Disaster A pair of old underpants in EU-Germany - How do you dispose of old underpants in the year of the lord 2025 without becoming liable to prosecution?

Bespoke translation by yours truly. Original article [A] by Danisch
Disclaimer because some readers were confused:
The article is not originally written tongue-in-cheek or humorously. The tone is dry, descriptive, and matter-of-fact. The facts regarding EU law, textile waste/old clothes containers, separate bins for separate kinds of trash, etc.pp. are all 100% real and, aside from people who are not familiar with the new EU law regarding recycling of textiles, everybody who lives in Germany can confirm them.

A pair of old underpants in EU-Germany​


I have looked into the matter of how to dispose of a pair of old underpants.

The situation is this:

I've still got one pair of old underpants lying around in Berlin. It's not that they're in a fundamentally embarrassing state, but the elastic rubber band that keeps the thing in position wears down over the years. And the things also shrink. That is why I am in possession of a decommissioned pair of underpants that I would like to dispose of at some point - while obeying the law.

When it rains, it pours, which is also why I've got a few decommissioned socks, of which one has a hole because they have been under a lot of load and walked thin over time, and it looks like one of the two didn't survive the last laundry session. Not usable anymore. Frankly, you could keep using the second one, but the pattern is so unique that I am ready to dispose of the second sock ahead of the end of its lifespan.

Now I have - next to the normal apartment waste and recyclable material, which I normally have to carry around 15 meters to the container with the trash cans for residual waste, recyclable material, paper/cardboard, organic waste, glass - a pair of underpants and a pair of socks that I need to dispose of.

But, look that that.

Until recently, I missed out on that, that's my fault, I could have simply put them with the residual waste.

But since 1.1.2025, European Law says that textiles of all kinds, of all conditions, of all sizes, are no longer allowed to go into the trash. (According to the phrasing, I guess that even applies to broken carbon fiber tripods and shopping bags.) They need to go to textile recycling or into a textile collection bin.

Now, 10 years ago, this wouldn't have been a problem, this area was full of dubious textile collection containers. You could have thrown that in there while abiding by EU law, so they can go and throw that into the trash, on the street, or into a bush. But they got rid of them many years ago already. They were annoying, they were violating the law, and they were also dangerous because the migrants tried to steal clothing, slid into the theft protection flap head-first, and if they were lucky, they only got trapped inside and got freed by the fire department, if they were unlucky they died in there because you can't be hanging upside down for so long or asphyxiate. That is why these things got removed from the wild. We are no longer a country in which you can just install old clothing collection containers. No longer works.

According to the municipal cleansing department of Berlin my only option is handing them in at a recycling yard.

By car, that would be 7.5 kilometers [4.6 miles] one way, so 15 km [9.3 mi] of driving to get rid of one pair of underpants without becoming liable to prosecution.

By public transport, 40 minutes one way, almost two hours with a return trip. One way for 3.80 euros, so 7.60 euros in total. Although a total of 2 km [1.2 mi] would need to get covered on foot. Which requires that you are not disabled and are able to walk 2 km, and can carry the weight of the disposable goods. With a pair of underpants, even in conjunction with a pair of socks, that should be manageable, but nobody knows how a simultaneously over-aged and de-automobilized society is supposed to correctly get rid of their trash.

To make things harder, there are opening times. Because said recycling yard is usually open from 7 AM to 5 PM, until 7:30 PM on Thursdays, until 3:30 PM on Saturdays. Hard to reach for people who work a job, especially people with children.

So this is how it is to want to get rid of an old pair of underpants while complying with the EU of our times.

Frankly, it would be cheaper and easier to put them in an envelope and just send them somewhere. Maybe to the EU.

I have also considered waiting for Spring and just snapping them through some open window. But, like I said, the rubber is worn out, that won't have any tension anymore.
 
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On a scale of 1 to 10, how funny was this in the original Deutsch? I get that it was trying to be tongue-in-cheek but it's hard to tell with you Germans.

I appreciate the translations by the way!
Only that one sentence about the weight of the underpants in conjunction with a pair of socks was tongue-in-cheek.
The rest is completely dry and neutral. No tongue-in-cheek at all. It was a completely neutral, descriptive, matter-of-fact description.
I'll give the tongue-in-cheek-i-ness a 2/10.

The point is that the EU and Germany are fucking insane.
 
Yankee ingenuity could solve this.


There's a lot of things you "can't" put in the trash that have left my property inside old cereal boxes and at the bottom of opaque cat food bags filled at the top with innocuous refuse.

Just never throw your junk mail in the same bag and you're untraceable.

BECOME UNGOVERNABLE MEIN HERR!
 
