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Health & Wellness

10 Dangerous Household Products You Should Never Use Again

Sustain Lane. Posted July 9, 2009.


Air fresheners, disinfectants, and cleaners found under your sink are more dangerous than you think.
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You would never cross the street without looking both ways, walk alone down a dark alley alone at three a.m., or tell your child to accept rides from strangers. So why let hazardous, toxic, and even carcinogenic chemicals into your home everyday?

The message driven home for millions of Americans each day via TV and internet commercials is this: No need to scrub or scour. With just one squeeze of the spray bottle, you can wipe away dirt, grime, and bacteria.

Alas, there’s that dark alley again. Air fresheners, disinfectants, and cleaners found under your sink are more dangerous than you think. Mix bleach with ammonia, for example, and you’ve got a toxic fume cloud used by the military in WWI. And they weren’t cleaning kitchens.

Here is a list of the ten products you should ban from your home -- forever -- along with suggested alternatives.

1. Non-Stick Cookware

When non-stick pans were first introduced into American households in the 1960s, they were thought to be a godsend. Gone were the days of soaking pans for hours and scouring pots with steel wool. In the forty years since then, however, we’ve learned that the ease of cleaning comes at a steep price: the coating that makes Teflon pans non-stick is polytetrafluoroethylene, or PTFE for short. When PTFE heats up, it releases toxic gasses that have been linked to cancer, organ failure, reproductive damage, and other harmful health effects.

The problems with PTFE-coated pans seem to occur at high temperatures, so if you must use Teflon, cook foods on medium heat or less. Avoiding non-stick pans altogether is the safest option. If you’re able to do so, try anodized aluminum, stainless steel, or cast iron pans with a little cooking oil. SustainLane reviewers like LeCreuset cast iron pans and more cost-effective ones like Lodge Logic. Using a lower setting on the stove will reduce the chances that your food will burn, which is how it usually gets stuck to pans the first place. If you’re worried about the extra calories cooking oil adds, try baking or steaming your food.

2. Plastic Bottles

By now you’ve heard of dangers of BPA in those ubiquitous neon water bottles. BPA mimics the effects of hormones that harm your endocrine system. While the company at the heart of the controversy has switched to BPA-free plastic, those aren’t the only toxic bottles. Single-use plastic bottles are even worse for leaching chemicals, especially when you add the heat of the sun (think about bottles left in your trunk) or the microwave. Aside from the fact that bottled water sold across state lines is not as regulated as tap water, the bottles themselves are spawning grounds for bacteria and are a source of needless waste. Each year, more than one million barrels of oil are used to manufacture the more than 25 billion single-use plastic water bottles sold in the U.S. Choose a reusable, stainless steel or glass bottle instead. SustainLane users have reviewed several water bottle alternatives.

3. Conventional Cleaning Supplies

These routinely make the top ten lists of worst household offenders. They contain toxic chemicals that negatively affect every system in your body. All purpose cleaners often contain ammonia, a strong irritant that has been linked to liver and kidney damage. Bleach is a powerful oxidizer, which can burn the skin and eyes. Another danger lies in oven cleaners, which can cause chemical burns and emit toxic fumes that harm the respiratory system. The American Association of Poison Control Centers reports that more than 120,000 children under the age of five were involved in incidents involving household cleaners in 2006, the most recent year for which data is available.

To protect you and your family from the hazards conventional cleaners pose, choose non-toxic, or natural cleaners. SustainLane reviewers have particularly enjoyed Method and Seventh Generation, which are commonly found on supermarket shelves. Bon Ami is a safe alternative to Comet and Ajax. If you have the time and want to go the extra mile, you can even mix your own using common household items like vinegar and baking soda. Check out these easy-to-make recipes household cleaners.


