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by Peter Sircom Bromley
Ever wonder what its going to take to get rid of the toxic
cleaners in our homes, workplaces and the environment? Kevin Daum
wonders about this every day because thats his job. Kevin
Daum is an entrepreneur and inventor who formulates, manufactures
and sells green cleaners. Over the last fifteen years he has spearheaded
the development of a company called Environmental Building Science
Inc. The goal of EBS is to solve global oil pollution and toxic
cleaner problems by changing how we clean at home and at work. The
company has turned this ideal into Oil Lift and other Lift cleaning
products now available in retail stores nationwide.
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source photo:
Teamarbeit
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You might think such enterprise would be easy considering all the
talk about going green. The truth is that Kevins people spend
most of their time re-educating prospective customers. And thats
a real challenge despite countless stories in the media about switching
away from toxic cleaners.
In North America, toxic cleaning products are a part of the domestic
landscape, but few people realize that spraying poison on a surface
or adding it to their laundry makes it, in a sense, less
clean. Millions of otherwise rational people have been trained to
place a high priority on white laundry and spotless kitchens at
the expense of their health. The cure is killing the patient.
So how is this spin accomplished? Kevin says the answer is simple:
fear and embarrassment. Advertisers ask if you care about your children,
family, friends and pets. They suggest that if you dont kill
the bacteria, youre a bad parent. Fears of being a bad homemaker
can be so powerful that they override common sense. For example,
youve been trained to believe doing laundry a certain way
kills bacteria when in fact laundry machines can be bacteria incubators.
Kevin calls this skanky laundry syndrome. To find out if you have
skanky laundry syndrome, he suggests you smell your towels after
you use them a couple of times. If they smell of mildew, you most
likely need to detoxify your laundry machine.
As an innovator, Kevin is used to thinking outside the detergent
box. Consider this: if the average person was given laundry detergent
from Brazil they would think that their whites are not clean. Laundry
detergent in South America is designed to make your whites have
a reddish hue. In North America were trained to think that
white laundry has a bluish hue. It also has to have a chemical smell.
Kevin recently had a friend do laundry tests for him; she had removed
all the red wine stains and was very happy with the results. Her
mother then sniffed the towels. These arent clean,
she said. They dont smell like bleach. Most other
mammals would run from the scent of chlorine bleach.
So how can we overcome the brainwashing and get rid of toxic cleaners
from our homes and workplaces? Recently Kevin was doing a cleaning
product replacement audit for a hotel. Many of the cleaning staff
were using products they thought were green because the supplier
had a green sounding name. The head of housekeeping knew that this
was misleading yet she couldnt get her staff to change (at
home she uses baking soda, vinegar and lime juice). Even staff members
who knew they were using toxic products were reluctant to change
because they believed the green cleaners dont work. One of
the staff even showed Kevin the bleach she hides in her towels to
use when her boss isnt around. They both had a good laugh
when Kevin pointed out that her boss could probably smell it.
So Kevin found himself with a bunch of bleach-smuggling professional
cleaners that he had to deprogram. In response, he wrote a booklet
called How to Kill your Cleaning Staff and provided it as
a free download on his website. When they had read the booklet,
he devised a clever strategy: he sold the hotel small bottles of
two replacement cleaners and asked the staff to go home and find
out what cleaning problems the cleaners dont work on. They
could not find any. The illusion that green cleaners are ineffective
disappeared.
Kevins story illustrates the degree to which the purveyors
of poison have brainwashed us to continue buying their watered down
toxic goo.
So how do we break the cycle? Kevin says the first step is to get
educated. To that end, Kevin offers a booklet How to Kill Your Cleaning
Staff on his website www.oillift.net. Just click on the banner that
says fun stuff for free on the left hand column, fill in your name
and e-mail. The booklet is automatically sent to you.
The second step is to read and sign Kevins on-line petition
to stop water pollution in your neighbourhood by banning toxic cleaners.
With the petition there is a series of six questions. Kevin asks
that you answer them honestly as he is trying to determine how much
people know about environmental cleaning. Youll be emailed
the answers to the questions. And youll also get a solution
for skanky laundry syndrome.
Whether you buy Kevins products or other eco-certified cleaners,
the problem of toxicity in cleaning products needs to be solved.
Through education you become part of the solution to get the toxins
out of your home and workplace.
Note: Oil Lift, Lift Cleaner and Surface restorer are now available
at Canadian Tire, Lordco, Windsor Plywood, Tim-BR-Mart, True Value,
Benjamin Moore, and most health food stores. Contact Kevin at info@oillift.net
with your cleaning questions or request for a free workplace cleaning
product audit.
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