But since 1.1.2025, European Law says that textiles of all kinds, of all conditions, of all sizes, are no longer allowed to go into the trash.
Can't wait for clothing / rags with oils and solvents on them to burn down a warehouse alongside some poor fucks that couldn't find a better job.
 
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Recycling is one of the greatest scams pulled onto consumers. Every year in the EU they discover new ways to offload work and responsibility onto citizens that must meticulously sort through their worthless trash as if it would make the world better (protip: it doesn't, the cleanest and most energy-effective way to get rid of trash is to burn it at waste-to-energy plants), all of that while paying increasingly more taxes because.. it doesn't work and it's not sustainable. Recycling has been proven not to work many times, it's mostly a lie and the industry knew it. Better learn the (often vague or inane) rules or next time you throw your garbage in your uniquely identifiable bin with a barcode on it or you'll get a massive fine. Some other places track car plates and if you ask a friend that doesn't live there to do you a favor one night you'll get them fined, too.
 
The funny thing about Germany going full eco-fascist is that Hitler was an environmentalist.

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Yankee ingenuity could solve this.


There's a lot of things you "can't" put in the trash that have left my property inside old cereal boxes and at the bottom of opaque cat food bags filled at the top with innocuous refuse.

Just never throw your junk mail in the same bag and you're untraceable.

BECOME UNGOVERNABLE MEIN HERR!

Or invest in a small shredder during prime day. Saves me all the trouble of ripping shit up by hand, especially with all the dumpster diving junkies around here.
 
If they’re cotton you can put them in the composting bins. Chop off the elastic waistband beforehand of course and use it to {idea verboten in Germany} the next Eurocrat you see?
Or burn them in your wood stove - oh wait they’re banned
Or take them to the recycling centre- oh wait cars got banned
 
If they’re cotton you can put them in the composting bins. Chop off the elastic waistband beforehand of course and use it to {idea verboten in Germany} the next Eurocrat you see?
Or burn them in your wood stove - oh wait they’re banned
Or take them to the recycling centre- oh wait cars got banned
Thou must take thy bamboo bicycle to the municipal recycling center
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Thou must take thy bamboo bicycle to the municipal recycling center
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I do sympathise. We have a stupid bin system where they pick up trash and ‘recycling’ and a box of stuff in alternate weeks and they’re always trying to lower the frequency of collections. I have family in a euro country where they’ve just been told they will revive two new bins, divided into sections for paper, plastic etc etc. all fine, except the actual rubbish (so nappies for example) will be taken once a month. Imagine used nappies festering for a month in the heat. And the volume of the bin that’s taken once a month? 120l. Good luck to anyone with children, or pets that have litter, or elderly adults that require sanitary products… or a million other things.
120l is about 26 gallons for our American readers. 26 gallon bin, taken once a month. To save the planet by making your own environment stinky.
My loathing for these people is palpable
 
Imagine used nappies festering for a month in the heat.
At least here in Germany, and I have lived in very different regions of Germany so I know it's not exclusively a local or regional thing, trash collection (for biowaste) is more frequent in the summer, when there is actual heat. Like, right now, every 2-3 weeks, but every week in the summer months.
 
At least here in Germany, and I have lived in very different regions of Germany so I know it's not exclusively a local or regional thing, trash collection (for biowaste) is more frequent in the summer, when there is actual heat. Like, right now, every 2-3 weeks, but every week in the summer months.
It’s every two weeks for them right now. Their summers are warm, and even at 2 week intervals the bins are crawling with maggots . It’s a public health issue.
 
It’s every two weeks for them right now. Their summers are warm, and even at 2 week intervals the bins are crawling with maggots . It’s a public health issue.
The powers that be will move mountains to protect the wellness of a single maggot over the life of a billion human beings.
Mark my words.
 
I do sympathise. We have a stupid bin system where they pick up trash and ‘recycling’ and a box of stuff in alternate weeks and they’re always trying to lower the frequency of collections. I have family in a euro country where they’ve just been told they will revive two new bins, divided into sections for paper, plastic etc etc. all fine, except the actual rubbish (so nappies for example) will be taken once a month. Imagine used nappies festering for a month in the heat. And the volume of the bin that’s taken once a month? 120l. Good luck to anyone with children, or pets that have litter, or elderly adults that require sanitary products… or a million other things.
120l is about 26 gallons for our American readers. 26 gallon bin, taken once a month. To save the planet by making your own environment stinky.
My loathing for these people is palpable
They'll be pikachu-faced when typhus and cholera return, and have no clue as to why...... must be those dirty anti-vaxxers and not the festering mounds of melon rinds and rusty tin cans outside everyone's door because trash pickup is now bi-monthly to save carbon emissions from the trucks.
 
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