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what they don't say about products like Method
Posted by: cherylsass123 on Jul 9, 2009 2:25 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is that they cost so much more , and us poor people can't afford them! they may be better for you, which I have to admit that those nasty shower cleaners like Bam literally make me wheeze so bad I feel like I am dying. but why are they so expensive, much like organic foods seem to be? I think this is because the corporations want us to become slaves to the shit that they sell us.
as for the anti-bacterial soaps and all? I've been told that if your house or trailer has a septic tank, to NEVER USE THESE! this by a plumber with a friend whom installed/cleaned septic systems. He explained that they kill the bacteria needed to digest human waste and thus make the tank fill up faster with sludge that then overflows into the leaching
fields ; clogging them up and soon costing you $20,000 for a whole new system!
that and living in "semi-rural" suburban Connecticut for 10 years, plus 11 years also here as a kid in Newtown where we had a septic system; I've often wondered just what exactly all those toilet bowl cleaners really do to the underground water used by houses with artesian wells ???
It is true that cesspools, a primitive form of the "septic tank" still used in much of Suffolk County, Long Island in New York {and portions of Nassau County's North Shore around Oyster Bay well as Southern New Jersey, Cape Cod/Martha's Vineyard/Nantucket, MA/ Block Island, RI} have literally done their important part toward making the well water UNDRINKABLE in Long Island's Hamptons and East End! That and the DDT the Potato farmers once used.

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I Use White Vinegar and Baking Soda....
Posted by: Razional Thinker on Jul 9, 2009 2:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
for almost cleaning everything.
It works; it is cheap and non-toxic; and as far as I can find out, it is environmentally friendly.

I clean my drains by putting a 1/2 cup of baking soda directly over them and then pouring a cup or two of hot vinegar over the baking soda, washing the mixture down the drain...it bubbles, it stinks but it is effective.

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» RE: I Use White Vinegar and Baking Soda.... Posted by: Old Horse Being Put Out To Pasture
» RE: I Use White Vinegar and Baking Soda.... Posted by: Lost in the Valley
PTFE dangerous?
Posted by: Old Horse Being Put Out To Pasture on Jul 9, 2009 3:16 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Unlikely. If you are using your pan at the temperatures where PTFE decomposes, I would surmise that the oxidized/burnt/chemically modified oil and protein in air and food will heighten the likelihood of getting cancer a _lot_ more than decomposed PTFE.

Aluminium pans are not harmless either. I remember a study about the correlation between use of Aluminium kitchenware and Alzheimer disease...

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» RE: PTFE dangerous? Posted by: QuestionAuthority
Compost Really Does Work Exceedingly Well
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Jul 9, 2009 3:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We had been somewhat put off the idea with regards to stories of smells and rodents, but my wife thought - well lets try it. A friend of ours gave us a composting bin a couple of years ago, that she'd never actually used. We put it at the bottom of our garden near the shed. We eat a lot of vegetables in our house and there is always a fair amount of waste from broccoli stalks, cauliflower, carrot peelings etc. All this ends up in the composter. The weird thing about it, is that the composter never seems to fill up, because the rate of decomposition of the old stuff in reducing volume is nearly as much as the volume of the new waste added.

After a couple of years we simply dug the thing up, which to be honest was a bit smelly - but the only time we'd noticed it - and dug the compost into our vegetable patch in very early spring.

In previous years, the produce from our vegetable patch has been extremely disappointing. This year the growth is phenomenal and it looks very healthy.

Tony

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» For apartment dwellers... Posted by: BreeMass
#2 and #10 could use some improvement rather than abandonment.
Posted by: JenniferBedingfield on Jul 9, 2009 4:14 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the plastic was hemp-based, it would not be so toxic. I would also add that air freshners are not necessarily toxic. You don't want to enter a room so soon as you spray it. Otherwise, interesting article. Let's see more like this.

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» RE: air fresheners are not necessarily toxic Posted by: JenniferBedingfield
CF bulbs - NOT
Posted by: artcalight on Jul 9, 2009 4:40 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Apart from the mercury content, some of them give off a low buzz which drives me nuts. I have sensitive hearing from radiation damage. Also, people who have electro-chemical sensitivity, a growing number since we're determined to cloud the planet in radiation from cell towers and the like, cannot tolerate CF bulbs around them.

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» RE: CF bulbs - NOT Posted by: countingdaisies
» RE: CF bulbs - NOT Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: CF bulbs - NOT Posted by: Python42
» RE: CF bulbs - NOT Posted by: hilly7
» RE: CF bulbs - NOT Posted by: Shey
TV at the top of the list
Posted by: weathered on Jul 9, 2009 4:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
its a toxic centrifuge of mis and disinformation.

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rgd
Posted by: rgd on Jul 9, 2009 6:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a terrific article with some great tips. Thanks. We made the switch to cast iron some time ago. The only point I disagree with is the light bulbs. We shut off everything in our house so the dial on our electric meter was stopped. Then one by one we switched on a light or appliance and timed the dial revolutions. I saw no disernable difference between the flouresent and incandesent. So I figured why have the toxins in the house. The dryer and well pump- that was another story.

