A few years ago, Time magazine issued a special issue titled "The Greatest Idea of the Century". This is the 4th time series of the most influential 100 people of this century This feature focuses on "scientists and thinkers". On the cover, Albert Einstein crossed his hands on a psychiatrist's sofa and crouched his chest and showed a frustrated look on his face. Dr. Sigmund Freud sat on a chair by the sofa, held the pen and pad with both hands, tilted towards Einstein, waiting for a psychoanalysis of a sad scientist.
As the 30th anniversary of the Earth Day approaches the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency, the time has come to evaluate what our environmental policy has attained and the limits they must overcome. With the clear air and water victory revealed, the first generation environmental policy has also created clumsy bureaucracy, high cost, political bias, litigation. Market-based approaches, consensus building, non-point source regulation, and performance-based measures are promising strategies for the second generation environmental policy, but are not panacea drugs. Furthermore, along with organizational and technical challenges, we must address the fundamental question of who should decide our environmental goals.
The state of our environment will always be a central element of human happiness. In other words, according to the political agenda of Bhutan, based on the GNH index model, environmental protection is rapidly becoming a top priority. It begins with the commitment of 2009, tomorrow maintains carbon neutral, moves forward for tomorrow, and speeds up from there. Other creative environmental initiatives include providing electric vehicles to the country in cooperation with Nissan with the aim of eventually converting all cars into electric vehicles. The government also began offering free electricity to farmers to reduce dependence on wood stove. In June last year, volunteers planted 49,672 trees per hour and established world records.
Companies known as environmentally friendly companies are companies that protect the environment as a top priority. Ben & Jerry, Body Shop, Maine's Tams, McDonald's, Lever Brothers, Procter & Gamble all have divisions dealing with environmental problems of their products. By donating to environmental protection groups or sponsoring events such as Earth Day and Eco Fest, it is possible to raise consumers' awareness of companies that are environmentally conscious. Consumers believe that companies have three ways not environmentally friendly. The most obvious way is for companies to pollute the environment by harmful industrial waste or disposal of irreversible chemicals. Dow Chemical and Union Carbide are good examples. The second way is to describe product descriptions that are false or misleading about product disposability or recyclability.
The Influence of Environmental Problems on Attitudes and Behavior of Female Cosmetic Buyers: Exploratory Study by Karen Nelson Baruch University