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RE: disposing of brake fluid?

Subject: RE: disposing of brake fluid?
From: Randall Young <randallyoung@earthlink.net>
Date: Fri, 11 Jun 1999 11:00:30 -0700
Cc: "triumphs@autox.team.net" <triumphs@autox.team.net>
Organization: Navcom Technology, Inc
The whole issue of 'natural' vs 'man-made' seems a little silly anyway. 
 How is a beaver dam any more 'natural' than a man-made dam ?  If man is 
'unnatural', perhaps we all should lay down and die to restore the planet 
to it's pristine purity.

Or, for that matter, how do you tell the difference between man-made 
'unnatural' water and 'natural' water ?

These are "knee-jerk" terms.  They have no basis in fact.

Randall

On Friday, June 11, 1999 7:55 AM, Susan and John Roper 
[SMTP:vscjohn@huntnet.net] wrote:
>
> Oil and petroleum distillates are not natural and therefore harmful. 
 Interesting
> concept, but not in keeping with fact.  John
>
> ArthurK101@aol.com wrote:
>
> > In a message dated 10-Jun-99 22:08:43 Eastern Daylight Time, MOWOGMAN 
writes:
> >
> > > You stated that brake fluid is toxic to the environment?  What 
exactly is
> > in
> > > it that is so toxic?
> > >
> >
> > John, man-made chemicals are not natural and so most do not belong in 
the
> > natural environment.  Oil and petroleum distillates, one of which is 
brake
> > fluid, are harmful to animals and humans.  That is why we have 
"recycling"
> > centers.  Cheers.
> >
> > Art Kelly
>
>
> 

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