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» RE: rgd Posted by: lepidopteryx
» RE: line-drying all our clothes Posted by: stellabloo
» RE: rgd Posted by: rob-bot
» RE: rgd Posted by: Tweck9
Fluoride in drinking water is starting to be recognized as a VERY SEVERE HEALTH PROBLEM!!!
Posted by: JohnTruth2001 on Jul 9, 2009 7:42 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Everyone needs to research the harmful effects of fluoride in water & in toothpaste!!!

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» Fluoride is natural Posted by: moyshekapoyre
At Last ....
Posted by: stellabloo on Jul 9, 2009 8:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nice to see some of these points being raised. Yes, the perfect consumer rat is also an unsuspecting corporate guinea pig!

A few more notes:

Bleach - breaks down immediately to water and chloride ions (as in salt) and so is safe for your septic tank. Less is more and peroxide is safer but this is a better alternative to Pinesol and other such environmentally persistent bactericides. The real problem with Trichlosan is that it lasts for 30 years. I'm not a purist but food poisoning is not a good option, either.

CFLs - may be another greenwashing scam. As noted there are disposal problems and in addition CFLs can produce UV and electromagnetic radiation.

Rays of Rash?

Phthalates - parabens and aromatic compounds are found in most products either inhaled or applied to the body on a daily basis - or both - this is madness, people. All these chemicals are potent endocrine disruptors and while we, as good citizens, wear pink ribbons and raise more and more money to find the "cure" for cancer, very little is actually being done to address the reason behind the current proliferation of cancer. It is big business, my friends, and this could be one of the biggest scams of all (if you don't count the War on Plants or the War for Oil):

The Chemical Sunscreen Health Disaster

Seeing Deception Is Your Only Protection


Politics of Cancer

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Aluminum never occurs in free form...
Posted by: bichomau on Jul 9, 2009 8:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in nature. It can only be obtained by the Bayer process and electrolysis from bauxite, an aluminum ore (Al202).

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» and your point is? Posted by: rafaeltoral
» neither does stainless steel. Posted by: rafaeltoral
ScanPan, LED's and CRT's
Posted by: channing on Jul 9, 2009 8:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
#1 noted the real-world hazards of Teflon which is now even showing up in the Arctic ice and mountain tops around the globe in particulate form, however, the author failed to mention a relatively new non-stick cookware from Denmark called ScanPan. I can tell you from personal and technical experience that the tried and true LeCreuset alternative to Teflon has finally been outdone. ScanPan uses fused ceramic-titanium which is created in 35,000 degree temperatures, it is guaranteed for life, and the cooking/cleaning experience is unparalleled in any other cookware I've ever used.

#7 refers to CFL's which is a disastrous and backward greenwash if ever I've seen one. Mercury, which is a long-known neurological hazard is not even mentioned in this article, but on top of that, the manufacturing process, the un-livability of the light/noise itself and the real disappointing lifespans make CFL's out of the question compared to LED's.

#? The article fails to mention one of the most energy-consuming, toxic-waste producing, radiation-emitting household products of them all which is the CRT (Cathode Ray Tube). Though the trend is already strong and growing in the American market for switching to LCD's, people should be aware how big a difference in the quality of their household life this will make. Not only did our electric bill go down approximately 20% (no joke, with one tv and two computers used regularly), but it is literally quieter (no 60/530hz noise), our eyes are safer (no radiation), dramatically less heat-waste and delay-time for off/on substantially reduced.

One other big thing people can do to detoxify our environment is to avoid all big-corporate food brands that are not explicitly USDA Certified 100% Organic. Allowing huge corporations to poison our soil, air, water and bodies is how they keep the medical establishment in the States so profitable. At our home we've been switching everything to organics, foods, cleaners, gardening etc., adding LCD's, LED's, and ScanPans have made a world of economic and clean-living difference.

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» RE: ScanPan; they wear out too Posted by: rational_moderate
» RE: ScanPan Posted by: channing
I'm trying
Posted by: Archie1954 on Jul 9, 2009 8:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to be more eco friendly but one problem I haven't solved is what to do with household kitchen waste. If I no longer get the plastic bags from the grocer how do I dispose of everyday garbage? Up to now I always filled a plastic bag and then put that bag in the large trash receptacle for pick up.

