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Poppy said in February 29th, 2008 at 1:29 pm

Yah, the people who make the argument that cloth is better for the environment and their pocketbook should perhaps sit down with a calculator and a list of pros/cons because I’m thinking they’re fooling themselves.

My babies will wear nothing at all, because nothing is free!

(I like saying ridiculous things, but you know I don’t mean this.)

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Pat said in February 29th, 2008 at 1:53 pm

You know, when or if force fields are ever invented, I think they should immediately be applied to the Diaper issue. Your baby can crawl around and all you have to do to see if he is dirty is look in his pants. A force field diaper will hold the wetness and ick in. To change the baby, you deactivate the force field somewhere, wipe, and reactivate again.

Hey, as long as we are dreaming….

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Poppy said in February 29th, 2008 at 2:06 pm

We are big kids, because you know I think this is the coolest idea I’ve heard all day long.

Now all I need is a baby and a forcefield!

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Elizabeth said in March 2nd, 2008 at 3:05 pm

You’re missing two points:

1) Water is (mostly) a renewable resource. She may have more laundry, but water can be reused.

2) She is reducing her consumption of disposable goods, which is the key to prolonging the existence of our resources. It’s not just about what is being thrown away or not, it’s about the materials and energy put into production of disposable diapers versus cloth.

I can sense I’m wasting my time pointing this out to you.

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Pat said in March 2nd, 2008 at 4:27 pm

You cant save the environment by using cloth diapers. Even the UK government said so.

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Gregory said in March 3rd, 2008 at 5:20 pm

They are not obsessed with their poop as much as they are obsessed with pretending it doesn’t stink.

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Kiltak said in March 4th, 2008 at 1:11 pm

We’re using cloth diaper for my daughter.. First, the bad point: they’re frickin’ discusting.

Good point: After 6 months, they cost a lot less, and you can re-use them for your future kids.

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Pat said in March 4th, 2008 at 1:14 pm

Kiltak, great reason to keep using them. I would have accepted that they are prettier, more fashionable, or even easier to use. As long as you don’t try to sell me on an environmental stance, hey to each his own!

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Kiltak said in March 5th, 2008 at 8:28 pm

Actually, there are disposable diapers that are good for the environemnt and decompose in just a few months.. They even have green tea extract in them to hide the smell..

Unfortunately, they cost a few more bucks per pack.. No idea if the manufacturing process actually polutes the environment though.

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Elizabeth said in March 8th, 2008 at 4:24 pm

Pat, how do you feel about religious groups encouraging environmental responsibility using the argument that your world was given to you by God and you should care for it accordingly?

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Pat said in March 8th, 2008 at 4:47 pm

Elizabeth,
I am all for environmental conservation.

As humans, we of course need to be good stewards of the earth. But leftists are pushing an environmental agenda for political purposes using bad science. This woman could have claimed any other reason to choose cloth diapers. but when she says it helps the environment she is a liar.

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Elizabeth said in March 10th, 2008 at 4:08 pm

Environmental conservation helps our environment. We use fewer resources and produce fewer pollutants and less garbage. So, she used cloth diapers because they use fewer resources and produce fewer pollutants and create less garbage. That’s conservation. And as an added bonus she saves some money. Where’s the political agenda?

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Pat said in March 10th, 2008 at 4:42 pm

Again, the UK government did a study that proves this is not the case. But the article would have us all believe that using cloth diapers is a necessary part of adopting a “green lifestyle” and that is not the truth. The green movement is a political agenda to force Americans to stop using technology.

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Sarah said in March 11th, 2008 at 7:45 pm

You actually don’t have to wash the diapers twice and if you have enough diapers that you can wash only when you have a full load you will use less water. You can also dry them on the line to save electricity. It can be more environmental but it takes a lot more work. I cloth diaper because I’m cheap and lazy and love when people give me shit about it not being any better for the environment than disposable. I know, I don’t care.

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Pat said in March 11th, 2008 at 8:23 pm

Cheap and lazy is a wonderful reason to use cloth diapers. Especially if its tough to get to a store. And for those that use cloth, do you bleach them or do you use oxyclean?

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umma said in April 10th, 2008 at 3:58 am

You know you’re wrong about them not helping the enviroment. Okay you wash more, that’s true but, like the other poster said water is a reknewable resource. Those disposable diapers that you dump out take a good 10 yrs or more to decompose. And, yes their is 1, ONE disposable diaper that can be decomposed faster than the others but, more money from your pocket = less buys. So, why not go cloth. Plus, if you have sewing skills you can even reuse material laying around your house(t-shirts, flannel blankets, towels etc) to make cloth diapers or buy special material and make your own as well. Recycling has to be good for the enviroment right? The less you throw away the less polluting our earth, building up in landfills. After that, I choose it for the cuteness, Who doesn’t want their child running around with flowers, and daddy loves me diapers instead of the old hoo hum animal prints that pampers or huggies constantly gives. To add to that, you can sale cloth diapers after using them, they have a high retail value. Buying cloth diapers for between $1 - $18 each you can dye them, paint them or embordier them and get 2-4X’s what you spent. Doesn’t that sound like it cost alot less than disposeables, you pay approx .48cent for one diaper then toss it in the trash.

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umma said in April 10th, 2008 at 4:03 am

excuse my spelling errors, ahaha. I would have gone back to fix them but, ehh. And,being lazy is a great reason to cloth diaper. I got tired of my husband complaning about going to the grocery store every 12 days to spend nearly $50 to keep two babies in diapers and wipes. So, I went cloth and didn’t have to hear him yammer on about not feeling like going. Bonus, I made a deal that he keep all the money we didn’t use on disposable to go to buy our new house. everything worked out.

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