but i'll be honest - i don't have time to plant trees. i catch the tram to work but thats probably only because its quicker than driving. i recycle, but wouldn't if their wasnt a recycling bin. i choose eco-freindly products as much as possible but by no means do i wash my dishes in vinegar. i'm sparing when watering my garden and have no lawn, but i water it when it needs it, not when the restrictions say i can, becuse i have a tiny garden. i don't give money to wildlife charities because i have little most of the time and i'm more important and i eat meat whenever i want, though like everyone else here its seems, i eat less than most.
No time to plant trees - MAKE TIME, you lazy so and so. Get off your butt, get away from your computer, and go join Green Corps,
Home, and do something for the environment. I'm sure they can point you in the directioon of some needy council that would love to have an additional pair of willing hands to assit with tree planting in their area.
i recycle, but wouldn't if their wasnt a recycling bin - well how totally narrow-minded and lazy of you. You mean you wouldn't carry your recycling materials in an eco-friendly green shopping bag, on the tram with you, and deposit them into a communal recycling bin? You know, it's lazy people like you that cause much of the polution issues - I bet you'd be just as happy to chuck your recyclables out on the street if you had no recycle bin, wouldn't you?
by no means do i wash my dishes in vinegar - you know, if everyone used vinegar to wash their dishes, we'd still be in just as much trouble as we are now. Vinegar is very strongly acidic. Can you imagine what would happen to the pH of the water in the water treatment plant? No doubt, your waste water is processed at Werribee, where the treated water is gaily pumped out across the paddocks, where some of the best beef cattle in the country are raised (no offence to those struggling country folk who have poorer quality beef cattle). So over time, the cattle at Werribee start eating poor quality grass, produced by overly acidic water, and before you know it, our Japanese beef export market goes down the gurgler. All thanks to you and your mates who want to use vinegar to wash their dishes. Go green and just use a piece of paper towel (made from unbleached recycled paper, of course) to wash your dishes. No water, no detergent, and no vinegar.
but i water it when it needs it, not when the restrictions say i can -Again, a very selfish and narrow-minded attitude. What about conditioning your plants to need water only on the days you are allowed to water? Haven't you heard of positive reinforcement for plants? If they grow a bit, on the days when you aren't allowed to water, you then reward them by watering them on the appropriate days. It's radical law-breakers like you that cause so much discontent in the community. You should have one of your hands cut off (your drawing hand of course

), or be sent to gaol, I think.
i don't give money to wildlife charities because i have little most of the time and i'm more important - yet another indication of your blatant selfishess. I don't think I've ever met a more self-centred person than you - it's always about you, isn't it?
i eat meat whenever i want - and I pictured you as a pasty, whining vegan, ravaging your way through acres of alfalfa and soy products. Oh well, I guess I can be wrong now and then.
because you know why? ITS NOT MY %#@!ING PROBLEM!!
Well, I have to admit, I'm with you on this one. As a non-breeder (there's way too many people on the planet already), I'm fed up with hearing about saving the planet for my children - I don't have any damn children. I've probably got another 25-30 years left on this planet, so as long as it's around that long, do I really care about it after that?
to be honest, (and i don't mean to offend anyone here) i can count my carbon emissions till the day i die, but i bet there will be a billion other things i unwittingly did that somehow indirectly @&*ked up the planet!!!
Exactly, not to mention the e-pollution in your original post. It's about time you got a grip Patrick, and started thinking about the big picture for once, like the rest of us do.
(There, are you happy now Pat?) - and for those of you who look like this

right now, Patrick and I actually get on very well together. That is except for times when he's too busy watering his garden on the wrong days, or bitching about stuff I've posted on this site.
