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  • Why Sustainable Living Feels So Expensive

    Green living is often associated with wealth, but driving a Prius and shopping at Whole Foods aren't the only means by which families can reduce their impact on the planet.  As this thoughtful and well-written article points out, many families can not afford to eat organic foods or buy fair trade products, but they shop sustainably (thrift stores, consignment shops), use public transportation, and simply buy - and use - less.  Because they have to.  And there's a lesson in that.

    It's so easy to get caught up in the latest trends in clothing, cars, electronics, that we often forget that "the real question is not how expensive sustainable products are, but how our purchasing habits affect the global population and environment."  In fact, in many ways, living a greener, more sustainable life is about living the way a less affluent family might - conserving resources like fuel, water, and electricity, riding a bike whenever possible, and growing eating home-grown fruits, veggies and herbs.

    There's no denying that buying green costs more - from cleaning products, to food, to furniture and clothing - but as Tom Kemper of Dolphin Blue explains, when looking at a super store price tag, we are not seeing the true impact of our purchases reflected in the price.  "Please also consider the cost of the loss of resources like habitat; loss of air quality because we use more energy and create more tons of emissions to make virgin-material products; loss of clean water because of unnecessary and excessive bleaching of paper; excessive reliance on oil because every time we don’t recycle and remanufacture a toner cartridge we use another pint of oil; and then, the associated costs to all of us through increased disease caused by pollution, and the transference of cost to each of us through healthcare premiums and medical care. If we now measure all these costs, which are only a portion of the true costs of 'business as usual,' then what are the costs of that cheap paper, or that non-recycled and non-remanufactured toner cartridge?"

     Bottom line: buy less, and you can afford to buy better.  Get it?


  • Kate Spade Wants Your Baby's Business

    Once upon a time, there was a plain nylon Kate Spade diaper bag that came in tote or messenger style in two or three different colors. It hung quietly from your shoulder and when your baby grew up, you could throw books in it and carry it on airplanes. Then diaper bags became this attention-grabbing phenomenon with crazy Asian-inspired silk prints and bubble-gum pink vinyl-covered backpacks that said "LOOK AT ME! I HAVE A BABY! AND ALSO MONEY!".

    Read More...


  • Robotic Babies Help Train...Parents? You Wish

    Brilliant move on the part of UK medical training centers to use simulated babies to train nurses and doctors in the care of real patients.  So brilliant in fact, I wonder why we haven't thought of making sim products for husbands, wives, nannies, and anyone else given charge of or influence over another human being?

    The baby mannequins can be programmed to simulate a range of medical conditions, many of which require immediate medical attention.  The student's performance is then monitored and video-taped for debriefing and feedback. Of course, I imagine part of the trouble with real live babies is they are squirmy and generally harder to hold down than a rigid plastic dolly.  Then again, any little bit helps in the training of doctors and nurses who are caring for wee sick babies.

    Meanwhile, I'd like to require all those horrid yelling parents who take their young kids shopping at Target late at night after feeding them ding-dongs for dinner to pass a "Love a Sim Baby Without Yelling for a Week" test before they get to raise one of their very own.



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