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Rubbish is happiness for freegan scavengers

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Published Date: 24 June 2007
THE day after New York University's class of 2007 graduated, about 15 men and women assembled in front of an NYU dormitory at Third Avenue and 12th Street. They had come to take advantage of the end-of-year move-out, when the mostly affluent students' discarded items are put into curbside rubbish bins.
The gathering quickly took on a giddy shopping-spree air, as members of the group came up with one first-class find after another. Ben Ibershoff, a dapper man in his 20s, unearthed a television. Darcie Elia, a 17-year-old student, was pleased with he
r haul of a desk lamp, a dish rack and dusters.

Most were there in response to a posting on the website Freegan.info - which provides information and listings for the small but growing subculture of anti-consumerists who call themselves 'freegans'.

Freegans are scavengers of the developed world, living off consumer waste in an effort to minimise their support of corporations and their impact on the planet, and to distance themselves from what they see as out-of-control consumerism.

They forage through supermarket rubbish and eat the slightly bruised produce or just-expired canned goods that are routinely thrown out. Some negotiate gifts of surplus food from sympathetic stores and restaurants.

They also dress in castoff clothes and furnish their homes with items found on the street; at freecycle.org, where users post unwanted items; and at so-called freemeets, flea markets where no money is exchanged.

Freeganism dates to the mid-1990s, and grew out of the anti-globalisation and environmental movements, and groups such as Food Not Bombs, a network of small organisations that serve free vegetarian and vegan food to the hungry, much of it salvaged from food market rubbish.

There are freegans all over the world. But New York has emerged as a freegan hub, possibly in part due to the quantity and quality of its refuse.

Many freegans are predictably young and far to the left politically, but there are also older freegans who hold jobs and appear in some ways to lead middle-class lives.

Freegans believe that the production and transport of every product contributes to economic and social injustice, usually in multiple ways, and hold in disdain any interaction with the marketplace.

According to Bob Torres, a sociology professor at St Lawrence University in Canton, New York State, the freegan movement has become much more visible and increasingly popular over the past year, in part as a result of growing frustrations with mainstream environmentalism.

Environmentalism, Torres said, "is becoming this issue of consume the right set of green goods and you're green", regardless of how many natural resources those goods require to manufacture and distribute.

"If you ask the average person what can you do to reduce global warming, they'd say 'buy a Prius'," he added.

Freegan.info founder Adam Weissman, 29, said: "If a person chooses to live an ethical lifestyle, it's not enough to be vegan; they need to absent themselves from capitalism."



The full article contains 510 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

nell from falkirk,

24/06/2007 07:45:57

This doesn't date to any "mid-90's"

At any of the rubbish dumps in Falkirk area (and no doubt elsewhere!) 'way 'way back, folk were "rakin' the coup" and scavenging anything useful.

It was (and is) an offence in Scotland, and there was much waste of police resources trying to catch people during the 'seventies and 'eighties. So much for good old Scottish thrift!

Obviously where they went wrong was that they didn't market themselves - had they substituted "rakin' the coup" for a glitzy American name, instead of being arrested, they could have appeared in "Time" magazine and been studied by sociology professors!

2

Dougie - Edinburgh,

24/06/2007 08:17:26

Now even street tramps become politically correct!

Eating thrown out food and scavenging through rubbish is the behaviour of a small brown tailed vermin whose three letter name starts with R. Talking of "economic justice" and "environmentalism" isn't going to change it!

3

Douglas,

Bathgate 24/06/2007 08:21:25

Right on the money nell.
It's an ethical lifestyle for the shiny happy people.

4

twowheel loon,

24/06/2007 10:12:03

#1 I remember tip rakin when I was a kid, used to go up with an air rifle and shoot rats (with the local farmers blessing) while scavenging around for interesting stuff. When I think back now to some of the items found and what they sell for on ebay these days I wish.... hindsight is a wonderful thing.

As an aside I must have been exposed to about every bacterial and viral nasty going during my childhood coup adventures and the strange thing is have never has a serious illness in my life.

Ps if my mother had known where I was and what I was doing I'd have caught hell. I used to stash the gun at my aunties up the road who was a sensible auld lass and was grateful for the odd rabbit and pigeon that strayed into my field of fire.

5

,

24/06/2007 10:52:20
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason: Scotsman Import, Original comment id: 733236, Article id was mapped to record!
6

Dragomir,

24/06/2007 11:08:37

Actually this "movement" dates back tens of thousands of years, as it's a primitive, but natural way of life.

7

twowheel loon,

24/06/2007 11:30:25

#5 see http://www.firstfoot.com/php/glossary/phpglossar_0.8/inde...

look under tu for descriptive term.

8

nell from falkirk,

24/06/2007 12:24:21

#5 you're posting this same tripe on many different threads.
These comments have nothing to do with the subjects(s) under discussion.
And nothing to do with me. Nobody in interested in your havers.
Go away.

9

nell from falkirk,

24/06/2007 12:32:25

#5 I see where you've misunderstood - but the story isn't about TALKING rubbish, it's about COLLECTING it.

10

twowheel loon,

24/06/2007 12:47:02

I don't know if anyone has heard of freecycle but it is an online community who exchange unwanted goods rather than just chuck them away.

http://www.freecycle.org/

Probably a local group in your area.

11

Abu Garcia,

India 24/06/2007 14:00:26

#5 Nell, stop being a troll. Deleting posts is very trollish.

12

,

24/06/2007 14:01:49
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason: Scotsman Import, Original comment id: 733574, Article id was mapped to record!
13

,

24/06/2007 14:54:51
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason: Scotsman Import, Original comment id: 733692, Article id was mapped to record!
14

nell from falkirk,

24/06/2007 19:05:12

Thanks for deleting #5's homophobic rantings "Scotsman".
But he's posting the same stuff at #11 & #13.
I suppose he gets out on a Sunday....

15

Jewel of the Forth,

Fife 24/06/2007 19:11:45

14. nell from falkirk

He makes more sense than most of your hateful posts, where do you get off complaining?

16

nell from falkirk,

24/06/2007 19:17:23

#15 what has a rant about homosexuality got to do with an article about people collecting and reusing rubbish?
One of the prime requirements of this forum is that comments should be relevant to the story or the discussion.
These aren't.

17

twowheel loon,

24/06/2007 19:52:20

Hands up I reported it, noted numpty was blaming you nell but i take responsibility for my actions as i did not want children reading these sort of posts on a public forum, certain subjects should be down to parents, not dings putting us in the position of explaining gay fellatio to a 10 year old who was reading an article and posts while making notes for school debating society.

I have followed the deletion up with a strongly worded email to scotsman editorial explaining how to trace an isp and use the abuse at function to report the address of certain persons no matter what nom de plume they try to use.

I have also forwarded this to ofcom and my mp with a selection of cuts from postings by trolls from the last 2 weeks.

18

Lynn,

Madison, Wisconsin, USA 24/06/2007 21:15:34

It's also known as "Dumpster Diving" over here. You can find some pretty good stuff this way!

19

Jethro's flute,

25/06/2007 11:17:45

This was known as 'bin-raking' when I was at school and it was an insult.

To intellectualize such idiotic behaviour is reprehensible.


 

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