Too High a Price?
Pollution
is the price we pay for an overpopulated, over industrialized planet. When you
come to think about it, there are only four ways you can deal with rubbish:
dump it, burn it, turn it into something you can use again, attempt to produce
less of it. We keep trying all four methods, but the sheer volume of rubbish we
produce worldwide threatens to overwhelm us.
Rubbish,
however, is only part of the problem of polluting our planet. The need to
produce ever-increasing quantities of cheap food leads to a different kind of
pollution. Industrialized farming methods produce cheap meat products: beef,
pork, and chicken. The use of pesticides and fertilizers produces cheap grain
and vegetables. The price we pay for cheap food may be already too high: Mad
Cow Disease (BSE) in cattle, salmonella in chicken and eggs, and wisteria in
dairy products. And if you think you'll abandon meat and become a vegetarian,
you have the choice of very expensive organically-grown vegetables or a steady
diet of pesticides every time you think you're eating fresh salads and
vegetables, or just having an innocent glass of water!
However, there is an
even more insidious kind of pollution that particularly affects urban areas and
invades our daily lives, and that is noise. Burglar alarms going off at any
time of the day or night serve only to annoy passers-by and actually assist
burglars to burgle. Car alarms constantly scream at us in the street and are a
source of profound irritation. A recent survey of the effects of noise revealed
(surprisingly?) that dogs barking incessantly in the night rated the highest
form of noise pollution on a scale ranging from 1 to 7. The survey revealed a
large number of sources of noise that we really dislike. Lawnmowers whining on
a summer's day, late-night parties in apartment blocks, noisy neighbors,
vehicles of all kinds, especially large container trucks thundering through the quiet village, planes and helicopters flying overhead, large radios carried
round in public places and played at maximum volume. New technology has also
made its own contribution to noise. A lot of people object to mobile phones,
especially when they are used in public places like restaurants or on public
transport. Loud conversations on mobile phones invade our thoughts or interrupt
the pleasure of meeting friends for a quiet chat. The noise pollution survey
revealed a rather spurring and possibly amusing old fashioned source of the noise.
It turned out to be snoring! Men were found to be the worst offenders. It was
revealed that 20% of men in their mid-thirties snore. This figure rises to a
staggering 60% of men in their sixties. Against these figures, it was found
that only 5% of women snore regularly, while the rest are constantly woken or
kept awake by their trumpeting partners. Whatever the source of noise, one
thing is certain: silence, it seems, has become a golden memory.
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