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Comments on Puzzle #32926: Time for dessert ?
By Rick (bee)

peek at solution       solve puzzle
  quality:   difficulty:   solvability: line & color logic only  

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#1: Carol Brand (KarylAnn) on Sep 24, 2019 [SPOILER]

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#2: Belita (belita) on Sep 24, 2019 [SPOILER]
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#3: Jota (jota) on Sep 24, 2019
I hate biodegradeable straws!
#4: Susan Nagy (susannagy54) on Sep 24, 2019
Jota - better get used to biodegradeable straws! There is now a $1,000 fine for waiters/waitresses who give a straw to a customer without first being asked. (That's what I've read but I am having a hard time believing it.)
#5: Rick (bee) on Sep 25, 2019
:-)
#6: Teresa K (fasstar) on Sep 25, 2019 [SPOILER]
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#7: Ga Hendrick (GaHendrick) on Sep 25, 2019
A terrific image ... I would love this for my dessert. Do you deliver?
#8: Belita (belita) on Sep 28, 2019
I truly don't understand the debate about plastic straws when people buy plastic water bottles by the thousands, they trash the landscape and fill the dumpsites, they're completely unnecessary since the invention of water fountains, and people are ignoring them and and picking on tiny little straws!
#9: Kristen Vognild (kristen) on Sep 28, 2019
The straw debacle is security theater, pure and simple. It does very, very little to affect pollution of our oceans, and it's more of a hassle for everyone involved, but it makes people *feel* good, and think they're doing something meaningful for the environment. I suppose it's a start.
#10: Carol Brand (KarylAnn) on Oct 12, 2019 [SPOILER]
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#11: Belita (belita) on Oct 13, 2019
Any trash is bad if you throw it in the ocean. Straws are no worse than any other trash if they're thrown away properly.
#12: Jota (jota) on Oct 14, 2019
Jim Leape, co-director of the Stanford Center for Ocean Solutions: Plastic straws are only a tiny fraction of the problem – less than 1 percent. The risk is that banning straws may confer “moral license” – allowing companies and their customers to feel they have done their part. The crucial challenge is to ensure that these bans are just a first step, offering a natural place to start with “low-hanging fruit” so long as it’s part of a much more fundamental shift away from single-use plastics across the value chains of these companies and our economy.

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