Event JSON
{
"id": "b35db54a933a4938409a2feb7988a39c2dd22776528d06645ffa0fb09494bff5",
"pubkey": "9f2fdccd17a4a4b6afa7c811874b4068feac83ec396b5a62215d844cf140c3d1",
"created_at": 1727213972,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
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"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"p",
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[
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[
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"https://norden.social/users/Flo_Rian/statuses/113194694894120377",
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]
],
"content": "nostr:npub13q9p75rzh0gypmdfc2rl0x6v2mzclxt7n9ujkq0ny7fv8djx83aqdkjsxy You listed some of the sources, but looking at the bars in graph B, I seem to come overwhelmingly from macroplastics breaking down. Any viable solution therefore needs to stop macro plastics from ending up in the environment, either through effective recycling or ban of (single use) plastics. Buying natural fibre clothes or using “microplastic-free” makeup might make us feel better (and have other advantages), but it’s not really tackling the core issue.",
"sig": "d8f9e9f7f2bd1bafad66fe47e540413852b07c84ca7b8fd7ec09a7457e948ce77fd3a3d8c298ebbf4d68eebad7e10035bb9795e93897dd82f83eb6bba5de808f"
}