ENSURING GOVERNMENT SERVES THE PUBLIC INTEREST
There is no such place as “away” when it comes to throwing things away, which means there’s a good chance that when you throw something “away” in New York City or Ontario Canada or anywhere around New York State, for that matter, it will likely end up at Seneca Meadows landfill—i.e., other people’s backyards.
Landfilling, a technology that has been widely employed for decades as a method for waste disposal, has increasingly been recognized as a failed technology due to its long-term environmental, social, and economic consequences. These impacts include pollution, resource waste, environmental degradation, and health hazards, all of which outweigh the purported benefits of landfilling.
Burying discards in the earth, especially when knowing these materials pollute the environment and create long-term health hazards, is not just an environmentally destructive practice, it is a form of collective insanity—insanity, by definition, being the inability to perceive reality clearly and act in ways that ensure survival.
If an alien were to visit Earth and observe our daily habits, they would likely be horrified by the absurdity of our waste management practices. With all our advanced technology and intelligence, it would baffle them to see us repeatedly bury the things we no longer want, only to face the devastating consequences later.
In her book Garbage Land, Elizabeth Royte paints a gritty picture of New York City’s waste scene: “It isn’t just garbage that irritates the [transfer] stations’ neighbors. Six days a week, twenty-four hours a day, ten-ton packer trucks roll in with their deliveries—at some stations, more than a thousand of them a day.”
