So the other day a bunch of people were talking about stuff that was GREEN and stuff that was (RED)™.

The (RED)™ thing you can read about here. They are working to solve big problems -- getting antiretroviral medicine to the people dying of AIDS in Africa.

Microsoft is one of the many (RED)™ partners.

This is also the kind of area that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation looks upon, as they too work to save lives.

In the end, it is fair to say that (RED)™ cares most about people. People who can really benefit from that caring.

It saves lives.

Now the GREEN is another kettle of fish.

It is an effort inside Microsoft that moved the company from one that only cared about trying to divide into trash/recyclable materials and added a whole new category -- compostable material. 

This effort came with a push to make the cafeterias use 100% compostable material -- the plates, the cutlery, everything.

Probably a good idea since most of those recycling places are a scam (they can't recycle stuff that is not 100% clean and how often is anything you are throwing away 1000% clean? The new plan just makes more sense).

I was talking to someone I know over at Adobe a few months ago. Apparently they did the whole GREEN thing too -- roughly six months earlier. We talked about how the initial spoons they got melt into the coffee, and the hot lunches require two of the initial plates if you didn't want to see your lunch eat through to the table before the meal was over. And you know that if you scrape the plate clean that you'll be eating some plate, too... :-)

As an aside, riddle me this -- why must we start on such extremes? No one wants to be responsible for using materials that will last for 30 million years, but plates that last twenty minutes longer would be great, especially if I am getting food from the Shamiana Indian Food station or the Typhoon Thai food station. Or if nothing else they should at least publish nutrition statistics for the plates. I mean, we get nutrition statistics for beer when you know that no one drinking beer is fussing about vitamin content. So why not let us know what we're getting if we are noshing on some plate while we eat? Then if it's after hours and the cafeteria is closed we know how many plates and how many bowls we have to chomp down to get out US RDA? :-)

Okay, enough jokes, and back to the contrast.

The GREEN effort clearly has a slightly different mandate.

They are trying to save the planet.

That is a very easy contrast -- people versus planet!

And of course they are hardly mutually exclusive. You can work on a (RED)™ PC after eating lunch in one of those GREEN cafeterias. Everybody wins!

So if you spport both causes and really feel like there is no conflist, then you have a kind of red-green colorblindness about you, in this case a good thing, right?

It would kind of suck having to choose between people and the planet.

I mean, having to do so more often that we do now, that is (example -- we could add a 200% tax on oil and give all the income to earth saving efforts, but millions of people would freeze to death -- clearly a choice of planet over people, and so on. I could come up with examples in the other direction but you get my point, I'm sure).

Maybe color blindness is the wrong term here, but another term did not jump out at me for "color uncaringness", if you know what I mean.

One could think of GREEN color-blindness as people who use plastic bags for their groceries and throw them out in the regular trash.

I remember being amused that someone I know had sent a proposal to the Gates Foundation to fund the encoding of historic scripts in Unicode (I knew because they asked me if I could advise on how to re-submit the proposal so it would be accepted). Now not to get all snooty about the relative importance there, but THAT is what I would call (RED)™ color-blindness.

So what is the term that does NOT suggest things like either of these but does suggest that you are not taking sides in this debate but both are important to you, important enough that you are willing to eat the plates if need be? :-)

 

This post brought to you by ♲♳♴♵♶♷♸♹♺♻♼♽ (U+2672 U+2673 U+2674 U+2675 U+2676 U+2677 U+2678 U+2679 U+267a U+267b U+267c U+267d, aka UNIVERSAL RECYCLING SYMBOL; RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-1 PLASTICS; RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-2 PLASTICS; RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-3 PLASTICS; RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-4 PLASTICS; RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-5 PLASTICS; RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-6 PLASTICS; RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-7 PLASTICS; RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR GENERIC MATERIALS; BLACK UNIVERSAL RECYCLING SYMBOL; RECYCLED PAPER SYMBOL; PARTIALLY-RECYCLED PAPER SYMBOL)

And NO, there is no COMPOSTING symbol in Unicode. Someone want to get on that? :-)