English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Whether or not we use toilets or ditches, how is human waste re-introduced into the soil? What's the current projection of long term impact on consumption? How's human waste being recycled today in terms of globalization as we know it? List the methods termed ENVIRONMENTALLY FRIENDLY and usAND US, used that are seeping back into the United States and other foreign and Third World Countries? Who's watching over the 'brown bags' that we bring home? Are you relying on honesty alone? HAIRNETS by food handlers in restaurants and fastfood restaurants are unseen today. THE QUESTION IS , WHY? When did the United States get beyond this requirement that of ALL food handlers wearing hairnets? SYPHILIS VS AIDS. WHY DO FAST FOOD EMPLOYEES AND ALL FOOD HANDLERS IN THE UNITED STATES NOT WEAR HAIRNETS? SOME HANDLE FOOD AND MONEY. DO THEY NO LONGER NEED HEALTH CERTIFICATION FORMS? This all tie in with globalizaton, and seeing that many ethnics are of Third World generations, I WANT KNOW

2006-07-01 03:06:20 · 2 answers · asked by PIE 1 in Politics & Government Other - Politics & Government

2 answers

As to the US. Human waste is re-cycled. We have purification systems and solid waste is re-cycled. I lived in AR. for a time, they take solid waste/sewage and mix it with leaves/yard waste. this is all ground and given away free to anyone for use as mulch and fertilizer. There is NO ODER. I feel certain this is common.
in US.
I don't know how much has changed in Mexico, but the reason one gets dysentary from their water and raw vegetables results from raw human sewage used as fertilizer. It's the reason one should not eat anything that cannot be peeled. Even the Nationals get dysentary occasionally. Bear in mind, all the large hotels have on site water purification systems. Cooked veggies are safe.

I can't answer all your questions. As for hairnets and health exams for food handlers, I can only surmise that there is some asinine violation of "civil rights". My first job was in a meat market. We had to be tested every six months. 50 years ago. And before aids. No longer. Sheeeesshh!

So called "Civil Rights". BS

2006-07-01 03:25:33 · answer #1 · answered by ed 7 · 0 0

the UN held a toilet summit. so it would seem that flush toilets are the way to go. the problem is supplying 6-10 billion people with the water they'll need to flush these things 20 billion times a day

i agree fast food workers should wear hairnets. they should also get paid more and be required and paid to attend a food safety course after 3 months on the job or before being allowed to handle the actual food, whichever comes first. they should also index the minimum wage to inflatino

i realize this would make a big mac from 2.50 to 2.75 and it might become unaffordable to millions of people to eat at macdonalds 4x a day. but wouldn't you be happier knowing the person who made your food knew enough to wash his hands and earned enough to have a family of his own?

2006-07-01 03:13:52 · answer #2 · answered by dorionland 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers