Something You Should Know - The Science of Changing Your Personality & What Really Happens to Your Trash
Episode Date: March 20, 2025Some people just seem to have more luck. Things seem to go their way. When you look closer, those lucky people often have some interesting traits in common. If you want to become luckier in life, lis...ten to the beginning of this episode. https://www.popsci.com/luck-real/ Are you stuck being who you are – or can you change your personality – or at least parts of it? The evidence is clear that not only is personality change possible but also, the people who do make changes are generally happy they did. Joining me to discuss the science of personality change and how to implement it is Olga Khazan. She is a staff writer for The Atlantic and has also written for The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post and other publications. She is author of the book ME BUT BETTER: The Science and Promise of Personality Change (https://amzn.to/3DJhcGT). After the truck comes and picks up your trash, where does it all go? It’s hard to answer because it can go to a lot of different places. And your recyclables, particularly the plastic – that can end up on the other side of the world. In fact, plastic has become a big problem because it isn’t as recyclable as people think. The journey your trash takes is a fascinating one and one worth understanding. Here to explain it is Alexander Clapp. He is a journalist and author of the book Waste Wars: The Wild Afterlife of Your Trash (https://amzn.to/4kSv3vh). What can a person’s handshake tell you about their physical health? More than you think. Listen as I reveal the relationship between a person’s handshake and their risk of dementia and stroke. https://www.prevention.com/health/a20431307/weak-handshake-linked-to-stroke-risk/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on Something You Should Know, the interesting things lucky people have in common.
Then there are strategies to change your personality.
And do the people who make the change like the change?
Yes, people who did change their personality traits in the desired direction tend to be
happy with the results. So, you know, you might be surprised
by how good it feels to act against your nature sometimes.
Also, what your handshake might reveal
about your risk of illness
and what happens to all the plastic
you think you're recycling.
Most plastic can only be recycled
three, perhaps four times.
So the act of recycling plastic
is never actually preventing final disposal.
It's actually just delaying it.
But a lot of it, the fate is to get burned in a field
or just dumped in a river.
All this today on Something You Should Know.
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Something you should know. Fascinating intel. The world's top experts. And practical advice you can use in your life.
Today, Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers.
Why is it that some people are just luckier than others?
That's the topic we're starting this episode with today. Hi and welcome to something you should know How lucky you are probably depends in large part on how you define luck
But we know that people who consider themselves lucky do have some interesting characteristics
Anxious people tend to be more unlucky in one study people were asked to read a newspaper
Some of the people identified
themselves as lucky, while others said they were unlucky. On one half page of the newspaper,
it said in large letters, Tell the experimenter you've seen this and win $300. The people
who said they were lucky were more likely to have seen that, while the unlucky
people seemed to demonstrate more anxiety, which detracted from their powers of observation,
which made them less likely to see that.
Serendipity seems to matter a lot.
Chance meetings with strangers and old friends increase the likelihood that good things will
happen.
So, you have to put yourself in situations where those encounters are more likely to occur. People who do, tend
to be luckier. Attitude helps too. A positive go-getter attitude is more likely
the attitude of a lucky person. And even lucky charms seem to work. Why? Because
people believe they do. And that is something you
should know.
I would imagine if you thought about it for a moment, I would imagine there are at least
parts of your personality you would change if you could. Maybe you thought, I wish I
could be more like that person, more outgoing or less critical
or whatever it is.
But you probably think that changing your personality seems almost impossible.
You are who you are and you can't change it a whole lot.
Or can you?
Maybe you can, according to my guest Olga Kazan.
She is a staff writer for The Atlantic and she has also written
for the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and the Washington Post. She's author of a
book called Me But Better, The Science and Promise of Personality Change. Hi Olga, welcome
to Something You Should Know.
Hi, thanks so much for having me.
So changing your personality or parts of your personality seems daunting.
Because I believe, and I think most people believe, your personality is your personality.
And yes, you can change it a little bit and it probably changes by itself over time.
But ultimately you are who you are and that's it. That's who you are.
Yeah, that's one theory and that was a prominent theory about personality. Several decades
ago, William James famously said it was set like plaster by the age of 30. But actually
newer research has shown that it is possible to change your personality. You do have to
really work at it. It's not just something you can snap your fingers and make happen, but researchers who have asked people if they would like to change their
personality traits and then given them little assignments or tasks or behaviors to do every
day that would put them closer in alignment with the personality trait they'd like to have,
they then found that those people actually did change their personality traits.
