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Filed: Country: Philippines
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Abigail Goldman

Los Angeles Times

If you listen to the marketers, manufacturers and retailers, it's all about buying environmentally sensitive products -- biodegradable cards, gift wrap made from wastepaper and glass objets d'art fashioned from old beer bottles.

Some critics are quick to assail the notion that you can go green by spending money, saying that this kind of eco-Christmas is more artificial than a plastic tree.

But others call the trend a way to ease consumers into a greener way of life.

"In a perfect world, the one we don't live in right now, there's something ironic about buying your way to green," said Deborah Barrow, founder of The Daily Green, a Hearst-owned online environmental guide. "But we live in this world, and this world has people who are heavily invested in a consumerist society and, yet, they're more and more interested in going green."

In a year with relatively modest expectations for holiday sales, that sounds like opportunity.

In a recent poll, nearly nine in 10 Americans identified themselves as "conscious consumers," according to the Conscious Consumer Report, produced by marketing agency BBMG.

About the same number said that if products were equal in price and quality, they were more likely to buy from companies that manufacture energy-efficient products, promote health and safety and commit to environmentally friendly practices, the pollsters found.

Those are good reasons for retailers to make sure their green is showing.

Home Depot on Wednesday offered tips for celebrating the holidays in green fashion, including improving a home before guests arrive, decorating it for the holidays and selecting the ideal gifts.

Oh, and just in case you need some gift ideas, Home Depot reminds consumers that it has an Eco Options line of environmentally friendly products.

Others also are getting in on the act.

Target Corp. devotes a section of its Web site to "eco-friendly" merchandise, though it's a year-round endeavor, the company says.

That's similar to Wal-Mart Stores Inc.'s green site, which highlights the world's largest retailer's own environmentally sensitive products.

Barneys New York's new catalog, titled "Have a Green Holiday," offers gift cards saying, "Green Is Groovy," " Join the Green Revolution" and "Save the Planet."

The upscale retailer also sells a variety of pricey products that incorporate organic materials or come with the promise to donate unspecified amounts to groups such as the Natural Resources Defense Council.

But if none of that appeals to consumers, Barneys also highlights an $850 leather tote bag tanned without chemicals and emblazoned in French with " I am the Earth. I love myself and I respect myself. "

All that is rubbing some people the wrong way.

"It's cynical on the part of the manufacturers and the people who want to sell this stuff," said Andrew Szasz , a sociology professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and author of the new book "Shopping Our Way to Safety: How We Changed From Protecting the Environment to Protecting Ourselves."

"In a world where people want to continue to aspire to middle-class consumption patterns, but they are also wanting to feel like they are responsible citizens who care about social and environment issues, how do they reconcile that? They go shopping for something that declares itself to be ecologically friendly."

Instead, the best way to be ecologically friendly is to give -- and buy -- less, said Debra Amador, co-founder of the Web site Buy(Less)#######.

The site, launched in April and targeted at the "cause-sumer," features flashy takeoffs on Gap Inc.'s Red Campaign under the heading, "Shopping Is Not a Solution. Buy (Less). Give More."

The group advocates giving directly to charities rather than buying products that purport to do so and asking retailers and manufacturers for specifics about how much they donate to the causes they say they support.

"We're not anti-shopping," Amador said. "Through this campaign, we've been connected to so many people, and they're not tree-hugging, Birkenstock-wearing, granola-eating activists. They're mainstream Americans who understand that we consume too much."

http://www.azcentral.com/news/green/articl...gifts23-ON.html

Posted

There was a program on History channel (I believe) last night about corn and all the things that can be made from it....plastics was amoung the list!

K-1 timeline

05/03/06: NOA1

06/29/06: IMBRA RFE Received

07/28/06: NOA2 received in the mail!

10/06/06: Interview

02/12/07: Olga arrived

02/19/07: Marc and Olga marry

02/20/07: DISNEYLAND!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

AOS Timeline

03/29/07: NOA1

04/02/07: Notice of biometrics appointment

04/14/07: Biometrics appointment

07/10/07: AOS Interview - Passed.

Done with USCIS until 2009!

Posted
There was a program on History channel (I believe) last night about corn and all the things that can be made from it....plastics was amoung the list!

Does that mean that food storage containers are actually edible? :wacko:

no but more biodegradable :)

K-1 timeline

05/03/06: NOA1

06/29/06: IMBRA RFE Received

07/28/06: NOA2 received in the mail!

10/06/06: Interview

02/12/07: Olga arrived

02/19/07: Marc and Olga marry

02/20/07: DISNEYLAND!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

AOS Timeline

03/29/07: NOA1

04/02/07: Notice of biometrics appointment

04/14/07: Biometrics appointment

07/10/07: AOS Interview - Passed.

Done with USCIS until 2009!

 

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