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... Most people buy regular batteries at the stores and use them in whatever devices,clocks,wris****ches,radios,you name it.When the batteries are worn down,they put them in the trash cans/bags and the batteries,along with other garbage/trash get set out front for the garbage trucks to pick the garbage up and haul the garbage to the garbage dumps and the batteies wind up buried down in the masses of other garbage.Some people throw old batteries down on the parking lots,roads,sidewalks,just anywhere they want to dispose of them. cuhulin Actually, we only do that in America and the UK. In other smarter countries, they recycle them through legislation. Take a visit to London, and you'll see just how extensive recylcing is. It's excellent. I'm aware that (from the sound of it) as an American you are unfortunately statistically likely to be unaware of the effects of what you do in life in terms of environmental issues. Batteries are a major plague, rechargable less so, but the systems used to charge them are largely inefficient, unless you pay over $100 for one. People don't pay over the odds because 1) electricity is cheap in most places and 2) The initial cost of a good efficient charger outweights the overall benefit when compared to how many packets of cheap batteries the $100 would buy. Alls I can say is watch out, that defiant method of living will wear out within the next 10 years. Don't 'make the best' of it now, try live a better life now, you'll appreciate it. Plus look at it this way, a crank-up radio will likely strengthen the masturbation wrist :-) NB: That doesn't mean I'm saying all Americans don't give a **** about the environment, but research shows that most don't care, which is a real shame. |
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