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Wednesday, August 27, 2008


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Provisional Truth  |  Essays  |  November 15, 2006

  Disposable Consumerism           

We truly have become a disposable, throwaway society and one day we will regret this incredible wastefulness if our idyllic, cheap-gas lifestyle fades into dim memories of better times.

Recently I had the opportunity to shop for new ink cartridges for a Hewlett-Packard ink-jet printer my wife uses at her retail store. The printer was less than a year old, and was purchased for less than $60 from a big-box office products superstore.

Needing both black-ink and color-ink cartridges, my joy in finding both in stock quickly evaporated when I saw the posted prices, $32 for black and $42 for color, nearly $80 with tax, which, of course, is more than we paid for the printer.

Quick-thinking consumer I am, I immediately went to Plan B, a new printer. As I wandered the aisles, searching, I came across a floor-display of the identical HP 5400 model we purchased earlier this year, on sale for $29.95!

So I bought two brand new printers, complete with the black and color ink cartridges I almost purchased separately for $74. After I returned to my wife's store, I regretted only that I didn't buy four new printers.

Naturally I removed the offending old, but mechanically perfect, HP 5400 and threw it away. Later, in recounting the episode, someone suggested I should have donated the old printer to a charity. “What would be the point,” I asked? To be useful, two ink cartridges costing $74 still would be required. “A tax deduction, of course,” was the reply. I suppose the charity could have sold it for a few dollars, and a tax deduction always is good, but it still would be a useless piece of equipment to anyone else without spending $74.

And although it occurred to me, again, how someday we will curse our wasteful habits, in 2006 our mindset and our consumer habits dictate the disposal of a perfectly good, mechanically functioning piece of equipment. Forget the manufacturing cost of the printer and the cartridges themselves. I imagine the cost of packaging and shipping alone, from China as one would expect, and warehousing, handling and shipping here in the states ultimately exceeded my $29.95 purchase price.

Maybe the HP 5400s are obsolete or were not selling well at $60, “marked down to move out,” as they say. Maybe the entire replacement ink cartridge segment is the real source of profits for both manufacturers and retailers. But if it ultimately is cheaper to buy another brand new “thing” rather than repair or maintain an existing “thing” these practices only promote our wasteful consumer habits.

I thought of the many other similar “marketing” concepts through the years, such as Kodak giving away cheap cameras that profit from film sales and developing would more than overcome. Or cell phone companies who give away the phones is exchange for expensive (profitable) multi-year contracts (and yet charge a “termination” fee to recoup the phone cost if a consumer wants to cancel a contract early!).

How many cell phones have I thrown away in the last ten years? How many printers, computers, televisions, toasters, microwaves, you name it. (Can you envision a day in the not-so-far-off future when the oil companies will have to give away cheap automobiles or motor scooters in order to sell very expensive (profitable) gasoline?)

I know by buying new printers, instead of replacing ink cartridges, I am part of the problem. To that I plead guilty. But, until the economics of wastefulness are changed, and equilibrium is reached, my consumer habits, and likely yours, are not going to change.

Someday I truly will regret my disposable habits. Unfortunately such a day may come sooner than we think.

  What do I know?  Send me an email.                   --Keith Hazelton

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     Once we thought the
        earth was flat -
     What of that?

     It was just as globos then
     Under believing men

      As our later folks have
        found it,
     By success in running
        round it;

     What we think may
        guide our acts,
     But it does not alter facts.

   Charlotte Perkins Gilman
            (1860-1935)

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