It was impossible to run a small load of wash, specifically to run the bags through the washer alone? It was impossible to use a needle and thread and mend some holes, or even use a patch? There was really absolutely nothing to do but throw the bags out?
’ve already said I’m neutral on the subject but this is a little over the top. Toss them in the wash after you go grocery shopping. Repair them when needed. If there’s a ban forthcoming then people need to learn to adapt.
Obviously people
didn't do that. The FACT that we as a society stopped using cloth bags and embraced the easy to carry, use & toss plastic grocery bags seems to support what I said. Although my hypotheses as to WHY we, as a society abandoned cloth bags may be incorrect. The fact is: we did. I was a teen at the time, not an anthropologist - then or now. I recall, in my own home, we did mend the first few bags. But, they kept wearing down or abrading. And we washed the first few, but that seemed to use as much energy & resources as were supposed to be saving.
That was the latter quarter of the 20th century. We are now in the first quarter of the 21st century, with some of the most advanced technological gadgets to date. Do you really think people are going to be talking on their Bluetooth headphones while doing
Little House On The Prairie, type of mending on their worn cloth bags? I don't think so. Not saying it's right. While I'm trying to reduce as much waste as possible and reuse the plastic bags I have,
I am waiting for the first sturdy, many-use, biodegradable plastic bags to be invented. We will once again abandon those cloth bags. When that happens, for the first time,
I will resurrect a zombie thread telling everyone, "I told you so."
I find this whole debate interesting. In the late 70's I worked in a grocery. Our paper bags then were much sturdier than those now and I grew up re using them for all kinds of things at home. Paper is made from trees ( renewable) and is biodegradable. Manufacture does use water and in the 70s created pollution. Plastic bags are made from petroleum ( non-renewable) do not biodegrade and involve more complicated resource extraction and production. I have NEVER understood how we made that transition as an environmental measure-and 40 years later it clearly was not the best decision. I also think bans are just a knee jerk reaction to a much deeper problem that needs to be fixed.
As I recall, and I was a teen at the time, so my recollection may not be accurate, but there was a huge push to save the trees. Turns out, all that tree logging was stripping the land and trees weren't growing at a rate that we were using & tossing paper products. It was the start of recycling paper. But, back then, it had a bad stigma, as no one understood how "clean" recycled paper pulp can get. Few people wanted to use "recycled" paper.

The Internet hadn't been invented yet. There wasn't a lot of research out. And the technology wasn't as successful as it is now. When items were made with recycled content, the labels used to say, "Made with 10% recycled materials," vs, now, where the percentage is much higher.

Back then, it seemed like an excess amount of energy was used to just recycle that 10%.
Moving to plastics was probably also a knee jerk reaction. I vaguely remember being told switching to disposable plastic cups & bags was a good thing as people could reuse plastic cups & bags many times before tossing. Of course, as plastic items became so plentiful and CHEAP, no one reused the disposable plastics again. They just immediately tossed them as it was cheaper and more convenient to simply buy another stack. Walk down the aisles of many of our dollar stores. There is more plastic junk that people need or even want. Our First World mentality of using & wasting created a greater problem than the original one.