Nursery Rhyme








Pussy Cat, Pussy Cat
Pussy cat, pussy cat, where have you been?
I've been to London to visit the Queen.
Pussy cat, pussy cat, what did you there?
I frightened a little mouse, under her chair.

@Stake

Part 2



Logo & Sticker:


Webpage: https://invis.io/A74WJAECW


Facebook:

Instagram:



Part 1


Our farmlands are at stake; farmlands are being bought out and demolished for subdivisions creating an overgrowth of houses and people, and destroying the land their houses now sit on.
We need to support city funding for centers for job opportunities and community engagement.

Reading 5

Waste Poster






Reference: Ifixit
Source: http://ifixit.org/ewaste
HOW I KNOW THIS SOURCE IS LEGIT:
1 | 2 | 3









Electronic Waste Links:
E-Waste Facts & Figures (1) (2)
E-Waste Questions
E-Waste World Map
Computers and Mobile Phones
The Problem with E-Waste
Phone Toxins
Recycle Your Mobile

Research

  • 142,000 computers and over 416,000 mobile devices are trashed or recycled everyday.
    • 95% is recyclable but only about 18% is actually recycled 
    • 135 million phones were trashed and only 17 million were recycled in 2010
  • Spending: $1312 per household on consumer electronics per year.
  • How long do products last?
    • TV: 7.4; Computer: 5.9; Laptop: 5.5; Smartphone: 4.6
    • On average, people only keep their phones for 11 months
  • Recyling
    • Experts estimate that recycling 1 million cell phones can recover about 24 kg (50 lb) of gold, 250 kg (550 lb) of silver, 9 kg (20 lb) of palladium, and more than 9,000 kg (20,000 lb) of copper.
    • Almost 40 percent of device owners in the US have two unused cellphones that could be recycled.
    • The study claims that only 49% of all survey respondents have ever given away or sold a device they no longer use.
    • Fewer than 50 percent of all owners would even consider recycling an old device, even if it were made incredibly easy, and despite the fact that the majority of that group (86%) know that recycling is good for the environment.
    • 12 percent of all respondents would rather throw their device in the garbage than recycle it. Isn’t that just the dumbest thing you’ve ever heard?
    • More than 50 percent of all the people in the study knew of existing ways they could recycle their devices (56%). 20 percent have seen automated recycling Kiosks, but only 12 percent think that recycling their devices is a viable option using one of these methods.


Space Waste Links:
Orbital Debris
NASA Orbital Debris FAQ
NG Orbital Objects
Trash in Space
Space Junk Cleanup