posted 2 years ago
[Disclaimer: I know Liam and Hannah, and the Happen Films crew, so I'm not trying to throw any shade on this project, but rather give a bit of perspective. My wife and I were just having this conversation last night because she had recently watched the video again.]
There is a structural bias against doing the "best possible" thing for the environment for many people, and the farther you go down the scales of socioeconomic advantage, personal agency, and indeed Maslow's hierarchy, the harder it is to live an idealised life. In Hannah and Liam's example, they are smart, well-educated, passionate, and well-connected people with access to social networks, land for growing food, and the willingness to pursue a goal despite the barriers imposed by our consumerist throwaway culture.
So yes, what they did is possible, but there are conditions that make it so. A single parent juggling a low-wage job, raising kids, living in an urban situation with no access to a garden plot, and (more than anything) stressed and time poor, would truly struggle to do a lot of this. The last thing I want to do is make anyone in tough circumstances feel bad because uncompostable waste lands in their bin. Add in any sort of disability, or additional caregiving (how often is the dependent parent part of the equation in families nowadays?) and you see how a zero rubbish lifestyle really does not make it onto the priority stack. And that's not the worst thing, because people in this part of our society are not the source of the problem.
What needs to happen is for the high-powered consumers, and more importantly the manufacturers of products that most of us consume, to radically shift into a mode of using, making, and doing less. Structural change is how we move the needle. Around the same time this video was being made, a bill was going through the NZ parliament to pretty much ban all single-use plastic packaging. Since it has taken effect, we now take cloth bags to the shops (and if we forget, they have paper bags for us) and there are all sorts of examples of source reduction in daily life here. It wasn't the end of the world. No one ever really needed a plastic bag for their onions.