It's more of this first-world guilt, with us wringing our hands and moaning softly at subtly racist imagery that allows us to expunge our actual concerns about solid waste and exploitation and replace them with digital pity. And for Wired to run it is like a slap in the face. That whole rag is run by adspace basically threatening you with social pariahdom for not conspicuously consuming every new chunk of crap you will need to buy to stay in touch with Facebook trolls and
Amazon Prime.
A recycler I spoke to once indicated this kind of journalism was more or less constantly recycled from a single story a few years ago about Ghana which had since been debunked. He claimed that the overarching industry figures like Apple and HP were in favor of shredding in order to preserve brand identity and prevent refurbishment outside of their operations and to that end, they would often nudge stories like this into the limelight in order to discredit recycling which doesn't involve shredding, despite the fact that shredding is a pretty lame way to recycle anything. But you can do it domestically, for a reasonable price, and thus it is a viable option for large corporations (who still export the junk which is leftover, anyway).
With National Sword in play, a story like this just serves to misinform the public that the developing world is suffering from our waste, thus justifying any objectives to keep recycling, in whatever form, a domestic enterprise, when the fact is that they really just want what they can market, like any other business. Now, when we
can't export to China, we can pretend we're doing it for their own good, not because they straight up got sick of us polluting their country and told us to take our trash and GTFO.
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