And were happy they did it?
Yes, people who did change their personality traits
in the desired direction tend to be happy with the results.
Well, I guess one thing I'd like to get a better focus on,
a handle on is what is your personality?
How do you define that?
So personality, according to most researchers,
is sort of the thoughts and behaviors and mindset
that come most reflexively to you.
They're the things that you kind of do automatically
without thinking about it.
Now Nathan Hudson, who is one of the researchers,
he kind of adds on to that by saying
that personality is like a tool that helps you get what you want. There's five traits of personality,
and for example, the trait of agreeableness, which is sort of like warmth and empathy,
that can help you make more friends. It can help you deepen your relationships.
It can help you become more enmeshed in community. And so that is actually, you can think of it as almost like a tool in your toolkit for living the kind of life you'd like to live.
So can you run down the five traits of personality?
Absolutely. You can remember them with the acronym OCEAN.
So O for openness to experiences.
This is sort of like imaginativeness and creativity.
Then C for conscientiousness.
This is being organized and on time, meeting deadlines,
not being messy, not forgetting things, things like that.
E for extroversion.
We all know extroverts, they love to socialize
and talk to people.
They're cheerful.
They like to go and do activities.
A for agreeableness, which I just mentioned,
which is sort of like warmth and empathy and trust in others.
And then N is a little funny.
It's for neuroticism, which is a bad thing.
It's associated with anxiety and depression.
So the others are positive. Neuroticism is a bad thing. It's associated with anxiety and depression. So the others are positive.
Neuroticism is a negative thing.
The flip side of neuroticism is called emotional stability.
And that's the one that you want to be.
Well, here's the thing that I find so fascinating about this
is you, as part of your personality,
would you say that whether you're, say, a neat person
or a slob or somewhere on that spectrum, that's part of your personality, would you say that whether you're, say, a neat person or a slob or somewhere on that spectrum,
that's part of your personality, yes?
Yeah, that's the personality trait of conscientiousness.
And so how many times have people, maybe more so people
who are messy, say, I wish I were neater?
Well, there's nothing stopping you from being neater.
No one's saying you can't be neater. People lament that they wish I were neater. Well, there's nothing stopping you from being neater. No one's saying you can't be neater.
People lament that they wish they were neater, but they, they don't get neater.
So what's that?
You know,
the reason why people are sometimes resistant to change on these traits is that
personality can have a little bit of an identity component.
So if you see yourself as an introvert, it can be really hard to
give that up. You know, it's almost like changing your name or something like that.
That's interesting, because I would think if you have a driving urge to change something
about yourself, it's always fascinated me then well, then just go do that. I mean, there's
people make it sound as if it's not possible,
like, oh, I wish I could be more like that.
Well, give it a try.
Why not?
But there's this invisible wall that I
can't get there from here.
Yeah, and sometimes it's about not
knowing what actions to take.
So particularly in the case of conscientiousness, that can be a really tough
one where people want to be on the other side of it, right? They want to be organized. They want
to be proactive. It can be really hard to see how to get there from where you are. And so,
a lot of the people that I talked to for that chapter, they were like, I'm going to start a
business. And then they just kind of sat around watching TV
because they weren't really conscientious to begin with
and they weren't really sure
how to make themselves conscientious.
So what do you do about that?
What you do about that is make systems and habits
that you set up that you do every single day,
even if you don't feel like it.
One good example of this is extroversion,
which is a trait that I was working to increase.
I wanted to become more extroverted and get out
and have more social connections and just socialize more,
not be so isolated.
In the beginning, I really did not want to do this.
I found it really hard to get myself out of the house and to actually talking to people.
So what I did is I signed up for things that I could not back out of. I signed up for an improv
class where you could only miss two classes and still kind of complete the course. So even when
I really did not feel like going and most of the time I did not. I had to go because I otherwise I would
lose my money on signing up for this class. So I would really recommend that to anyone who
wants to change their personality but finds it difficult is to sign up for things that you can't
back out of. It would seem that something like introversion would be hard to change.
I know nothing of the science, but that
feels more hardwired than anything.
