{"id":837,"date":"2025-08-27T12:01:17","date_gmt":"2025-08-27T12:01:17","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.canoeinstructor.com\/?p=837"},"modified":"2025-08-28T16:16:32","modified_gmt":"2025-08-28T16:16:32","slug":"coloradans-are-not-to-blame-for-plastic-waste-producers-should-bear-the-cost-of-their-trash-opinion","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.canoeinstructor.com\/index.php\/2025\/08\/27\/coloradans-are-not-to-blame-for-plastic-waste-producers-should-bear-the-cost-of-their-trash-opinion\/","title":{"rendered":"Coloradans are not to blame for plastic waste \u2014 producers should bear the cost of their trash (Opinion)"},"content":{"rendered":"
Walk any mountain trail, city park, or downtown street this Labor Day weekend and you\u2019ll likely spot plastic bottles or aluminum cans left behind. We call it \u201clitter.\u201d But let\u2019s be honest — this isn\u2019t consumer waste. It\u2019s corporate trash.<\/p>\n
For decades, packaging and beverage companies have pulled off one of the most cunning blame-shifts in modern American life. They convinced us that the garbage problem is about our bad habits, our laziness, or our failure to recycle.<\/p>\n
Who can remember the famous \u201cCrying Indian\u201d ad from the 1970s? That wasn\u2019t made by environmentalists. It was created and paid for by the beverage and packaging industry. The message was simple: if bottles are floating in creeks or scattered across trails, blame yourself — not the companies churning out billions of single-use containers.<\/p>\n
And the ploy worked. For fifty years, we\u2019ve dutifully sorted bottles into blue bins, internalizing guilt, while corporations kept cashing in. The result? They pocket profits, and taxpayers get stuck with the cleanup bill.<\/p>\n