Thursday, March 26, 2015

Post No. 013: My Point Of View On Paper Products, Including Using 100% Recycled Paper Products


(Image from The University of Wisconsin Oshkosh)

My Point Of View On...
Paper Products, Including Using
100% Recycled Paper Products

My Point Of View No. 1: Paper products, including office paper products (such as printing and writing paper, stationary, and envelopes), or paper publication products (such as magazines, newspapers, brochures, flyers, books, notebooks, and binders), card stock paper products (such as greeting cards and postcards), paper packaging products (such as cardboard, paperboard, cartons, and grocery bags), and tissue paper products (such as paper towels, napkins, tissue paper, and toilet paper) can be made from recycled paper—with up to 100% recycled paper content.

My Point Of View No. 2: If possible, "choose to use" recycled paper products (with up to 100% recycled paper content), including office paper products, paper publication products, card stock paper products, paper packaging products, and tissue paper products, for all of your paper product needs. I "choose to use" recycled paper products by trying to buy 100% recycled paper products, as much as possible, and I use them "guilt-free."

-Paul Whiting
(a.k.a., Math Magician)
"I can explain everything!"

My Mathematical Notes:

The reason that I wrote this prose can be summed up with the following statement: If possible, "choose to use" recycled paper products (with up to 100% recycled paper content) for all of your paper product needs. I "choose to use" recycled paper products by trying to buy 100% recycled paper products, as much as possible, and I use them "guilt-free."

And this prose was also published on my "Paul Whiting — A Creative Writer" blog (please see the hyperlink below for the blog), since I feel that the message in this prose applies to the message that I am trying to convey through "Paul Whiting — A Creative Writer."

This prose was written in Portland, Oregon.

-Paulee

https://paulwhitingwriting.blogspot.com

"Paper recycling" from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia—which is funded primarily through donations from millions of individuals around the world, including this blogger (I make a totally affordable monthly donation):

"The recycling of paper is the process by which waste paper is turned into new paper products. It has a number of important benefits: It saves waste paper from occupying homes of people and producing methane as it breaks down. Because paper fibre contains carbon (originally absorbed by the tree from which it was produced), recycling keeps the carbon locked up for longer and out of the atmosphere. Around two-thirds of all paper products in the US are now recovered and recycled, although it does not all become new paper. After repeated processing the fibres become too short for the production of new paper - this is why virgin fibre (from sustainably farmed trees) is frequently added to the pulp recipe.

There are three categories of paper that can be used as feedstocks for making recycled paper: mill broke, pre-consumer waste, and post-consumer waste. Mill broke is paper trimmings and other paper scrap from the manufacture of paper, and is recycled in a paper mill. Pre-consumer waste is a material which left the paper mill but was discarded before it was ready for consumer use. Post-consumer waste is material discarded after consumer use, such as old corrugated containers (OCC), old magazines, and newspapers. Paper suitable for recycling is called 'scrap paper', often used to produce moulded pulp packaging. The industrial process of removing printing ink from paper fibres of recycled paper to make deinked pulp is called deinking, an invention of the German jurist Justus Claproth."

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paper_recycling

This "Paul Whiting — Math Magician" Post No. 013 was edited on December 7th, 2022.

"Prose is using all of the words that are necessary in order to describe all that is necessary to describe." –Paul Whiting [June 1st, 2022]