If you're introverted and you do what you suggested
or what you did of going out and taking an improv class
and really getting out there, that you would come home
and go, oh my god, that was exhausting.
I mean, I don't ever want to do that again.
It just feels wrong, no?
You might feel that way.
I mean, if you're really, really far on the introversion
scale, you might feel that way and just think,
like, that Olga woman was wrong.
But I will say that in lab experiments, when they have introverts
go out and act like extroverts, which usually just means socializing for a few minutes,
they actually say that they felt better afterward. They had a little mood boost from
behaving like an extrovert for a little while. And they also said they felt truer to themselves
when they were behaving like extroverts,
which suggests that it's not really that important
to act exactly in accordance
with what you think your personality is all the time.
Now, one thing that some researchers say is that,
let's say you are doing this,
let's say you're really introverted,
but you're pushing yourself,
you're going out and giving a bunch of sales presentations
because you want to meet your sales goals.
It might be necessary to then have kind of a restorative
niche or restorative period after each of these
presentations where you go back to the hotel room
and you read your book and take your bubble bath
and have your introvert time.
That still counts.
That's still personality change,
as long as you're pushing yourself
and you're kind of expanding those boundaries.
So when you came back from that improv class,
did you go, wow, that was great?
Or wow, that was, or what did you, how did it feel?
Yeah, you know, it was exhausting and it was great.
Like I think I, after basically the first class, I was driving away from the class and I was smiling.
Like I noticed myself smiling and kind of giggling
to myself because I had fun,
even though I didn't expect that I would have fun.
And I kind of had this elevated mood throughout the night
just from being around other people
and being in this situation
where I was just kind of being silly.
So, you know, you might be surprised by how good it feels to act against your nature sometimes.
We're talking about how to change parts of your personality and my guest is Olga Kazan,
author of the book Me But Better, the science and promise of personality change.
me but better, the science and promise of personality change. different moments without the distractions. And that's not all. New Galaxy AI features like NowBrief will give you personalized insights
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So Olga, I think what you said before is really important that people may want to change their personality.
I wish I had more friends.
I wish I was more outgoing.
I wish I was not late all the time.
But if you don't know the steps to take
to get from here to there, then you're really stuck.
Yeah, exactly.
And one of the studies that I write about,
the personality change studies is called,
you have to follow through.
It's really not enough to just wish that you were different.
You really do have to kind of do something every day
that accords with your quote unquote new personality.
So, you know, the person who was trying to start a business, who I was talking about earlier, who kind of didn't know where to start. She
honestly started by buying a giant whiteboard and writing everything down on it and hanging
it in front of her desk. So she would write down all of her appointments, everything she
needed to get done, you know, the time she needed to get it done by positive affirmations, like if it was important, it went on this white
board. And that actually worked for her just having everything
in front of her in one place like that. And I really think
that variations of that can work for all of the traits and can
work for everyone. But you do have to kind of experiment a
little to see what will work for you.
Do you think or does the science say, or do you
think, that personality changes much over time?
And I guess what I mean by that is,
it's kind of like you look at yourself in the mirror every day
for 80 years.
You don't notice the change because you're
seeing yourself every day.
But I wonder if the same thing is true with personality.
Are we very different at 80 years later,
or is the core of our personality still the same?
I would say both are true.
You are a little bit different 80 years later,
even if you don't try to become different,
but there's still a little piece of you
that's gonna be quite similar, right?
So if you were a very introverted, anxious child, try to become different, but there's still a little piece of you that's going to be quite similar, right?
So if you were a very introverted, anxious child, you're probably going to be a little
bit introverted and anxious as an adult as well.
But the studies that have followed people across decades have found that most people
change across at least one personality trait over the course of their lives.
And in general, just something to look forward to,
people tend to become less neurotic
and more conscientious as they get older.
So, and that's not through like life hacks
or doing anything in particular
that just kind of naturally happens.
So when you just said like, when you were a child,
if you were anxious and neurotic,
well, why were you anxious and neurotic?
Do we know where those things come from or they just are? Yeah. So about half of it is genetic.
