
Originally Posted by
jazbug5
Ah, but Ixion- we have a rather wider range of pollutants available to us now and many of them are for more toxic and also more capable of entering the food chain. In those days there were terrible issues in new industrial centres because of the sudden population growth. Smog was poisonous, but subsided relatively quickly, and better hygiene and plumbing was enough to deal with pollution caused by human waste etc.
The scale of the issues we now face have a much higher potential scale and severity; can we really say for sure that we can turn back and reverse the damage we are doing quite as easily in the future?
We shouldn't be so sloppy about disposal fer sure, but in the long run if we convert a set of components into a dangerous combination we can un-make them, at some cost.
If I was a worrier I'd be far more stressed about likely biological threats than chemical ones, far more difficult to manage.

Originally Posted by
Ixion
Every age thinks its own problems are worse than any past age.
Victorian pollution had lots of lovely nasties - lead (in profusion), mercury, tin, hells own concoctions from smelting and blast furnaces. Plus water loaded with microbes. Assuming that you had running water at all, which millions didn't.
Cleaning water isn't that hard, we do it now. Cleaning air, a bit harder , but not impossible even today.
Though none of that actually has anything to do with sustainability.
Yup, easy to lose perspective, our life expectance and quality are far better than at any time in history, and we can thank Victorian England for much of those improvements.
I can agree that the rampant growth in consumerism adds little to either of the above though, and represents an irresponsible element to post industrial revolution tech advances.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
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