Dark Knight wrote:a Turtle or any other form of life chocking on a carrier bag does not make the carrier bag toxic.
it's this type of ill informed opinion that gives the tree huggers the leverage they crave
like anything people are happy to blame anyone and anything rather than take one iota of responsibility for their own selfish actions
People cause the problem, not an inanimate object, so the answer is to tax the carrier bag, well done !!, another example of papering over the cracks, rather than actually do something about lazy, selfish people who can't do something as simple as put waste materials in a bl**dy bin
According to the so called experts it is because we put these bags in the bins that cause the problems. The rubbish then gets taken to a landfill site where the bulldozers spread it all around and the wind blows the plastic bags off the site.
As regards toxicity I have to accept the findings of so called experts who say that the food chain becomes contaminated with carcinogenic toxins from plastic which ends up in the sea.
So by putting our plastic bags in the bin we seem to be causing the problems, but not in Huddersfield where we incinerate our household waste, probably putting lethal dioxins into the atmosphere.
It appears we can't win, so I have decided to opt out and will be starting a petition to bring back free supermarket plastic bags.