So it comes from your genes. Thank you, mom and dad. So you're not going to be exactly like your
mom and dad, but your personality is going to be influenced by the genes that
they pass on to you, just like they influence how tall you are, your eye color, things like
that. So part of it, you're kind of, is just there. But another part of it is kind of hard
to define and they still don't know exactly what makes it up, but it's sort of just the
environment. So it's who your friends are,
what your life experiences are.
Do you go to college?
What kind of job do you have?
Do you get married?
Do you have kids?
All of those kind of environmental factors
and experiences contribute to that other part
of your personality that isn't really genetic.
It's sort of up to you.
So everything that happens to you
is part of your personality,
but your personality also affects everything
that happens to you.
That's true, yeah.
So like you can see variations on that cycle
in like who goes to college, right?
So it's usually people who are more open to experiences.
And then they're around a bunch of other people like them,
and they're around a bunch of professors
who are also open to experiences.
And so they become even more open to experiences
in the process.
So your personality leads you into certain situations,
and then those situations further affect your personality.
Has anybody looked at when people try to change their personality? It's kind of a big term,
but how many times does it take? How successful are people? Is it 3% of people who try succeed
or is it the other way around? I mean, is this a daunting task or is this something
that if you put your mind to it, it's not that tough?
So I think that it depends on the scale of what
you're trying to do.
If you're just trying to become a little bit more
conscientious, you know, or a little bit more
extroverted, I think that it's definitely something
that if you put your mind to it, it can pretty easily be done.
Some of the traits like neuroticism and agreeableness
are a little bit harder to change.
So I think that one would be more,
require a lot more kind of like inner work
and a little bit more struggle
to actually become permanently different on.
But yeah, I think it is doable for everyone,
but it does require new habits
and new ways of thinking about yourself.
So if you're not ready for those,
then I imagine it would be hard.
And as far as, sorry, as far as how long the changes last,
the studies that have been done
suggest that they last for a few
months, but that's because we don't have longer term studies. And whether, like what happens to
those people after a few months, we don't know. I did talk to one person who had a pretty radical
personality change that he has now kept up for a few years, kind of across all the personality traits.
And a few other people I talked to were able to change,
just one or two traits for a few years.
I wanna get a better sense that if you try
to change your personality,
are you always trying to change your personality?
Is it always, are you always pushing against the grain
that here's your personality and this thing you're doing is not your
Personality or does it become your personality?
Do you become more neat more on time more extroverted and that's now who you are. Oh
Absolutely. I mean, yeah and Sonia Lubomirski one of the researchers that I talked to
Explain this which is that you know, a lot of times things don't feel very natural at first because we're not very good
at them.
She actually used the example of becoming a runner, where she now runs pretty regularly,
but it was kind of hard for her at first to commit to doing it and to do it regularly.
But once you are kind of doing something more and more,
you become more familiar with it
and it becomes less intimidating and less scary in a way.
So, I mean, in that way, yeah, it does become easier
just because like, you know what to do
in a room full of strangers now.
And my last question is,
and it's maybe a personal question
to you, but also if there's research about this,
when people decide that they're going
to make a change in their personality or attempt to,
is it because something happened or is it just a decision one
day kind of out of the blue?
I've actually come across both. There was a sort of a book about people being inspired to
basically change completely called quantum change. And that one was like a mix of out of the blue,
plus like near-death experiences, plus like voice of God type thing. But some of the people I talked to for my book, it was just sort of like, I got tired
of drinking so much, or I got tired of being so disorganized, or one more person made a
comment about how I'm always late and I decided I didn't like it.
So it really depends. It's sometimes like it's a realization that someone else points out to you and sometimes
it's something that comes from within yourself. Well, as I think you said, you know, you can
change your personality, but you have to work at it. You have to do something every day. But
I think that comes as good news to people because I mean I've
always thought your personality is your personality and that's who you are and
who you're gonna be for the most part. And I think it's it's liberating to know
that if you really think it's something to change then then change it. I've been
speaking with Olga Kazan she's a staff writer for the Atlantic and author of
the book Me But Better the Atlantic and author of the book, Me But Better, The
Science and Promise of Personality Change. And there's a link to her book in the show
notes. Olga, appreciate you coming on and talking about this. Thanks.
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interesting to me not sure why is trash it's interesting because like most
everyone else I sort my trash,
put stuff in the appropriate bins and then put it out on the curb and it gets
taken somewhere. It goes to a landfill or or the recyclables get recycled
somewhere, probably not too far away, and it's all very efficient. And yet as
you're about to learn, it's not all that efficient.
