Plastic bags have been captured by humans since the early 1900s, and because of their item-carrying ability, they quickly grew in popularity among the public. Farmers began to breed plastic bags to capitalise on this new marketplace, and the population increased. Plastic bags are bred in large greenhouses, to prevent them from escaping and roaming free, and survive through photosynthesis of sunlight. When it has reached adulthood, the bag is drugged to make it docile and shipped to supermarkets all around the world. Since the 1970s, bags have often been marked with the logo of the supermarket they are being shipped to, which has created a lot of controversy with animal cruelty groups, who call the process "unnecessary and barbaric".
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| - Plastic bags have been captured by humans since the early 1900s, and because of their item-carrying ability, they quickly grew in popularity among the public. Farmers began to breed plastic bags to capitalise on this new marketplace, and the population increased. Plastic bags are bred in large greenhouses, to prevent them from escaping and roaming free, and survive through photosynthesis of sunlight. When it has reached adulthood, the bag is drugged to make it docile and shipped to supermarkets all around the world. Since the 1970s, bags have often been marked with the logo of the supermarket they are being shipped to, which has created a lot of controversy with animal cruelty groups, who call the process "unnecessary and barbaric".
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| - A plastic bag in its natural surroundings.
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| - Plastic bags have been captured by humans since the early 1900s, and because of their item-carrying ability, they quickly grew in popularity among the public. Farmers began to breed plastic bags to capitalise on this new marketplace, and the population increased. Plastic bags are bred in large greenhouses, to prevent them from escaping and roaming free, and survive through photosynthesis of sunlight. When it has reached adulthood, the bag is drugged to make it docile and shipped to supermarkets all around the world. Since the 1970s, bags have often been marked with the logo of the supermarket they are being shipped to, which has created a lot of controversy with animal cruelty groups, who call the process "unnecessary and barbaric".
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