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» Yup, me too. Posted by: kateco2
» RE: Yup, me too. Posted by: HoboHomo
» RE: I'm trying/ Posted by: m/r
» RE: I'm trying Posted by: babs
» Yep, me three Posted by: zigy
CFL Bulbs
Posted by: archivistIII on Jul 9, 2009 9:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I switched to CFL bulbs years ago and have had plenty of time to evaluate the supposed savings of using these things.

1. They are meant to be left on! If you know anything about ballast controlled lighting you know that you are not supposed to turn them on and off all day. If you are like me and don't like wasting electricity you turn your lights off when you don't need them. When you reneter the room or area again a few minutes later you turn them back on. This GREATLY reduces the life of CFL bulbs! You will be buying more of these mercury laden pollution generating devices than you think.

2. These bulbs generate more profit than standard bulbs. That is why GE and other companies want you to use them. Overall you are not going to use less electricity or spend less on them in the long run.

3. These bulbs use many more manufacturing processes than do conventional blown glass light bulbs. More manufacturing means more pollution and more waste.

I too thought these things were great when I first started using them. But through expereince of using them for over five years I don not have one bulb left that I started with and they are supposed to last at least five years each. They burn out in a year or two just like regular light bulbs.

If you have lights that are left on all the time such as in an office or other commercial building then they are great if you use a high quality unit. Don't opt for the cheapest ones if you do buy them. If they are cheaper it menas they aren't going to last as long and they are going to use more electricity.

P.S. These are technically a biohazard. If you break one in your house and notify authorities they will want you to vacate your home and intiate a process to clean the mercury. Afterwards, of course, you get a bill. I learned about this a few years back from an article featuring a single mom who had one break in her home. Try google.

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» Sorry but you are wrong Posted by: Tweck9
Morethoughts
Posted by: archivistIII on Jul 9, 2009 9:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
CFLs are not good. The utilize way more resources (in manufacture) than a regular glass blown bulb, they contain mercury of course and they dont last very long. They are good for commercial applications such as restaurants and office buildings (barring discussion of the horrible radiation they emit) if left on and contained inside an enclosure.

I once saw one of those plastic shopping bags floating through the air about 50 - 70 feet up. It floated by my house coming from god knows where and continued on out of site. It was caught in some channel of air and floated along as if it were a bird with a mind of its own. I couldn't believe my eyes. I'll never forget how peacful it was, motionless except for its lateral travel through the sky. Thinking back, once it took flight it got filled with air which was then heated by the sun keeping it afloat.

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» RE: Morethoughts Posted by: Tweck9
how about...
Posted by: ellie on Jul 9, 2009 10:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
not buying stuff unless it's to replace something and replace it with something you would have found in your grandma's house... besides the efficient frig and stove of course...

simplify, not spend because it's supposed to be 'safe and green'... we don't need all this crap being marketed to the fearfull...

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» RE: how about... Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: how about... Posted by: Lilly
PLEASE ADD ONE CATEGORY TO THE LIST
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Jul 9, 2009 10:11 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Everything made in China. They just recalled 400,000 baby cribs. Their standards are very low and everything stinks for a reason. It's literally garbage. ANNA

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» Don't forget the slave labor. Posted by: rafaeltoral
rgd
Posted by: rgd on Jul 9, 2009 10:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I got to wondering why my grandmothers generation lived into their 90's. It wasn't debt or stress issues becaused they had the Depression and WWII. Near as I could see, it was the food they ate. Very little processing and little chemical use in the home. Many had gardens or bought produce from the produce truck making the rounds each day. (No GMO)Milkmen delivered each day and the way my grandmother described it, each day there was a chore to do (i.e. washing, baking, mending, etc.) When the days chore was done, they were done. She claimed that when all the new labor saving devices showed up in the house, she acually had less time. We should look up these older folks and find out how they did many of the things they did. We might be surprised.

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Air Fresheners, Chemicals and Birds.
Posted by: Longdream on Jul 9, 2009 10:59 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have five parrots, and they're a big part of my life.

I clean their cages with a heavy duty steamer that has a TANCS attachment to its boiler. No other substances needed. I highly recommend plain steam as the cleaner of choice for most surfaces in your house. Non-toxic to the max.

Years ago, when Febreze was put on the market, it was only out a week when the reports of bird deaths started coming in. Every pet bird resource in the country had warnings about using that crap in your house if you wanted your birds to live.

