Why I Regret My New Toilet Seat

I recently bought a new wooden toilet seat at Target for five dollars. Five dollars! It wasn't even on sale and I thought to myself, "What a steal!" I should have known that was probably, literally the case. My toilet seat was probably illegally logged in Russia. In this week's issue of The New Yorker, Raffi Khatchadourian (who also wrote the great profile of Paul Watson) writes about the illegal logging market. The article is not quite online yet, but check out this short video where he discusses how a tree illegally logged from halfway around the world becomes a toilet seat at your local Wal-Mart (or Target, I'm sure).

More like this

I'm no fan of WalMart's. Too much disruption of the retail world at the expense of the global environment and workers around the world and too little attention to the needs of its own workers. My side of the political fence is not friendly WalMart territory, to be sure. It turns out that right wing…
If anything should signal the dire shape of the US food safety problem it's FDA's announcement last week that it is extending the warning over Salmonella contaminated Peter Pan peanut butter to products bought as far back as October 2004. FDA warnings about Peter Pan peanut butter have been…
By Liz Borkowski  In the latest issue of the San Francisco Bay Guardian, Joseph Plaster explores how the system for trucking imported goods from the Port of Oakland keeps both truckers and residents struggling. Truckers scrape by on meager earnings and can only afford the oldest, most polluting…
One of my healthier, but alas more expensive habits, is that I walk a mile or so several times a week to my neighborhood shopping area and visit one or another bookstore. I live in a college town, so my neighborhood shopping area has some of the best bookstores anywhere. Not just a university…

Oh, come on. How can you put toilets and illegal logging in the same post.

I'm not even sure what illegal logging is - forgetting to flush afterwards?

I didn't even know what some of our toilet seats were made of. This site says they are made of either plastic -- easy to identify -- or wood flour and melamine, combined at high temperatures to create a kind of molded wood:
www.madehow.com/Volume-5/Toilet.html
The wood flour comes from sawdust and there is plenty of sawdust, so it is good that it gets used.
I've never seen a real wood toilet seat made of pieces of wood instead of the above "molded wood."
This article talks about sawdust and its uses:
www.agmrc.org/agmrc/commodity/biomass/sawdustshavingswoodwaste/sawdustp…
Why is it cheaper to get wood from Russia than to use recycled sawdust here at home?