hh on Nostr: Yellow is plastics and other containers like aluminum cans. Blue is paper and ...
Yellow is plastics and other containers like aluminum cans. Blue is paper and cardboard. But not if said paper and cardboard were oily. That goes to the brown one - organics.
Oh, and of course, glass goes to the green round one. Like bottles of beer. Except the bottle cap. That's goes to the blue one because its brass or whatever. Well, not the blue one but the brown one if it was a wine bottle with a cork, because cork is organic.
Also don't mess up with what is called in English a "carton" of milk or soup, because it contains layers of other stuff, so blue. And no, don't worry if they're oily or wet with the liquid food they contained. In this case that doesn't count as organic so it stays in the blue, not in the brown.
Then, there are the generic trash gray containers, which well, you're a terrorist if you use them because you should have separated your trash better. And in some towns they're starting to deploy "smart trash containers" that you need to identify yourself to open, and record when you use them. Presumably so they can check you didn't break any rules and fine you with a "reasonable" proof to make it stick in front of any judge if necessary.
This is not a parody, including the last bit. It's how it "works" and the public has been brainwashed to learn it and to comply. Admittedly I am from Catalonia, which is Spain's California, so maybe things are not so insane where our friend
Cyph3rp9nk (nprofile…q3h8) is. But I don't think they're too far from us.
Published at
2024-11-21 22:53:07Event JSON
{
"id": "88c88c565803dd3c98c8970c8c494be2049bc950cccf25700c178e93ff835d92",
"pubkey": "82bdee506e769ebc94ee2f362d07c1960dce40bac650d826a42f8e0c019c3c96",
"created_at": 1732229587,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"e",
"591d2f675f0c1ff1a9273fef2e909e70b8385310c8ab84a24e4ad8e532353638",
"",
"root"
],
[
"e",
"0bf23ba79b12dcbfbfb2b33445d811a3e045c33fe9eedafdfb947efc6ed8ebe9",
"",
"reply"
],
[
"p",
"fcf70a45cfa817eaa813b9ba8a375d713d3169f4a27f3dcac3d49112df67d37e",
"",
"mention"
],
[
"p",
"1c9dcd8fd2d2fb879d6f02d6cc56aeefd74a9678ae48434b0f0de7a21852f704"
]
],
"content": "Yellow is plastics and other containers like aluminum cans. Blue is paper and cardboard. But not if said paper and cardboard were oily. That goes to the brown one - organics.\n\nOh, and of course, glass goes to the green round one. Like bottles of beer. Except the bottle cap. That's goes to the blue one because its brass or whatever. Well, not the blue one but the brown one if it was a wine bottle with a cork, because cork is organic.\n\nAlso don't mess up with what is called in English a \"carton\" of milk or soup, because it contains layers of other stuff, so blue. And no, don't worry if they're oily or wet with the liquid food they contained. In this case that doesn't count as organic so it stays in the blue, not in the brown.\n\nThen, there are the generic trash gray containers, which well, you're a terrorist if you use them because you should have separated your trash better. And in some towns they're starting to deploy \"smart trash containers\" that you need to identify yourself to open, and record when you use them. Presumably so they can check you didn't break any rules and fine you with a \"reasonable\" proof to make it stick in front of any judge if necessary. \n\nThis is not a parody, including the last bit. It's how it \"works\" and the public has been brainwashed to learn it and to comply. Admittedly I am from Catalonia, which is Spain's California, so maybe things are not so insane where our friend nostr:nprofile1qqs0eac2gh86s9l24qfmnw52xawhz0f3d862yleaetpafygjmanaxlspr3mhxue69uhkummnw3ezucnfw33k76twv4ezuum0vd5kzmqpp4mhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mqpzemhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuurjd9kkzmpwdejhg8qq3h8 is. But I don't think they're too far from us. ",
"sig": "90f6a8b9f06907db6bb15dc770d40d36224b5d4e1d7f05bccc0b117548cae335eaa204d252c6612d42671a29adaa3fcf5abc87cd23fce38cee5a21539719cbc0"
}