Stuff this toxic shouldn't be allowed on the market.

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» RE: Air Fresheners, Chemicals and Birds. Posted by: body and home organics
» fellow parrot "owner" Posted by: Shey
money saving
Posted by: Rusty Shackleford on Jul 9, 2009 2:01 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with others here that the cost of some of this natural and organic stuff is pretty steep. That's the price we pay for conscientiousness.
However...
One tip........

Use lemon juice or baking soda (not baking powder) as a deodorant/antiperspirant.

According to countless sites online (just google the terms) both work better (and last longer) than deodorant and both are devoid of toxic chemicals like aluminum that cause our bodies damage.


Think of the savings....
a 50ยข box of baking soda that lasts for months versus a $4 stick of deodorant ($15 stick of "organic" deodorant) that lasts less than a month.

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The odd worry about CFCs and mercury; ever hold a thermometer in your mouth?
Posted by: Beck on Jul 9, 2009 2:28 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you own an ordinary household thermometer, you have a glass package containing about 300 times the mercury in a CFC, a glass tube of toxin that you've put in your mouth, or the mouths of your loved ones. And I've never heard of anyone vigorously shaking a CFC, holding it in their mouth or other possible orifice, then removing it and shaking it again. A CFC contains a pencil-point sized bit of mercury. You can easily find ones encased in unbreakable plastic globes, if you're really clumsy and break lots of light bulbs. But after all the years of every family owning and sticking in their kids' mouths (or elsewhere) fever thermometers, the propaganda against CFCs seems a bit cowardly or dishonest or misinformed.

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» You're absolutely right! Posted by: Tweck9
Thanks Alternet for a practical, useful article.
Posted by: zigy on Jul 9, 2009 4:40 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I lambasted you earlier today for yet another pie-in-the-sky article about "hope" for the economy but, in my opinion you still provide some very useful information. You are, to my knowledge among the better progressive web sites.

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The Chikuno Cube
Posted by: Longdream on Jul 9, 2009 5:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I just got two of these today. They're from this website, which isn't dedicated to green living so much as to cool stuff.

They're small, honeycombed bamboo charcoal cubes that absorb odors, and are renewable by being placed in sunlight.

Love the concept. I'll let you know how well they do.

The website they came from is a pretty fussy one, and I've got lots of good stuff from there, so I have high hopes.

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Add flea collars and treatments to #4
Posted by: PaulK on Jul 9, 2009 6:01 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For too many owners they have been a ticket straight to a dead pet. Only stooges believe that the government or the very large company will protect them and will tell the truth.

Not that commercial lawn treatments don't kill pets off like flies too. You want a safer alternative.

Oh, and there are lots of human casualties coinciding with the use of insecticides.

Don't forget commercial bug repellents. There are safe alternatives.

As a rule, if it's advertised heavily, I'm probably talking specifically about it. Yep, that one quite specifically. That one too.

Also as a rule, the high insurance costs of these products makes safer methods competitive.

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Avoid plug-in air fresheners also..
Posted by: yale on Jul 9, 2009 8:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You know, those little 'plug-it-in' things they sell at supermarkets? They are the equivalent of a tiny diesel engine idling inside your home, emitting oil fumes that are petroleum based.
For cooking we have never used anything but cast iron fry pans, and when properly seasoned, rarely does anything stick. For pots we use enamel on cast, some of them are Lacreuset(not sure on the spelling), and they are about 25 years old, and just now starting to show wear. We will need to replace them soon and it will cost a few bucks, but once you cook with these pans, no other pan will do.

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Wok
Posted by: maxfactor on Jul 9, 2009 9:28 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
LeCreuset is really nice cookingware - just takes a lot of energy to warm up because of their extremely heavy construction. Alternatively use a light and thinwall tin wok without tefloncoating and a rough stainlesssteel pad for cleaning. A good sized wok also avoids oilsplashes and chemical clean up after cooking.

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Air fresheners and other like products are consumables...
Posted by: Bearzerker on Jul 9, 2009 11:15 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
so why are products like Febreeze not listing their ingredients anymore?

I thought they were mandated to provide a breakdown
so consumers are aware that their products maybe unhealthy?
Didn't all consumable dangerous goods and items use to be required
to provide this info on there product for consumers?
If not anymore, when did that change?
if no regulation in the past, why not now?