Some of the recyclables that you go to the trouble
of separating out end up in the landfill with the trash.
A lot of it cannot be recycled.
Some of it gets shipped to other countries
for all sorts of reasons.
And plastic, plastic presents a whole set of problems
that a few decades ago, we didn't have to deal with.
Here to explain what really happens to your trash is Alexander Clap.
He is a journalist and writer based in Greece and his reporting has appeared in the New
York Times and The Economist and other places.
He's the author of a book called Waste Wars, the wild afterlife of your trash.
Hi, Alexander, welcome to Something You Should Know.
Thank you, Mike.
Thank you for having me.
So, I put my trash in my recyclables and my yard waste.
I put them in their bins and I like to think good things happen to them.
But you know, it's all very vague.
Like I hear that some of the trash goes to other countries
and that that causes environmental problems.
And I don't really know what happens.
So that's something that's actually really interesting
about the waste trade.
It is not the garbage that you think is doing great damage
to other parts of the world.
It's in fact the stuff that you're recycling by and large.
The waste trade occasionally operates by, you know, sending a cargo container full of municipal
trash to a poor country and dumping it on a beach somewhere. But often it's much more
nuanced than that. It's the stuff that you think is perhaps not harming the planet or
maybe even helping it, stuff that you're recycling. So things like plastic, things like Tetra
pack or Styrofoam, the stuff that you thoughtfully discard into a recycling bin, this is the stuff that is getting
shipped around the world disproportionately to poorer countries. The United States alone
sends 100 million tons of recycled plastic to poorer countries. And what do they do with it?
That's a really good question. That's what I spent the last two years attempting to understand.
The thing about plastic is that best case scenario, it is not truly recyclable.
You can't form a circular economy out of plastic.
Most plastic can only be recycled three, perhaps four times.
So the act of recycling plastic is never actually preventing final disposal.
It's actually just delaying it. So best case scenario, we're sending thousands and thousands
of tons of sequestered carbon to those very countries that cannot handle their own waste
outputs. The best case scenario, as I said, is that some of this might get recycled. But
a lot of it, the fate is to get burned in a field
or just dumped in a river.
Well, that's not what people had in mind
because when you think of recycling,
you think you're doing a good thing,
that you're helping the planet and all that.
And in fact, perhaps not.
And I had heard that for a long time,
China used to take a lot of our recyclables and
or trash and don't anymore.
So now a lot of it does end up in landfills because nobody really wants it.
That's right.
So for 30 years, between about 1990 and 2016, half the plastic placed in a recycling bin
anywhere on the planet ended up in China, which is
an extraordinary fact if you consider it. In 2016, China came to the recognition that
this was causing far more pollution than it was doing any good. And so it stopped, it
put up a ban against imported plastic waste. After that, there began a kind of mad scramble,
this weird game of kind of whack-a-mole, whereby rich countries needed a new country, a new frontier to be sending all this plastic to that they
insisted was being recycled, even if its true fate was far from clear. And so you had countries like
Vietnam or India or the Philippines, especially Turkey for instance, which suddenly started
receiving overwhelming amounts of plastic from countries like the
United States or European Union countries. And so what's the what's the future of this?
I mean, it sounds like, you know, here you take it, I don't want it. No, no, you take it,
I don't want it. And nobody really wants it. So where's this headed?
Yeah, it's a sort of hot potato game whereby Western waste exporters are constantly searching
for the next frontier with which to send this stuff.
And increasingly one by one, these countries disproportionately across Southeast Asia are
coming to the realization that while there might be a small amount of advantage or profit
in accepting Western plastic waste, this comes at a huge consequence. These are countries
that, again, as I said, they cannot handle their own domestic waste outputs. So the idea that a
country like Malaysia, which is currently the greatest recipient of American plastic waste on
the planet, this is an absurdist, illogical industry that is based off a fundamental premise,
which is that we overproduce plastic by extraordinary
quantities and the stuff constantly needs a place to go because in truth it cannot be
efficiently or profitably recycled. That comes as a surprising statement, I think,
to many people because the whole point of plastic was, well not necessarily the whole point, but
in addition to the convenience that it provides, that you could
do something with it, you could recycle it into something else and that, see, isn't this great and
we got nothing to worry about. One thing that's really interesting that's emerged over the last
five or ten years is that journalists have been digging into the meeting notes of the plastic
industry in the 1980s, especially the late 1980s. And what they've come to acknowledge or
realize is that the plastic industry, 40 years ago, knew that plastic recycling didn't work.
