General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: 'Checking out at the store, [View all]GiaGiovanni
(1,247 posts)And not everyone had the money or interest in buying in. My grandmother would not use paper plates. She also washed her dishes by hand.
The real shift came in the late 60s and 70s when the use of plastic containers rose. In the 1960s, if you wanted a bottle of coke, you got a glass bottle and your returned it to be cleaned. To make sure you returned the bottle, they'd make you pay a "deposit"--you'd pay five or ten cents for the bottle of Coke plus an extra cent or two for "deposit". When you returned the bottle, you got your deposit back and the distributor took the collected all the bottles for cleaning.
In the 70s, you got aluminum cans that proudly declared "No Deposit, No Return" , meaning that you could just throw them out. Finally, in the 80s, you got your plastic 2-litre.