Air fresheners have been found to contain phthalates these are incredibly toxic and can aggravate respiratory problems like asthma.

Personally I prefer simmering water on the stove and adding nutmeg cloves, cinnamon, apple, orange peels... or use yeast it smells good and is great for indoor plants!
the list is only limited by your imagination...
potpourri have been around a lot longer then expensive canned sprayables have been... when did we as a society get so dangerously lazy?

Since when does Healthcare takes a back seat to corporate profits?

Is Febreeze safe to use around my son?

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There is no Pacific Garbage Patch
Posted by: stormchilde1975 on Jul 10, 2009 9:29 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's an urban legend that the writer should be embarrassed to be perpetuating. This gross error casts doubt on the author's credibility. I would suggest carefully fact-checking all claims made above.

This is not to say that recycling isn't important, or that pollution doesn't suck. It is to say that truth in reporting is critical.

Here's my source:

http://skeptoid.com/episodes/4132

If you read the article, it makes clear that there is lots of garbage in the ocean, and lots of (microscopic) plastic in the water where the "garbage patch" is supposed to be. That's pretty unsettling, but it's not an island the size of Texas.

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» What skepticism? Posted by: stormchilde1975
» I've seen it!!! Posted by: bobtr900
» There IS a Pacific Garbage Patch Posted by: veggiegrrrl
decent piece, but very very old news.
Posted by: DaBear on Jul 10, 2009 10:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We po' folks have been doing a lot of these things (albeit with some cheaper benign materials than Method and 7th gen) for a long long time. We've lit our places with CF bulbs since 1992. I just changed my first CF bulb... and it was in that original batch. I will be switching to LED's however due to the disposal issues with CFs. We compost in a plastic barrel (landlords and HOA's don't generally allow composting and this hideable device allows us to play dumb). We save our seeds from what we grow too... last time I bought seeds was 1999. So far, so good.

It's kinda funny the middlings and owning classers are just now catching on... but hey, better late than never with some things. No if we can just get them to quit whining and give us the damned universal single-payer, affordable housing, enlightened zoning laws, consumer and tenant protections we all need... pfeh, like that'll happen.

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few more thoughts...
Posted by: ellie on Jul 12, 2009 5:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
you guys came up with a wonderful batch of ideas and arguments for and against many consumer products... if everyone did at least 2 of them consistently, we'd be in much better shape financially, ecologically and health wise...

we all know how to mix up stuff to do a job but it's been laziness on our part by being convinced by the gurus in advertising they can do the job better and 'greener'... looks like most of us just woke up from a long nap...

one more thing... no one addressed the issue of water table and waterway contamination from pharmaceuticals we take for millions of reasons that are water soluble... means these drugs go in one way and come out the other...

these drugs are still active when they hit the water treatment plants, the plants don't have the technology to screen them out and the meds (including chemo that are highly dangerous to healthy folks) that are extending your comfort level or heading off personal health disasters are making their way into the waterways... then back through water treatment plants which still don't have filters to remove them and we bathe, drink and use the drug contaminated water... bottled water folks, this includes you too, you're not safe from these contaminants... everyone lives downstream from everyone else...

if we're going to clean up our acts and reject costly 'green' along with conventional chemicals in our environment, use simple products or a home brew recipe to do a job, how the heck do we clean up the pharma industry that is contributing to the mess on a grand scale???

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Some of the best...
Posted by: bobtr900 on Jul 12, 2009 6:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...reasons for not using plastic ware or as little as possible, is that you.wecan srtick ourfingers right in the eye of the oil/chemical companies that now control the GOP and threaten the very existence of our democracy with their anti democracy corporate and religious fascism.

And then there is that other very good reason for avoiding oil/chemical/plastics, YOUR/OUR HEALTH and that of our children.

Isn't it strange how the Pro-life and Family Values people are killing us, our families and especially our helpless young children.

That is exactly why I don't believe their so called Pro-Life and Family Values bullshit. What a crock of crap and bald faced lies. They all are covering up a multitude of sins and burying them under the guise of Pro-Life and Family Values. What a great scam they have going for them. Kill and degrade people, and then call it Pro-Life and Family Values.
----------

An old German woman told me that in Germany their gov't does not allow the use or sale of Aluminum or Teflon cookware. Here in America, we have the Bush oil family and the GOP pimping for profits. And the Religious Reich, including my own religion, telling them their doing just fine, they call it Christianity.

