The journey of one thread of plastic from your washing machine to your dinner

The Guardian is one of the few mainstream news sources I almost always appreciate. I was particularly impressed by The Guardian’s recent account of how a thread of microplastic finds its way from your washing machine to your dinner. The story is clever, informative, and deeply disturbing. Read the full story here, and/or check out these key quotes from the story:

The story starts with a single thread of polyester, dislodged from the weave of a cheap, pink acrylic jumper [i.e., sweater] as it spins around a washing machine. This load of washing will shed hundreds of thousands of tiny plastic fragments and threads.

Along with billions of other microscopic, synthetic fibres, our thread travels through household wastewater pipes. Often, it ends up as sewage sludge, being spread on a farmer’s field to help crops grow.

Spread on the fields as water or sludge, our tiny fibre weaves its way into the fabric of soil ecosystems. A worm living under a wheat field burrows its way through the soil, mistaking the thread for a bit of old leaf or root. Continue Reading →

Snake bite hero, and more

HEY SNAKE. BITE ME. I go solo for most of this week’s program, starting off with the incredible story of Tim Friede, who Pope Leo really oughta canonize. Can you imagine being bitten by venomous snakes 200 times? On purpose?? Then injecting yourself with snake venom an additional 700 times???

That’s exactly what Friede did over the course of 18 years. No, he’s not a nut job. No, he’s not a snake-handling religious fanatic. But those are both good guesses. Friede’s goal in enduring such discomfort and risk (he once landed in a coma) was pure altruism: to see if his body could develop immunity to snake venom through repeated exposure.

Scientists recently confirmed that Friede appears to have been successful in that effort. His blood now holds the potential to save the lives of some of the 140,000 people who die each year from snake bites.

Oh, and, like Pope Leo, Friede is from the Midwest, which as this Raygun shirt confirms is the best region on Earth. Continue Reading →