They knew that it wasn't profitable. They knew that functionally plastic cannot really be
recycled. They knew that there was no circular economy here as there is with paper or steel.
And so regardless, the plastic industry, because it had a mounting reputational
crisis at the time, because people were discovering microplastics, for instance, in all sorts of
places, pushed this recycling narrative, because they wanted to shift the onus of the burden of
disposal onto consumers themselves rather than themselves having to handle it, just as plastic was facing
this huge reputational crisis, that something really interesting happened, and that's that the
Berlin Wall fell. And so suddenly the plastic industry, which had this huge waste disposal
reputational crisis on its hands, suddenly half the planet opens up.
And what you have in the early 1990s is that you have countries in Western Europe,
which begin shipping their garbage to Eastern Europe, often just dumping it on the side of
the road. Or in the case of China, it theoretically is getting recycled. But so much of the plastic
that was heading to China at the time was too dirty or too cheap,
too flimsy to actually be recycled, that its true fate was just to get burned or to get dumped.
If plastic is so not able to do what it was promised to do, why doesn't there,
at least from my perspective, doesn't there seem to be a shift away from plastic, maybe back to glass bottles or maybe to other
kinds of packaging or what I don't see any change.
If anything, it looks like there's more plastic than ever.
I think it's pretty simple.
I think it's remarkably profitable to produce.
The thing about plastic is that it's produced from the byproducts of petrochemical refining itself. So basically,
all our energy results in something that itself can become plastic. So for the petrochemical
industry or for plastics producers, this stuff, the building blocks of plastic are getting
manufactured regardless of what they do. So this stuff is scandalously cheap
and profitable to produce.
But here's the thing though, there are so many,
well, I don't know how many,
but there are a lot of products that exist as plastic
that seemingly can't be anything else.
I mean, your credit cards can't be anything
other than plastic, it would seem to me.
I don't know what else they could be.
There are other products,
I'm sure we could think of a bunch of them
if we sat here long enough.
Then what do you do?
It's a really good question.
I think it's important to keep two things in mind.
The first is that within living memory,
there wasn't all of this plastic.
I mean, going back to the 1950s or 1940s,
plastic didn't really exist or at
least not in these quantities. The second is to understand that certain things do need to be made
of plastic. For instance, medical plastic is important, but there are a lot of things. In
fact, the vast majority of things that are made of plastic, single-use plastic, they can be made
of paper or they can be made of paper or they can be made of wood.
They can be made of things that are genuinely recyclable.
And yet they're not, or they're not like they used to be. I remember seeing a picture
of a store shelf of soda from the 50s and it's all glass bottles. And today, there's not a single glass bottle.
And the irony is that glass is genuinely recyclable.
When you recycle glass, it will become a new glass bottle.
The same is not true of plastic.
But there's no uproar.
I mean, well, you're uproaring a little bit here.
But there's no big uproar.
I did an interview that's always stuck with me.
It was just a couple of years ago of someone from Consumer Reports that said
that we all ingest about a credit card's worth of plastic
every week.
I think it was every week.
I mean, that's just frightening, but there it is.
I think there's growing recognition.
I mean, they've also found plastic in our brain cells,
for instance, in our bone marrow.
I think there's growing recognition
that this stuff not only can't be recycled,
not only as a huge pollution pandemic,
but it's probably killing us as well.
And so I expect over the next years or perhaps decades,
much more pushback against the plastic industry.
What does the plastic industry say about this? I mean, or do they just sweep it under the rug?
I mean, do they have a counter argument to all of this of why we need all this plastic or do
they just pretend not to notice? It makes several arguments. One of which is that plastic is in fact
It makes several arguments, one of which is that plastic is in fact ecologically better for the planet than say glass, because it's lighter and it's easier to transport and it's
easier to move around and therefore spews less carbon into the atmosphere.