That's no form of Christianity that I ever grew up with. It must be some new breed of business christianity. Something I'm not familiar with, and do not want to be.

They kill and degrade people, put them in economic slavery or destitution and then dare to offer up phony and false complaints about abortion. This goes on all over the Latin American countries, and has since the Spanish invasion.

PNAC, The American Enterprise Institute, The Heritage Foundation, the Federalist Society and dozens of other prostitutes for fascism including the entire GOP have a great scam going for them.
-------------

Back in the 60's I found Rodale Press to be a great resource, along with New Shelter magazine, Prevention and Consumer Reports.

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Ho hum!
Posted by: JPHickey on Jul 12, 2009 7:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is really nothing new in this article, as some of us have know about these matters for decades.

Though I'm glad many of you have read and commented, I'm wondering where in the world you've been.

Rather than resenting the cost of some healthy, non-toxic products, why not consider the long-term cost of damaging your health and well-being over a lifetime. How about sacrificing perhaps years off your lifespan because you lack ernest dedication to personal responsibility.

The corporatists want us to consume like sheeple. I prefer to follow the precautionary principle "better safe than sorry".

Some comments here seem to have a hint of resentment against "doing the right thing". Well, think about it this way. If nothing else, do the right thing for yourselves and your future first rather than jumping into rabid environmentalism.

Like Dr. Bronner always stated "your health is your wealth".

Taking responsibility for one's health means doing whatever is necessary to avoid the "health care" industries, which are not only bankrupting the nation, but don't even consider the fact that the body heals itself, doctors or drugs do not.

We have the best opportunity ever to be our own doctors, and heal ourselves with the wonderful resources available via the internet. Subscribe to Dr. Mercola, and/or Mike Adams (the health ranger).

Poisons listed above act like a ball and chain. Please do your best to cut yourselves free. At age 67, I have facilitated the regeneration of my health, well-being, and youthfulness beyond my wildest dreams.

Wake up and celebrate life by feeling great again! It's well worth a little knowledge, effort, and dedication. Remember the precautionary principle!

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Sheep Come In Many Different Colors
Posted by: Aldebaran on Jul 12, 2009 9:40 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am not certain which is more disturbing: The allegations of this article, or the uncritical acceptance of them by people here. In this article, vague, out-of context references to associations between ingredients and disease are supposed to imply direct danger via unequivocal cause-and-effect relationships. This is not scientific thinking; it is merely a sloppy series of alarmist insinuations.

To be clear, I am no defender of the status quo. I am as suspicious of anyone of the powers that be, and I am open-minded to alternative thinking in all areas. As the saying goes, however, one should not be so open-minded that one's brains fall out. Because it fails to offer detailed explanation or documentation for its claims, this article is highly flawed, and it is disturbing to see a unanimous "amen corner" forming around it.

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insecticides....hate to say this but...
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on Jul 15, 2009 8:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
insecticides....hate to say this but... you can kill spiders in this method:
spray them with essential oil mixed with water and liquid soap. fill a spray bottle with water, add a few tablespoons of liquid soap and 30 drops of lemon, orange, tea tree, peppermint pure essential oils. spray the spider then cover it with a glass jar for a while. no more spider.
sad but true.

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Incandescent Vs. Fluorescent
Posted by: ep27 on Jul 16, 2009 4:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Buy a "Kill-A-Watt" meter and hook it up to a lamp with an incandescent bulb and then a fluorescent. Check out the Watts used (Watts are power). You'll see the difference.

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Static Cling Drier Sheets are loaded with carcinogenic chemicals
Posted by: P.E.A.C.E. on Jul 17, 2009 8:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here is a list of just some of the chemicals found in fabric softeners and dryer sheets:

Benzyl acetate: Linked to pancreatic cancer

Benzyl Alcohol: Upper respiratory tract irritant

Ethanol: On the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Hazardous Waste list and can cause central nervous system disorders

Limonene: Known carcinogen

A-Terpineol: Can cause respiratory problems, including fatal edema, and central nervous system damage

Ethyl Acetate: A narcotic on the EPA's Hazardous Waste list

Camphor: Causes central nervous system disorders

Chloroform: Neurotoxic, anesthetic and carcinogenic

Linalool: A narcotic that causes central nervous system disorders

Pentane: A chemical known to be harmful if inhaled


https://shop.sixwise.com/index.asp?PageAction=Custom&ID=92

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