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On Dumpster Diving Analysis

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Showing up for school and work, is an obligation. Giving away money and clothes, is a choice. No one is making anyone give away any of their belongings unless it’s to pay the bills, taxes, or buying food or clothes. No one says you have to show up for work, however, be prepared to lose your job. No one says you have to attend school, except the law stating they have to or else they’ll be fined $500 if they can’t fix their attendance. For there to be even an obligation to anything, there must be a rule or law. For there to be a choice, there must be room for a yes or no answer with no consequences following behind, maybe, besides the feeling of guilt. There have been too many times where I felt guilt as I drove past the older gentleman holding …show more content…

In “On Dumpster Diving.” by Lars Eighner, he talks about how to safely dumpster dive when he brings up about how college students will throw out anything even if they’re not sure if it’s still good or not since it was bought with their parents money, before he states, “But in the case of discards from student apartments, the answer may be that the item was discarded through carelessness, ignorance, or wastefulness” (Eighner 150). Students don’t exactly always know when things are good or bad, when they see the expiration date has passed, they would rather be safe than to be sorry. At first, when it’s revealed by Eighner later in “On Dumpster Diving.” with how much is being wasted by college students or of a household, it is put into a better perspective when you look at the USDA results. The USDA is the United States Department of Agriculture, they conduct federal laws for anything relating to food, farming, agriculture, and forestry. Under the USDA’s FAQ’s page, they first tell us about the goal for food loss and reduction, which was placed in September of 2015, before they state, “In the United States, food waste is estimated at between 30-40 percent of the food supply” (USDA). Just little less than 50 percent of food is going to waste, going nowhere besides landfills. When the USDA know how much is being wasted and has a goal while Eighner knows how much students …show more content…

From “The Gospel of Wealth.” author Andrew Carnegie tells us how wealth should go to the public after death as punishment to those who did not spread out their wealth through their years, before he states, “The growing disposition to tax more and more heavily large estates left at death is a cheering indication of the growth of a salutary change in public opinion” (Carnegie). With higher taxation comes better benefits for the public, and with better benefits given to the public, to the community, the more they can grow and build a better place for the future generations. Skipping all the way to 2010 we see a different side of things, where Fareed Zakaria in “How to Restore the American Dream.” talks about the differences between India and America, how the two countries have flipped and what has been happening over the years, from companies going global, to reclaiming the American Dream then leading to what needs to happen now. Zakaria tells us about South Korea’s plan to invest in renewable energy projects and how America can “...pay for this with a 5% national sales tax…” before he states at the end of this passage, “ All the proceeds from the tax should be focused on future generations, because we need to invest massively in growth” (Zakaria 466). As of right now, there is talk within the society of America about raising taxes, using

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