There are all sorts of rhetorical acrobatics that are used to defend plastic.
And again, this goes back to the 1980s when this myth of plastic recycling was concocted in the first place.
When I think of plastic, I tend to think of consumer items, bottles, things around my house that are plastic.
But is that the real problem or is it other kinds of plastic, industrial plastic or something else that's the real problem?
I would say the real problem is the single use plastic.
The timescales of this stuff are simply boggling.
I mean, consider the fact that a water bottle
that you own for one minute or two minutes
in the plastic waste trade,
this will spend months getting moved by truck,
by to ports, across across oceans by cargo ships. It'll
then get trucked to a village in Southeast Asia. So this simply makes no sense from a kind of
logical perspective that these objects that you own for moments and think nothing of throwing away
become these objects of incredibly arduous journeys
across the globe.
And even when they do arrive to these communities
in Southeast Asia,
it's unlikely that it's possible
that it'll be recycled or processed,
but it's equally likely that it'll just be tossed
into a river or dumped or incinerated.
Then why do those countries or businesses in those countries
accept it? If it's just going to toss it into a river, where's the money?
How do you make money tossing a bottle into a river?
It's a really good question.
If you do this industry at scale, if you import enough
Western plastic, which tends to be of higher grade than plastic elsewhere, if you are able
to bribe your inspectors, if you're able to pay labor very little, if you have low energy costs,
if you have abundant water, there is a margin of profit that can be made through
sorting plastic and chemically reducing it and then selling it to a petrochemical refining plant.
But again, this is something that needs to be done at scale. And it is also something that
increasingly countries across the South are realizing is too ecologically damaging
to be acceptable.
Well, it doesn't seem like this is anything consumers
can do much about other than protest.
Because it's hard to change your behavior.
Because like I was saying, if you
were going to make a statement and stop
buying soda in plastic bottles or plastic whatever they are,
good luck. What are you going to buy it in? Because it doesn't come in glass anymore.
But in some ways, I think that's actually what the petrochemical or plastics producers would
want you to believe. The problem with plastic is that it's not a problem that's going to be solved
through individual morality. It's not a problem that's going to be solved through individual morality.
It's not a problem that someone is going to wake up and say, okay, I'm going to stop buying plastic today.
It's actually a problem that needs to be solved at the global legislative level.
We need globe spanning legislation that at the very least puts quotas on the quantities of plastic that can be produced or attempts to phase this material out.
But as we said, some of these things, you can't phase it out. I mean, how do you phase it out?
I don't think you need to phase out all plastic, but I think within
reason. I mean, there are single-use plastics, for instance, that should be banned. I mean,
it should not be necessary to
purchase a plastic water bottle that you consume for one or two minutes. I think there are plastics
and I think one of the problems with the conversation is that when people think about
banning plastic they think, oh you know I touch plastic all day, you know my cell phone case is
made of plastic, my toothbrush is made of plastic. I don't think you necessarily need to ban
all forms of plastic, but only the most insidious,
the plastic that is used for the shortest amount of time,
the plastic that gets tossed away the most often,
there needs to be legislation to ban this.
Yeah, well, that makes sense,
but boy, those plastic water bottles
are sure come in handy sometimes.
And you just grab one and drink it and toss it away.
But it's just contributing to a problem.
And those are the kinds of things
that probably are not really recyclable.
Those bottles don't recycle well.
Not particularly, and certainly not more than three or four
times.
So again, you're never actually eliminating disposal.
You're just delaying the time.
I remember talking to someone who
works in the trash business who said,
and this has always stuck with me,
that this dance that we all do where we separate
our recyclables and we put them in this bin
and we put the trash in this bin
and we put it out on the curb
and the different trucks come and take it,
that a lot of it is just for show,
that most of it or much of it still ends up in a landfill,
that this is all to make us feel good,
but we're really not tackling this problem.
Increasingly the case, yes,
since China stopped taking our recycled plastic.
What you've also had is you have plastic recycling facilities
all over the United States,
and it's something worth watching or paying attention to,
which since 2017 have just gone up in smoke, literally,
because there's so much plastic,
there's such a glut of this and there's no place to put it
that the easiest thing is now just to torch it.
So there are or have been facilities in the US
that do make an attempt to recycle plastic?
