profile" had to be entered into the
"system." Just after I asked that question another lady,
probably the manager of this joint, starred at me for about 20
seconds and I starred back. In that stare she was probably comparing
me to the pictures of local wanteds, assessing my drug usury status,
and trying to figure if she recognized me from causing trouble
before. I starred back to tell her that I was none of the above.
Here's another bit of juicy information. Apparently there is only
one way to sell aluminum without a license, and that is by the can.
In fact, the only metal you can sell without a permit is aluminum
cans and steel. Any other type and you must have the permission of
your local government. I plan on getting that permission.
To
be a scavenger is to align yourself with cons, drunks, drug addicts,
and the homeless in our society. You become trash when you quit the
matrix. I've spent more time with "garbage" since I
resigned then I have in my entire life it seems. Why am I doing
this? I'm just following my bliss. It seems my bliss is to rummage
through this empires garbage heap. I'd rather pick through the shit
then kiss the agents ass. I'd rather get on with the scarcity
economy now while there's not much competition. This is what the
future looks like, only more fighting and less potable water and
food. What are we supposed to do with all of this end of
empire/civilization due to the constraints that the laws of
thermodynamics and simple physics place on reality? First go through
all of the stages of grief. That took me about five years. It took
that long because of the conditioning cemented into my psyche due
to a life spent in the matrix. Once you finally get it, then decide
what you are going to do about it. Just do something. Be the change
you want to see in the world. I've decided to learn how to grow food
and navigate my way through the scarcity economy that we are headed
into. It's only going to get more difficult as time moves on.
However, it can always get worse as long as you are breathing.
It's
like this. The Buddha said "life is suffering." That's
correct, and you have to internalize that before you are free to live
joyously. Otherwise you are deluding yourself. Surrender to the
empires shit pile and you may find some gems to trade for what you
need in the process. Either way at some point your probably going to
find yourself at said shit pile. If your not used to the smell it's
just going to add to the suffering bit. It's uncanny what you can
unearth in the magical land of away that's found at the business end
of societies butt hole. Here's to finding those undigested peanuts in the shit.
5 comments:
Part of the reason you get your profile entered when you bring that scrap in, is if they didn't, scavengers would dismantle the empire right quick. Some dudes locally just stole some copper gravestone bases, but dumped them when news of the heist hit the airwaves. Last year, guys stole the stainless steel letters from the stone dedication to the new 35W bridge, the night after the pubic ceremony! Government makes the salvage companies document everybody, in part too, because the people who run such companies are necessarily without much in the way of scruples. Not that any of it works, only temporarily stemming a tide, nor does it negate what you say about becoming associated with the dregs, scrapping instead of trashing stuff.
I see several scavengers a day, driving down my alley. I leave my metal scrap for them, on the side of the garage. One of them came into my driveway and dismantled the aluminum frame of a small greenhouse a neighbor gave me. Many scavengers are thieves too.
I mostly scavenge what is useful, for building, or making beautiful.
My favorite literary reference are the ruinmen, of Greer's Stars Reach.
I have meant to read Stars Reach but have neglected to of late. Maybe it's time because the "ruinmen" seem interesting here.
i think meant to have read is what I meant to say
"Here's to finding undigested peanuts in the shit"
Herehere! And the shit's pretty good fertilizer too. I spent a summer on a sort of dysfunctional organic farm in Wisconsin, chasing a girl. The one good thing that came out of it was realizing that composting toilets actually worked, and human shit is not as horrible as it's made out to be.
They had a bucket filled with sawdust for taking a dump in, then threw it into a enclosure made with hay bales to let it ripen.
I reached down to grab some (what I thought was) sawdust from (what I thought was) a regular compost pile while working on a project, and got a handful of it. Which I ran to wash right away. But it didn't smell. And my hand didn't fall off. We're so used to mixing it with drinking water and flushing it to 'away' that we don't even know what the stuff is.
Not that I'm rushing out to start a humanure pile in my backyard now- my neighbors are only a few feet away and it wouldn't play well- but I appreciate your comments on the reusing of 'waste'. Even a dead squirrel makes good fertilizer. Americans won't be able to afford to be so squeamish in the near future.
it really is pathetic how sterile our society is. My guess is that it has something to do with machines...but I'd have to think on it some more.
Getting a humanure project off the ground is a hard nut to crack. It takes dedication. I harvest my urine by peeing into a one gallon apple cider jug. It either ends up in the compost or applied directly to my plants. Sometimes I don't even dilute it.
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