These environmental bad boys are on the run. Find out who they are with the EPA’s Most Wanted list. Also, “These Guys Are Full of **it” is back and we’re covering the latest in corporate greenwashing campaigns. ZapRoot http://zaproot.com/ Community Site http://boldurl.com/UCgwNh69 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ The Daily Green - EPA Most Wanted ...

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Jessica Williamson: This is Jessica Williamson and you’re watching Zaproot. Did you ever dream of working long hours, drinking bad coffee and busting low life scum sucking so I think they are above the law? Then the EPA might have a job for you. Check out their most wanted list. But with various characters like Larkin Baggett who is allegedly charged with a legally dumping hazardous waste from a chunk of industry into the sewer system. He has skipped town before trial and he is believed to be in Utah. Crazy people in Utah? That’s unheard off. Well, for example Dennis Feron. He’s charged of installing a secret drain pipe into the back of his copper smelting factory that dumped straight into the Mississippi River. He is believed to be in Belgium. Wait! Crazy people in Belgium? That’s unheard off. Wait, it is kind of unheard off. Well, check out this guy William Morgan who allegedly accept at 3.8 million puss of toxic waste from companies like cyanide, arsenic and cadmium with the idea that he probably disposed it. Probably it was—it was all a sham and he just shipped it warehouses and dump in landfills around the country. When indicted, he fled to Canada. Good to see some people also escape in Canada. This guy is old scow. So, if you’re in the mood to bust some perk, head over to EPA and check it out. There’s a link in our show notes. Female: Do you want some free stuff? Well, buygreen.com is looking to give it to you. Sign up on our community site “Add a Blog Entry”. You can use pics and videos. And the best blog entry this way will receive this, sponsored by buygreen.com. And don’t forget, there is link in our show notes. And here’s some of my favorite green lesson campaigns with these guys are full of—check out this ad from the board. Female: That’s a good question and we believe that it benefits the planet. The primary focus for my group has been developing by the materials. There were many people that told us and it wasn’t possible to put even in my new amount of soy into these. They said they tried it. They said it could not be done. We now meet all the specifications for good, out of foam. Jessica Williamson: Yes, we will just get some soy and say, it’s cheap, and hippies love that crap. The problem is, for every calorie that comes out of soy, many more calories of crude oil go waste in form of transmutation processing fertilizer and pesticide. So, you actually waste energy by turning the oil into soy and the soy into the sides. It would be more efficient to just do it the old way. And check out this ad from Chevron. Male: Can you see it, it’s here, a hundred and seventy-five miles off to coast of Louisiana. It’s your commute. You’ll fly to Phoenix, your way of life. Here, more than 28,000 feet below the surface, in a place that experts thought impossible to reach, setting half-a-dozen world records for technological innovation without a single safety or environmental incident. This is the power of human energy. Jessica Williamson: That’s strange. Chevron forgot to mention the panel of independent scientist that just confirmed that the damage to Amazon Jungle by Chevron dumpling 18 billion gallons of oil waste will cause $27 billion to clean up. The affected area is 1700 square miles and houses about 30,000 people. Dulce Ann Mae, an expert in toxic spill says, “If this were in the US, the area would be considered unfit for human habitation and would be fenced off.” Oh, well, I guess it just slipped Chevron’s mind that day. And finally, we’re not the only ones slinging the green washing mode. Dell is crying ‘foul’ of Apples’ new ad. Doubting how green the new Mac book out. Dell: This is the new Mac book. It’s advanced aluminum in glass and closure. It’s completely recyclable. It’s engineered to be so efficient. It runs on a quarter of the power of a single light bulb. And it’s made without many of the harmful toxins found in other computers like mercury. The new Mac books, the world’s greenest family of Mac books. Jessica Williamson: Bob Pearson, Dell’s VP of Communities and Conversations. How did you get that job? He