If you think buying a washer/dryer/dishwasher that lasts 5-7 years and needs to be thrown out into the landfill (which usually gets shipped to places like Thailand and Vietnam since China stopped taking Western trash, out of sight and out of mind of most hypocritical “environmentalists” here in the US) and replaced by a new unit is more eco-friendly than a washer/dryer/dishwasher that lasts 15-20 years, and you’re also one of the american wastefuls that does a ridiculous number of loads of laundry and uses a dishwasher regularly, despite being a single person with no significant other and family when it would make economically and eco-friendly more sense to run those appliances. Well, then, like I said.
Sure. Ok, Boomer.
I never used a dishwasher when I was single a long long time ago. And given you’ve been single a lot longer than me, there would be no need for you to use a dishwasher to even be commenting on a dishwasher. So either (a) you really are eco-friendly and don’t use a dishwasher, which then means you aren’t knowledgeable enough to talk about which dishwasher is better or (b) you really are an expert in which dishwasher is better because you took the time to shop for one… But then, that means you aren’t eco-friendly given your expected carbon footprint for an individual.
In either case, it doesn’t look good for you either way, because in either scenario, you clearly aren’t walking your talk. But hey, it’s ok. There’s a lot of this on piggington these days. It’s right up there with the 529k advice from folks that have no 529k or no kids.