Yes, domestically, but again, it's a failing enterprise. There's no profit in it. It is
always cheaper to produce new plastic than it is to attempt to resurrect old plastic.
And therein lies the problem, I guess.
Yes.
This is unfortunately doesn't sound like it's going to have a happy ending anytime soon. It
doesn't seem like there's just there just doesn't seem to be a lot of momentum to fix this because plastic everything tends to provide a lot
of convenience for people that they don't want to give up. Exactly but as I mentioned before I mean
it's hard to believe it but there was a time within living memory when you know the bottle
of milk was not produced out of plastic. It's not unreasonable that we could possibly go back
to such times.
If somebody is, and I assume they are,
forecasting the future of plastic production,
what does it look like?
This is something that the petrochemical industry
or the oil industry has strategically been anticipating.
So they see their future,
their future profits increasingly in plastic.
The idea is to wrap all of our plastic packaging
and even more plastic to the point that by 2050,
it's expected that the world
will triple plastic production of today.
That's a lot of plastic.
Yeah, and there's only so many places it can go.
Well, this is a good conversation to have because I think people feel very virtuous when they separate their recyclables from their trash and put it out in the right container and put it out on the curb.
You know, that makes them feel good, and maybe it should. But to hear the real story of what happens to those
things that you throw away after they leave your curb is an interesting and somewhat troubling
story to hear. I've been talking to Alexander Clap. He is author of a book called Waste
Wars, the wild afterlife of your trash. And there's a link to his book at Amazon in the
show notes. Alexander, thank
you for coming on and explaining all this.
Thank you, Mike. It's been a great conversation.
I can still remember my father telling me about the importance of having a good firm
handshake. A firm handshake indicates that you're confident, that you're friendly, and probably, it turns
out, in pretty good health.
A study found there's a link between handshakes and potential health risks.
Researchers followed 2,500 people for a decade and determined that those with a firm handshake
were at significantly lower risk of stroke and dementia than those with a flimsy or limp handshake.
The author of the study says vascular problems in the brain
manifest themselves in a variety of ways,
and a weak grip could be a sign
that your overall cardiovascular health
isn't in the best of shape.
And that is something you should know.
If you could help us out with a
rating and review on whatever podcast app you listen on or maybe share this podcast with someone
you know or one or both of those things, really do help us, help us grow our audience and help us get
noticed. And I'd appreciate it if you do that. I'm Mike Carruthers. Thanks for listening today
to Something You Should Know.
Have you ever heard about the 19th century French actress
with so many lovers that they formed a lover's union?
Or what about the Aboriginal Australian bandit
who faked going into labor just to escape the police,
which she did escape from them, it was a great plan.
How about the French queen who murdered her rival
with poison gloves? I'm Anne Foster, host of the feminist women's history comedy podcast, Vulgar History.
Every week I share the saga of a woman from history whose story you probably didn't already know,
and you will never forget after you hear it. Sometimes we re-examine well-known people like
Cleopatra or Pocahontas, sharing the truth behind their legends. Sometimes we look at
the scandalous women you'll never find in a history
textbook, listen to vulgar history, wherever you get podcasts.
And if you're curious, the people I was talking about before, the Australian
woman was named Maryanne Bug and the French actress was named Rochelle, no
less name, just Rochelle.
And the queen who poisoned her rival is Catherine de Medici.
I have episodes about all of them.
who poisoned her rival is Catherine de Medici. I have episodes about all of them.
I'm Amy Nicholson, the film critic for the LA Times.
And I'm Paul Scheer, an actor, writer, and director.
You might know me from The League, Veep,
or my non-eligible for Academy Award role in Twisters.
We love movies, and we come at them
from different perspectives.
Yeah, like Amy thinks that, you know, Joe Pesci was miscast in Goodfellas, and I don't.
He's too old. Let's not forget that Paul thinks that Dude 2 is overrated.
It is.
Anyway, despite this, we come together to host Unspool, the podcast where we talk about good movies, critical hits.
Fan favorites, must-sees, and in case you missed them.
We're talking Parasite the Home Alone, From Grease to the Dark Knight, we've done
deep dives on popcorn flicks, we've talked about why Independence Day
deserves a second look, and we've talked about horror movies, some that you've
never even heard of like Ganja and Hess, so if you love movies like we do, come
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