A very good discussion. As outdoors folks, hunters, fishermen and women, I agree that we talk about conservation and habitat preservation but often do not give a thought to how we might be impacting the environment with our own day-to-day actions and choices. I recently moved to Aurora, Colorado, and several miles North of me is a trash mountain. It is literally landfill that has been made into a extremely large hill made of trash and covered with dirt. There are 2 and it looks like they are working on a third. I imagine most towns and cities are the same worldwide.
I am afraid we have become a throw away society. Consumerism is now the new norm. I may be a pessimist but I do not think there is any way of going back. Technology has brought a lot of useful products into today's world: Big Screen TVs, Cellphones that are essentially mini-computers, GPS and Garmin In-Reach devices, microwave ovens, air fryers, coffee makers that use individual coffee pods, vehicles with on board GPS/mapping and Satellite Radio, etc. Then there is construction, new homes covered in Tyvek, blown or foam insulation, vinyl windows, vinyl flooring, etc. Speaking of which, I have been watching new houses being built in my neighborhood and it is shocking to see all of the good lumber that gets tossed into the dumpster along with cardboard boxes, plastic covers, excess Tyvek, wiring, plastic pipe and scrap metal. None of the extra or unused materials goes to the next house or habitat for humanity - it goes into the dumpster and there is a dumpster for each new house that gets emptied weekly. And, then there is waste from hospitals, dentist offices, airports and airplanes, restaurants and grocery stores. There are plastic water bottles everywhere.
We have made great advances across the board in living standards, medical, technology, shelf life of food, fresh food from around the world, transportation and communication. Yet, it all comes at a cost of greater waste and pollution, and more plastic and heavy metals. Is anyone going to give all of that convenience up? And, will enough people give it up to make a difference? I don't think so. We haven't even talked about other countries that are using resources to reach the same level of wealth, materialism, living standard and opportunity as the U.S. We have wonderful things but it still just things. At the end of the day, it gets tossed in the garbage. A thought provoking discussion.