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We sell green cleaning products that really work. They cost about the same as the toxic products now in use and are great for the environment. The question is, are people ready to commit to switching over. The world is ready to regenerate itself because of all of the impurities but if we take steps toward reversing the harm we've caused perhaps we can avoid disasters and preserve the earth for future generations. Comments?

2006-08-05 01:22:00 · 8 answers · asked by FC 1 in Environment

8 answers

Earth will not preserve.

I'm not an expert in this but i read it somewhere that we're in between ice ages and that in the future, the Earth will heat up until something-i-can't-remember happens and then it will freeze over again.

Over pollution to the environment only speeds up the process.

2006-08-05 03:29:26 · answer #1 · answered by Tiffany kate 2 · 0 0

First, they aren't great for all the environment or they would not work. The mold and mildew hate them. If something is toxic to mold, it is toxic to humans at some level and "green" products being sold can be worse because you have to use more of them.
Natural, green, safe, and nontoxic are becoming meaningless terms. Nontoxic always has had no meaning. Water and milk for example are toxic under certain circumstances.

The biggest problem is comparison. Green sellers are not doing a good job of PROVING they are equivalent. The studies I've seen on bacteria shows they do not work as well as the commercial versions, therefore they require more frequest use. Killing 95% of the germs is not as good as 99.9%.

At lastly, the price is always an issue. I think mainstream companies will start offering "green" alternatives, putting most of the little guys out of business, but I think commercials will never go away. The requirements of the society and government are too strict.

I

2006-08-05 05:35:01 · answer #2 · answered by Peter Boiter Woods 7 · 0 0

Greener cleaning products are constantly being developed and the acceptance and demand for them is constantly increasing. About 40 years ago pollution of streams was a concern because of phosphates in laundry detergents. Low phosphate detergents were developed and accepted in the marketplace to the extent that this problem is now minor. Similar trends occur as other problems are identified, new cost-competitive products developed, and the consuming public becomes aware of them and their benefits. Unfortunately there is a time lag between the identification of the problems and the development of the solutions.

2006-08-08 10:46:06 · answer #3 · answered by Ray 4 · 0 0

ready for? what do you think people used BEFORE all the chemical stuff ?

and they seemed to cope pretty well

in fact i CANT use chemical glass cleaners at all so i use water with a lil vinegar in it...and guess what? cleans well with a streak free shine every time and costs next to nothing

we NEED to switch back ~ anti-bacterial soaps etc etc are not helping us they are helping bacteria and viruses build up resistance just like the over prescription of medicines has

2006-08-05 01:30:17 · answer #4 · answered by Ðêù§ 5 · 1 0

For sure "the world is ready for green cleaning products" but "are green products ready for the world?"

2006-08-05 08:16:11 · answer #5 · answered by ISU 2 · 0 0

waiting made outfits. the only situation i've got chanced on is that a length 8 gown consistently looks to be somewhat tight around the chest and shoulders yet different than that each thing is high-quality.

2016-09-28 22:33:36 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

announcement to the universe: mother nature does not clean up after you!!!!

earth should as a whole be ready for everything to be green. if not and we fill our air and land and water with toxins, then we will be blue.

2006-08-05 01:27:01 · answer #7 · answered by annie - rainbow goddess 4 · 0 0

They already exist, and they're selling like hot cakes. They're made by a company called method in San Francisco.

2006-08-05 01:26:22 · answer #8 · answered by Otis T 4 · 0 0

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