Again, the mention of Swedish Death Cleaning in the last post got some reaction, not quite as much as the book ripping which got the predictable Nazis and Salman Rushdie mentions. This has got nothing to do with railways, model or otherwise, but does lead me to a question, the one at the top. I know at least two people with huge collections of magazines – whole collections in some areas. This would now be regarded as an ‘old people’ thing in many quarters. Not in a disparaging way, but in that we have moved on during this century. When I launched SRI a few years ago I was informed that ‘print media is dead’ and as much as it pains me to agree being a lover of paper stuff, as a populous, it is true. The purchase of magazines or newspapers is looked upon by anyone under 40 as slightly quaint. For example my step children, all born post 1985, don’t own a book between them, don’t own CDs or any hard form music, don’t buy newsprint in any form and… this is important… lead far more vibrant lives than most of the people who are now arguing in their heads. Yes you could argue that if the internet goes off you can’t access stuff, but the same would be true of the tills in Smiths, so that is fairly universal. We long stopped using coins and wooden drawer cash tills to facilitate the purchase of magazines. I reckon we have about 10 years before the fall in print makes it unsustainable in hard form. Books are slightly different and Kindles haven’t really taken off, but any charity shop will tell you that they have more books coming in (mainly from over 60s) than they could ever shift. If you think that these don’t get pulped or landfilled, then you are delusional. People are still buying new, but the second hand market is all but gone.
If you add all this up, it explains my thinking about getting rid of stuff now and the way that some of this is being done.