Donnie Barnes wrote:
Let's be sure before we go too crazy spending resources that might be completely wasted in the grand scheme.
Your point is well taken. But how long do we wait until we're "sure enough" to take those steps? There will always be vocal contingents who will continue to passionately argue their positions long after the issue is "settled" in the public consciousness. For a historical example, consider the cigarette companies' insistance (under oath, even) that their products were not harmful to their customers long after the evidence was no longer being disputed by anyone else.
Certainly many of the proposals out there are extremely costly, but there are many things we can do as individuals on a small scale that are basically free and only represent a small inconvenience. For example, I took my empty drink bottles home with me today to be recycled rather than throw them in the big trash bag at the bus. Sometimes I'll fill a bag with other people's recyclable trash as well. At every event we (as a club) fill multiple large trash bags, of which probably 90% is recyclable. At the Christmas party I learned that none of the empty bottles we generated would be recycled- I packed home as many of them as I could fit.
It's only a grain of sand, but if everyone in the world did it, that would be an awful lot of sand. Of course, as long as I continue to participate in motorsports I'm a hypocrite. For now I make various rationalizations for it, but I'm starting to suspect it's all a smoke screen...

That would be where
real sacrifice would come in.
_________________
Carl Fisher
Be Cool to the Pizza Dude:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/stor ... Id=4651531