I’ve only been abroad one time, and there were little gecko/lizard things everywhere, climbing up walls and scurrying across roads, and nobody cared. I was constantly fascinated but to the locals they’re just kinda there.

Bonus question to anyone who visited the UK - was there anything that fascinated you but I’d be taking for granted?

Pic unrelated.

  • AlsaValderaan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    24 hours ago

    It’s not just that, they wash and reuse the bottles (without melting them down or anything)! Amazing stuff.

    They’re finally starting to put more stuff in them here opposed to plastic bottles, and I’m so glad for it.

    • Dasus@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      they wash and reuse the bottles (without melting them down or anything)

      Idk where you’re talking about, but in Finland… That used to be the system, and the bottles which were actually washable were far sturdier than what we have now. Now it’s all flimsy PET bottles which just get shredded and “recycled”.

      I used to work in a bottle room back when most deposits were glass bottles and sturdy plastics and only the cans got crushed not reused.

      I was the guy in the backroom piling the bottles from a huge conveyor belt (glass bottles) to be organised in pallets. Could manage like 7 beers bottles in one hand, but that was pushing it and the most effective speed was 3-4 bottles per hand per move.

      I liked the job but the employer was a massive cunt.

      • Tuukka R@sopuli.xyz
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        2 hours ago

        This was because PalPa, the company responsible for maintaining Finland’s recycling system was (and is) a corrupt heap of shit.

        It’s owned by the largest breweries and they used it for keeping smaller and foreign companies out if business. You couldn’t get a right to use Finnish bottles –> You had to pay a steep punishment tax for using non-recyclable bottles.

        They successfully argued that washing bottles from that many sources would be impossible to organize, so the EU required PalPa to start accepting crushable PET bottles, which are easy to produce without any active coöperation by PalPa.

        PalPa(…tine?) was hoping that they could still somehow block this from happening, so they framed the change as Evil EU forcing Finland to stop washing bottles. And when the PET bottles were indeed accepted in the end, they dismantled the whole bottle washing system in Finland so that they wouldn’t be held accountable for their lies.

        So, it’s the same thing that happened to our regional bus network (vakiovuorot), basically. And what’s currently happening to our railways.

        • Dasus@lemmy.world
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          22 minutes ago

          So, it’s the same thing that happened to our regional bus network (vakiovuorot), basically. And what’s currently happening to our railways.

          Don’t forget healthcare and dental. Kids don’t get free dental anymore?

          • Tuukka R@sopuli.xyz
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            58 seconds ago

            That’s not because of an organization trying to make Finland ignore the EU legislation using strategies that then cause us to run headlong against a wall, though.

    • snooggums@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      The US used to do that before the plastics industry (oil company derivatives) squashed it.